Nakamura completed a soul-crushing comeback win over Aronian, while Kasparov couldn't quite win the final day against Caruana! Final report on the #Chess9LX in St. Louis:
https://chess24.com/en/read/news/chess9lx-day-4-nakamura-completes-comeback
https://chess24.com/en/read/news/chess9lx-day-4-nakamura-completes-comeback
chess24.com
Chess9LX, Day 4: Nakamura completes comeback
Hikaru Nakamura started the last day of Chess960 in St.
Louis a point behind Levon Aronian but went on to win the match with two rounds
to spare, as Levon went an incredible 14 games without a win. Elsewhere it took
Wesley So just one game to wrap up victory…
Louis a point behind Levon Aronian but went on to win the match with two rounds
to spare, as Levon went an incredible 14 games without a win. Elsewhere it took
Wesley So just one game to wrap up victory…
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Chartres: meeting with a young chess prodigy
https://youtu.be/BHZjo70eYOw
https://youtu.be/BHZjo70eYOw
We have come a long way from there are two kinds of chess: “real chess and women’s chess"! Article about the US new #1 female
https://gamesmaven.io/chessdailynews/womens/two-kinds-of-chess-real-chess-and-women-s-chess-QGAjV1NfgEGHA4eBa4VZSQ/
https://gamesmaven.io/chessdailynews/womens/two-kinds-of-chess-real-chess-and-women-s-chess-QGAjV1NfgEGHA4eBa4VZSQ/
Chess Daily News
Two kinds of chess: “real chess and women’s chess"! - Chess Daily News
In 1989 chess legend Garry Kasparov commented that there were two kinds of chess: “real chess and women’s chess"!
You can still enter! If you were born in 2007 or later and you have a FIDE rating of 1800 or higher! Limited number of participants may enter the competition.
#GlobalChessFestival
https://www.globalchessfestival.com/budapest-2019/programs/future-champions-of-europe
#GlobalChessFestival
https://www.globalchessfestival.com/budapest-2019/programs/future-champions-of-europe
Globalchessfestival
Future Champions of Europe
Among the various programs of the Global Chess Festival this year we are searching Future Champions from all over Europe
#OnThisDay
German-Polish chess master Johannes Zukertort, the first-ever world championship match runner-up, was born on September 7, 1842.
One of the best players of the late 19th century, he lost to the first world chess champion Wilhelm Steinitz in the match in 1886.
@UnityChess
German-Polish chess master Johannes Zukertort, the first-ever world championship match runner-up, was born on September 7, 1842.
One of the best players of the late 19th century, he lost to the first world chess champion Wilhelm Steinitz in the match in 1886.
@UnityChess
Forwarded from Unity Chess Club
Forwarded from Unity Chess Club
✴️ #about_Zukertort
🔸 Johannes Zukertort
🔸 German-Polish chess master
♦️ Johannes Hermann Zukertort was a leading German-Polish chess master. He was one of the leading world players for most of the 1870s and 1880s, and lost to Wilhelm Steinitz in the World Chess Championship 1886, which is generally regarded as the first World Chess Championship match. He was also defeated by Steinitz in 1872 in an unofficial championship; both were the world's best players.
🔘 Full name: Johannes Hermann Zukertort
🔘 Country: Congress Poland & German Empire & United Kingdom
🔘 Born: 7 September 1842
Lublin, Russian Empire
🔘 Died: 20 June 1888 (aged 45)
London, England
♦️Zukertort filled his relatively short life with a wide range of other achievements as a soldier, musician, linguist, journalist and political activist. He became a naturalised citizen of the United Kingdom in 1878.
Zukertort learned to play chess in Breslau when he was about 19. Entering a tournament in that city, and receiving the odds of the queen, he lost every game, whereupon he took up the study of Bilguer's Handbuch, with the result that in 1862 he won games from the leading German chess player Adolf Anderssen at the odds of a knight. Zukertort studied with Anderssen and within a very few years he became one of the strongest players in Germany.
Among many other notable matches that Zukertort played with Anderssen, he defeated him in 1866, lost in 1868 by a score of eight wins, three losses, one draw, and finally defeated him convincingly (5–2; no draws) in a match in 1871.[6][unreliable source][7] In 1867 he moved to Berlin and in 1872 to London. In that year, he played Wilhelm Steinitz in London, losing 9–3 (7 losses, 1 win, 4 draws).
♦️ A memorable game by Zukertort👇🏼
▪️ Johannes Zukertort vs Joseph Henry Blackburne
▪️ London (1883), London ENG, rd 22, Jun-11
▪️ Rubinstein Opening: Classical Defense (D05)
♦️ Review and download PGN file👇🏼
@unitychess
🔸 Johannes Zukertort
🔸 German-Polish chess master
♦️ Johannes Hermann Zukertort was a leading German-Polish chess master. He was one of the leading world players for most of the 1870s and 1880s, and lost to Wilhelm Steinitz in the World Chess Championship 1886, which is generally regarded as the first World Chess Championship match. He was also defeated by Steinitz in 1872 in an unofficial championship; both were the world's best players.
🔘 Full name: Johannes Hermann Zukertort
🔘 Country: Congress Poland & German Empire & United Kingdom
🔘 Born: 7 September 1842
Lublin, Russian Empire
🔘 Died: 20 June 1888 (aged 45)
London, England
♦️Zukertort filled his relatively short life with a wide range of other achievements as a soldier, musician, linguist, journalist and political activist. He became a naturalised citizen of the United Kingdom in 1878.
Zukertort learned to play chess in Breslau when he was about 19. Entering a tournament in that city, and receiving the odds of the queen, he lost every game, whereupon he took up the study of Bilguer's Handbuch, with the result that in 1862 he won games from the leading German chess player Adolf Anderssen at the odds of a knight. Zukertort studied with Anderssen and within a very few years he became one of the strongest players in Germany.
Among many other notable matches that Zukertort played with Anderssen, he defeated him in 1866, lost in 1868 by a score of eight wins, three losses, one draw, and finally defeated him convincingly (5–2; no draws) in a match in 1871.[6][unreliable source][7] In 1867 he moved to Berlin and in 1872 to London. In that year, he played Wilhelm Steinitz in London, losing 9–3 (7 losses, 1 win, 4 draws).
♦️ A memorable game by Zukertort👇🏼
▪️ Johannes Zukertort vs Joseph Henry Blackburne
▪️ London (1883), London ENG, rd 22, Jun-11
▪️ Rubinstein Opening: Classical Defense (D05)
♦️ Review and download PGN file👇🏼
@unitychess
Forwarded from Unity Chess Club
@Zukertort-Blackburne 1883.pgn
764 B
"I believe every chess player senses beauty, when he succeeds in creating situations, which contradict the expectations and the rules, and he succeeds in mastering this situation."
🔸 Vladimir Kramnik
@UnityChess
🔸 Vladimir Kramnik
@UnityChess
Forwarded from Unity Chess Club