This position has arisen from the Scotch opening and it seems that Black is well-prepared for it.]
13...fxe5! [opening up good prospects for his bishop on g7.]
[13...Bb7?! 14.exd6! Qxe2+ 15.Kxe2 f5 16.Nd2 Bxa1 17.Rxa1 cxd6 18.Bxd6 0–0–0 19.c5 Ba6+ 20.Kf2 △Nf3–e5 20...Rhe8™ 21.Nf3 Re2+ 22.Kg1= △Nd4]
14.Bxc6+ Bd7 [△e×f4]
15.Bxd7+? [White should have exchanged queens with the following continuation:]
[¹15.Bxa8 exf4! 16.Qxe7+ Kxe7 17.Bf3 fxg3 18.hxg3 Bxa1 19.c5 Nc8³]
15...Qxd7 16.Nd2 0–0 17.fxe5 Rae8! [△R×e5]
18.0–0–0 Rxe5‚ 19.Qd3 Ra5?!-/+[Black is completely better, But the rush to attack decreases his advantage. He could have obtained a huge advantage with:]
[19...Rfe8!–+ △Re2]
13...fxe5! [opening up good prospects for his bishop on g7.]
[13...Bb7?! 14.exd6! Qxe2+ 15.Kxe2 f5 16.Nd2 Bxa1 17.Rxa1 cxd6 18.Bxd6 0–0–0 19.c5 Ba6+ 20.Kf2 △Nf3–e5 20...Rhe8™ 21.Nf3 Re2+ 22.Kg1= △Nd4]
14.Bxc6+ Bd7 [△e×f4]
15.Bxd7+? [White should have exchanged queens with the following continuation:]
[¹15.Bxa8 exf4! 16.Qxe7+ Kxe7 17.Bf3 fxg3 18.hxg3 Bxa1 19.c5 Nc8³]
15...Qxd7 16.Nd2 0–0 17.fxe5 Rae8! [△R×e5]
18.0–0–0 Rxe5‚ 19.Qd3 Ra5?!-/+[Black is completely better, But the rush to attack decreases his advantage. He could have obtained a huge advantage with:]
[19...Rfe8!–+ △Re2]
The brilliant trio of FIDE http://Chess.com Grand Swiss winners:
🥇 Wang Hao (his second trophy is for the qualification to the FIDE Candidates Tournament 2020)
🥈 Fabiano Caruana
🥉 Kirill Alekseenko
🥇 Wang Hao (his second trophy is for the qualification to the FIDE Candidates Tournament 2020)
🥈 Fabiano Caruana
🥉 Kirill Alekseenko
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Kirill Alekseenko, a 22-year-old player from Saint Petersburg, has drawn with Alexander Grischuk, Magnus Carlsen, Wesley So, and Vishy Anand, has beaten Sergey Karjakin and he's currently fighting for a spot in the Candidates tournament. Quite an ascent.
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Wang Hao, a 30-year-old Chinese grandmaster, secures a sensational spot in the 2020 Candidates tournament with a fine performance in the FIDE Grand Swiss, an event filled with many superstars. Notably, two Chinese players in a Candidates tournament is a historic first.
The proud holders of GM norms for their #IOMchess performance (from L to R):
Jonas Buhl Bjerre (15-year-old)
Raunak Sadhwani (13-year-old)
Vincent Keymer (14-year-old)
Dinara Saduakassova
Soumya Swaminathan
Congratulations! 👏👏👏
Jonas Buhl Bjerre (15-year-old)
Raunak Sadhwani (13-year-old)
Vincent Keymer (14-year-old)
Dinara Saduakassova
Soumya Swaminathan
Congratulations! 👏👏👏
The top women’s prize of #IOMChess ($10,000) was shared by Harika Dronavalli 🇮🇳 and Dinara Saduakassova 🇰🇿 who both scored 5½ points, with the Indian player receiving the trophy on a better tie-break.
One of the earlier encounters between Karpov and Kasparov. This one is from Moscow 1981. And they had no idea how big will be the rivalry between them.
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"It so often happens that, after sacrificing a pawn, a player aims not to obtain the initiative for it, but to regain sacrificed material."
🔸 Efim Geller
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🔸 Efim Geller
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Mikhail Tal, A Positional Player, Part I
https://www.chess.com/blog/kamalakanta/mikhail-tal-a-positional-player-part-i
https://www.chess.com/blog/kamalakanta/mikhail-tal-a-positional-player-part-i
Chess.com
Mikhail Tal, A Positional Player, Part I
Dear chess lovers, this post is based on the book "Mikhail Tal's Best Games 1, 1949-1959, The Magic of Youth", by Tibor Karolyi I have selected a few of Tal's games that show his positional skills. We all know he is famous a a "tactician', but my point of…
Soviet grandmaster Lev Polugaevsky, pictured in play against Gyula Sax (Hungary), in the opening round of the AVRO tournament at Hilversum, 12th June 1973.
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A magnificent piece of footage from the end of the famous 1953 Candidates tournament, featuring David Bronstein, Paul Keres, Samuel Reshevsky, Mark Taimanov, Vassily Smyslov and others. bit.ly/2BtLF8l
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