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🔸London Chess Classic 2017
🔸Round 9
⚪️Aronian,Levon (2805)
⚫️Carlsen,Magnus (2837)
🔸0-1
🔸Round 9
⚪️Aronian,Levon (2805)
⚫️Carlsen,Magnus (2837)
🔸0-1
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🔸London Chess Classic 2017
🔸Round 9
⚪️Anand,Viswanathan (2782)
⚫️So,Wesley (2788)
🔸0-1
🔸Round 9
⚪️Anand,Viswanathan (2782)
⚫️So,Wesley (2788)
🔸0-1
The press centre at the 1984 World Chess Championship in Moscow: Vasiukov, Tal, Polugaevsky, Gipslis, Bykhovsky...
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Analysis of the game Korchnoi-Kasparov, 25th Olympiad, Lucerne 1982
Maia Chiburdanidze, Nana Ioselani, Aivars Gipslis, Nona Gaprindashvili, Nana Alexandria, Garry Kasparov, Eduard Gufeld.
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Maia Chiburdanidze, Nana Ioselani, Aivars Gipslis, Nona Gaprindashvili, Nana Alexandria, Garry Kasparov, Eduard Gufeld.
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Former World Champion Max Euwe in play v. Wolfgang Unzicker, Round 1, top board of the Netherlands-West Germany match, Utrecht, 13th March 1954.
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📘 59.R×f5?=
It gives black an opportunity to equalize the game with Re8 and then Re1.
The winning continuation was:
59.Ra3! with the idea of Rf3 —-> K×f5. White with Covering 3rd-rank prevents the black rook to transfer the 8th-rank, for example, 59.Ra3 Rh8 60.Ne2+ Kd5 61.Rc3 +- Please see the diagram below👇👇👇
It gives black an opportunity to equalize the game with Re8 and then Re1.
The winning continuation was:
59.Ra3! with the idea of Rf3 —-> K×f5. White with Covering 3rd-rank prevents the black rook to transfer the 8th-rank, for example, 59.Ra3 Rh8 60.Ne2+ Kd5 61.Rc3 +- Please see the diagram below👇👇👇
📘 In this position, white can win the game with the following processes:
1-transferring the king to d2.
2-Ne2
3-Rf1
4-Moving the king to f2 to defend g2-pawn.
5-Now Rc1
6- Maneuvering Ng1-Nf3-Ne1 and c2-pawn will eventually fall.
1-transferring the king to d2.
2-Ne2
3-Rf1
4-Moving the king to f2 to defend g2-pawn.
5-Now Rc1
6- Maneuvering Ng1-Nf3-Ne1 and c2-pawn will eventually fall.
📘 36.c4?
It turns out to be a blunder that costs a pawn.
36...Nd6 37.Rc7 d×c4 38.B×c4 Ra1+ 39.Kf2 Rc1 40.b6 N×c4 41.b7 Rb1 42.R×c4 R×b7 -/+
It turns out to be a blunder that costs a pawn.
36...Nd6 37.Rc7 d×c4 38.B×c4 Ra1+ 39.Kf2 Rc1 40.b6 N×c4 41.b7 Rb1 42.R×c4 R×b7 -/+
📘 70.Rh4?!
Allowing black to play f5.
70.g4! was simpler and more logical which white draw should be secure: 70.g4 Ra6 71.Kg3 Kf7 72.Rh6! Ke6 73.g5 =
Allowing black to play f5.
70.g4! was simpler and more logical which white draw should be secure: 70.g4 Ra6 71.Kg3 Kf7 72.Rh6! Ke6 73.g5 =
📘 12.Nb3!
White has more space so he keeps his knight on the board. Ivanchuk retreats his knight to b3 instead of f3 because the typical square for Black's dark-squared bishop is h6; with the knight on f3, the f4-pawn would then require guarding by the queen (of course White is not going to weaken the long light diagonal with g2-g3 just to guard the f-pawn).َ Also In some lines, Black castles long and it won't hurt for White to station a piece on the queenside to facilitate matters there.
White has more space so he keeps his knight on the board. Ivanchuk retreats his knight to b3 instead of f3 because the typical square for Black's dark-squared bishop is h6; with the knight on f3, the f4-pawn would then require guarding by the queen (of course White is not going to weaken the long light diagonal with g2-g3 just to guard the f-pawn).َ Also In some lines, Black castles long and it won't hurt for White to station a piece on the queenside to facilitate matters there.
16...Nb8!
Wonderful defensive resilience from Ivanchuk. Now, c4-c5 runs into ...Ba6 and Black also has the possibility of regrouping with ...Ba6, ...Nb7, .. .d7-d6 and ...Nd7, killing White's ambitions on the queenside.
16...h5 17.c5! White has the upper hand.
16...f3 17.Bh3 Nb8 18.Nd2 Ba6 19.Bg4 and after Re1-e3, the pawn on f3 will fall.
Wonderful defensive resilience from Ivanchuk. Now, c4-c5 runs into ...Ba6 and Black also has the possibility of regrouping with ...Ba6, ...Nb7, .. .d7-d6 and ...Nd7, killing White's ambitions on the queenside.
16...h5 17.c5! White has the upper hand.
16...f3 17.Bh3 Nb8 18.Nd2 Ba6 19.Bg4 and after Re1-e3, the pawn on f3 will fall.