Unity Chess Club
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Forwarded from Unity Chess Club
▪️ About this game Bronstien has noted:
" Korchnoi remained unruffled. He wrote down my move on his scoresheet and began carefully studying the position. I think it seemed incredible to him that White could sacrifice his last rook (I myself could not believe my eyes!). And only when he had convinced himself, did he stop the clocks. These are the variations: A) 39...Kf7 40.Qc7+ Kg8 41.Qc8+ Kf7 42.Qe6+ Kf8 43.Rh8 mate; B) 39...Kg5 40.Qe5+ Kxg4 41.Rg6+ Kh4 42.Qg5 mate; C) 39...gxh6 40.Qg8+ Kf6 41.Qf8+; D) 39...Kxh6 40.Qh8+ Kg6 41.Qh5+ Kf6 42.g5+!"
[ ... New In Chess, 2007/1. For the Love of the Game, pp. 56–61 ... ]

♦️ Review this informative and tactical game and download PGN file👇🏼
Forwarded from Unity Chess Club
@Bronstein-Korchnoi 1962.pgn
743 B
🔸 David Bronstein - Viktor Korchnoi, Leningrad-Moscow (1962), round 2
🔸 PGN format

@unitychess
Judit Polgar and Magnus Carlsen in the London Eye in May 2013 (REX Archive).

🔗 Olimpiu G. Urcan (@olimpiuurcan)
Magnus Carlsen is among the players in action in 1 hour as the FIDE Online World Corporate Chess Championship begins! https://chess24.com/en/read/news/carlsen-giri-nepo-play-fide-world-corporate-championship
#c24live
A draw in the top game (maybe with a miss for Magnus?), but it's Sberbank's boards 2-4 that make them favourites in their group
#c24live #CorporateChess
day 1 games at the FIDE_chess Online World Corporate Chess Championship:

https://worldcorporate.fide.com
1964, Amsterdam, interzonal tournament. Now it looks like a small "open" of 24 participants, but then we played for over a month! 12 tables, a special volunteer records the moves so that there is no confusion in the recording!

🔗 Sergey Kim (@sergey\_e\_kim)
You must be able to handle a variety of move orders during the first 5-6 moves - otherwise you'll find yourself 'tricked' time and time again.

🔸 Edmar Mednis

@UnityChessClub
Once in a conversation with Keres I mentioned this and even compared Botvinnik with a bulldozer, which sweeps away everything in its path. Keres smiled and said: 'But can you imagine what it was like to play him when he was young?'

🔗 Chess History (@MrMarksTV)
Tilburg (Netherlands), 29th September 1980.
The opening moves of what would become a famous game - World Champion Anatoly Karpov v. ex-World Champion Boris Spassky from the 9th round of the Interpolis tournament.

🔗 Douglas Griffin (@dgriffinchess)
The 20th Olympiad, Skopje, Yugoslavia 1972. In the 1st round of the 'A' final (played 27th September), Zoltán Ribli faces Mikhail Tal on Board 4 of the Hungary v. USSR match. The game was drawn; the Hungarians won the match 2½:1½.

🔗 Douglas Griffin (@dgriffinchess)

The 20th Olympiad, Skopje1972