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πΈEuropean Rapid Championship 2017
πΈRound 10
βͺοΈTari,Aryan (2593)
β«οΈZhigalko,Sergei (2641)
πΈ0-1
πΈRound 10
βͺοΈTari,Aryan (2593)
β«οΈZhigalko,Sergei (2641)
πΈ0-1
π 11.Ng5!
Preventing Black from castling and also to prepare the maneuver Ne4-d6.
11...Nc6
(11...o-o 12.Qb1! +/-)
(11...h6 12.Ne4)
12.Qh5 Qe7 13.h4 Bb7 14.Rh3
Preventing Black from castling and also to prepare the maneuver Ne4-d6.
11...Nc6
(11...o-o 12.Qb1! +/-)
(11...h6 12.Ne4)
12.Qh5 Qe7 13.h4 Bb7 14.Rh3
π 23.RΓa6
An interesting exchange sacrifice by the 20 years old, Russian Grandmaster.
23...Ne4
(23...BΓa6 24.Rf3)
24.Rf3 Qe8 25.Bf4 BΓa6 26.QΓe4 +/-
An interesting exchange sacrifice by the 20 years old, Russian Grandmaster.
23...Ne4
(23...BΓa6 24.Rf3)
24.Rf3 Qe8 25.Bf4 BΓa6 26.QΓe4 +/-
π 28.Bh2?
Yuffa missed his opportunity. He could have obtained a huge advantage by playing:
(28.BΓh5! Qd7 29.Bg4 +-)
(28.BΓh5! RΓh5?? 29.Qa8+ Mate in 3 Moves)
Yuffa missed his opportunity. He could have obtained a huge advantage by playing:
(28.BΓh5! Qd7 29.Bg4 +-)
(28.BΓh5! RΓh5?? 29.Qa8+ Mate in 3 Moves)
π 27.RΓg6+
Mamedyarov's finishing sacrifice
KΓg6 28.Ne5+ 1-0
(if 28...Kf5 29.e4+ Kf4 30.Qf6#)
(if 28...kg7 or 28...Kh6 the black king will soon be checkmated)
Mamedyarov's finishing sacrifice
KΓg6 28.Ne5+ 1-0
(if 28...Kf5 29.e4+ Kf4 30.Qf6#)
(if 28...kg7 or 28...Kh6 the black king will soon be checkmated)
π 12...Qf5!!
Strangely enough, Black gets compensation with the following: 1. White's disfigured, doubled f-pawns and isolated h-pawn. 2. When White takes the exchange on f8, his bishop has trouble returning, since Be7 is met by ... f5-f6!, continuing to imprison it (a theme Short was, unfortunately, unable to evade anyway later in the game!) 3. White's rooks just don't work well in the resulting position. It seems Black stands equal at a minimum after the acceptance.
Strangely enough, Black gets compensation with the following: 1. White's disfigured, doubled f-pawns and isolated h-pawn. 2. When White takes the exchange on f8, his bishop has trouble returning, since Be7 is met by ... f5-f6!, continuing to imprison it (a theme Short was, unfortunately, unable to evade anyway later in the game!) 3. White's rooks just don't work well in the resulting position. It seems Black stands equal at a minimum after the acceptance.
π 18...Nxe3!
This sacrifice is standard issue in ...e5xd4 King's Indian lines, but usually, this sac only occurs when queens remain on the board. In this case, not only have queens come off but Black is down a pawn as well as the exchange. As it turns out, the position is something of an anomaly and Kramnik's sac is absolutely sound. His ferocious piece activity, coupled with threats against a2, see to it that he is the only one with chances to win.
18...Nb4 19.Nxb4 Rxe3 20.Bc4=
18...Ne7? 19.Bc4+/-
This sacrifice is standard issue in ...e5xd4 King's Indian lines, but usually, this sac only occurs when queens remain on the board. In this case, not only have queens come off but Black is down a pawn as well as the exchange. As it turns out, the position is something of an anomaly and Kramnik's sac is absolutely sound. His ferocious piece activity, coupled with threats against a2, see to it that he is the only one with chances to win.
18...Nb4 19.Nxb4 Rxe3 20.Bc4=
18...Ne7? 19.Bc4+/-
πUnity Chess Multiple Choice 183
C: Qe8 β 10
πππππππ 67%
A: a6 β 3
ππ 20%
B: f5 β 2
π 13%
π₯ 15 people voted so far.
C: Qe8 β 10
πππππππ 67%
A: a6 β 3
ππ 20%
B: f5 β 2
π 13%
π₯ 15 people voted so far.
πUnity Chess Multiple Choice 184
C: f4 β 10
πππππππ 59%
B: h6 β 4
πππ 24%
A: e5 β 3
ππ 18%
π₯ 17 people voted so far.
C: f4 β 10
πππππππ 59%
B: h6 β 4
πππ 24%
A: e5 β 3
ππ 18%
π₯ 17 people voted so far.
The playing hall at the 12th Olympiad, Moscow, 1st September 1956. 1st round, preliminary groups. Among the pairings: Poland-Switzerland (bottom left); USSR-Sweden (top centre).
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