πUnity Chess Multiple Choice 185
B: Qg3 β 10
πππππππ 63%
C: f5 β 4
πππ 25%
A: Qf2 β 2
π 13%
π₯ 16 people voted so far.
B: Qg3 β 10
πππππππ 63%
C: f5 β 4
πππ 25%
A: Qf2 β 2
π 13%
π₯ 16 people voted so far.
πUnity Chess Multiple Choice 186
A: Rab8 β 7
πππππππ 47%
B: Bg4 β 7
πππππππ 47%
C: a5 β 1
π 7%
π₯ 15 people voted so far.
A: Rab8 β 7
πππππππ 47%
B: Bg4 β 7
πππππππ 47%
C: a5 β 1
π 7%
π₯ 15 people voted so far.
Paul Keres v. Sammy Reshevsky, 11th round, FIDE Candidates' Tournament, ZΓΌrich/Neuhausen, 16th September 1953.
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Sammy Reshevsky v. Vassily Smyslov, 10th round, FIDE Candidates' Tournament, ZΓΌrich/Neuhausen, 15th September 1953.
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πΈNutcracker Rapid 2017 Moscow
πΈRound 1
βͺοΈGelfand,Boris (2697)
β«οΈArtemiev,Vladislav (2691)
πΈ0-1
πΈRound 1
βͺοΈGelfand,Boris (2697)
β«οΈArtemiev,Vladislav (2691)
πΈ0-1
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πΈNutcracker Rapid 2017 Moscow
πΈRound 2
βͺοΈMamedyarov,Shakhriyar (2799)
β«οΈYuffa,Daniil (2522)
πΈ1-0
πΈRound 2
βͺοΈMamedyarov,Shakhriyar (2799)
β«οΈYuffa,Daniil (2522)
πΈ1-0
βͺοΈPaul Morphy
βͺοΈ American chess player
β¦οΈ Paul Charles Morphy was an American chess player.
β¦οΈ He is considered to have been the greatest chess master of his era and an unofficial World Chess Champion. He was a chess prodigy.
β«οΈ Full name Paul Charles Morphy
β«οΈ Country United States
β«οΈ Born June 22, 1837 New Orleans, Louisiana, United States
β«οΈ Died July 10, 1884 (aged 47) New Orleans, Louisiana, United States
β«οΈ World Champion 1858β62 (unofficial)
β¦οΈ A fantastic and informative game of Morphy ππΌππΌππΌ
β¦οΈ About this game:
" πΈ This game will make an impression on you.
πΈThe most instructive part of this game is how Morphy gives his opponent no time to do anything!
πΈAfter poor opening play (do not bring your queen out too early without GOOD reason!) by black he gets caught in a whirlwind of problems and from move 7 onwards every move is more or less forced!
πΈMorphy uses a powerful strategy (which you should attempt to emulate) of developing his pieces with a gain of time (piece comes out and hits the enemy queen, forcing her to move again instead of doing something productive) and pushes his opponent around until the final checkmate. "
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βͺοΈ American chess player
β¦οΈ Paul Charles Morphy was an American chess player.
β¦οΈ He is considered to have been the greatest chess master of his era and an unofficial World Chess Champion. He was a chess prodigy.
β«οΈ Full name Paul Charles Morphy
β«οΈ Country United States
β«οΈ Born June 22, 1837 New Orleans, Louisiana, United States
β«οΈ Died July 10, 1884 (aged 47) New Orleans, Louisiana, United States
β«οΈ World Champion 1858β62 (unofficial)
β¦οΈ A fantastic and informative game of Morphy ππΌππΌππΌ
β¦οΈ About this game:
" πΈ This game will make an impression on you.
πΈThe most instructive part of this game is how Morphy gives his opponent no time to do anything!
πΈAfter poor opening play (do not bring your queen out too early without GOOD reason!) by black he gets caught in a whirlwind of problems and from move 7 onwards every move is more or less forced!
πΈMorphy uses a powerful strategy (which you should attempt to emulate) of developing his pieces with a gain of time (piece comes out and hits the enemy queen, forcing her to move again instead of doing something productive) and pushes his opponent around until the final checkmate. "
@UnityChess
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βͺοΈ Paul Morphy vs James Mac Connel
βͺοΈ New Orleans | 1849
@UnityChessβͺοΈ Paul Morphy vs James Mac Connel
βͺοΈ New Orleans | 1849
βͺοΈ Download PGN file ππΌππΌππΌ
@UnityChess
βͺοΈ New Orleans | 1849
@UnityChessβͺοΈ Paul Morphy vs James Mac Connel
βͺοΈ New Orleans | 1849
βͺοΈ Download PGN file ππΌππΌππΌ
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π 28.a4!
A clever move that prevents black to play Rc7-Nd4 and obtain the equality.
28...bΓa4 (Nc7 29.Re1)
29.Bc4 Nc7
(29...Rc7 30.BΓe6 fΓe6 31.Ka2 +-)
39.Rd1 Ra8 31.Rd7 +-
A clever move that prevents black to play Rc7-Nd4 and obtain the equality.
28...bΓa4 (Nc7 29.Re1)
29.Bc4 Nc7
(29...Rc7 30.BΓe6 fΓe6 31.Ka2 +-)
39.Rd1 Ra8 31.Rd7 +-
π 33...BΓf3?? 34.Rf8+?
Mamedyarov's blunder. Both players here overlooked the obvious mate in two moves, by 34.Rh7+ Kg8 35.Qg7#
34...RΓf8 35.RΓe6 NΓe6 36.gΓf3 =
Mamedyarov's blunder. Both players here overlooked the obvious mate in two moves, by 34.Rh7+ Kg8 35.Qg7#
34...RΓf8 35.RΓe6 NΓe6 36.gΓf3 =