Unity Chess Club
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Solution explained by Daniel King
Tactical cascade - Chess puzzle of the week - White to play and win #shorts
Simul then and now (well, 2 weeks ago). Find the only difference... πŸ˜‚πŸ‘€

πŸ”— Judit Polgar (@GMJuditPolgar)
⛡️| Norway Chess 2021 πŸ’˜ 4 days to go!

Norway Chess is a 6-player double round-robin featuring World Champion Magnus Carlsen and taking place in the Clarion Hotel Energy in Stavanger, Norway from 7-17 September. Each of the 10 rounds consists of a classical game where a win is worth 3 points and a loss 0. If the players draw they play an Armageddon game, where the winner earns 1.5 points and the loser 1 point. No draw offers are allowed before move 30.

https://chess24.com/en/watch/live-tournaments/norway-chess-2021
Former world champion Max Euwe with his wife before embarking on a tour of Iceland and Americas in November/December 1948.

πŸ”— Olimpiu G. Urcan (@olimpiuurcan)
"The development of beauty in chess never depends on you alone. No matter how much imagination and creativity you invest, you still do not create beauty. Your opponent must react at the same highest level."

πŸ”Έ Vladimir Kramnik

@UnityChessClub
Another interesting 1978 photograph of Kasparov from the Sputnik archive.

πŸ”— Olimpiu G. Urcan (@olimpiuurcan)
A nice photo of Garry Kasparov that I found in an old Russian book. βš½οΈβ™Ÿ

πŸ”— David Llada β™ž (@davidllada)
Two further Sputnik archive photographs of Anatoly Karpov from the 1970s. The laptop computer was yet to be invented.

πŸ”— Olimpiu G. Urcan (@olimpiuurcan)
Via http://chesspro.ru, a photo of the young Vladislav Artemiev (b. Omsk, Russian Federation, 5th March 1998).

πŸ”— Douglas Griffin (@dgriffinchess)
Daily chess puzzle
Lombardy - Reshevsky, New York 1956
https://chesspuzzle.net/Puzzle/348580
Happy 41st Birthday to Hungarian GM PΓ©ter LΓ©kΓ³!

A winner of several major chess events, Leko narrowly missed becoming the 2004 Classical World champion when he drew the match vs Kramnik. In 2005 & 2007 FIDE World Championships, he finished 5th & 4th respectively.
If I play the King’s Gambit whatever my result is I’ll have some fun!" (Nepomniachtchi) Big report on a dramatic Day 2 of #NorwayChess:

https://chess24.com/en/read/news/norway-chess-2-nepo-beats-firouzja-with-king-s-gambit
Alekhine during a 40-board simultaneous exhibition in Riga on September 12, 1935. It was probably the worst simul performance of his career: he won 9 games, lost 15, and drew 16 (State Russian Museum's Archive).

πŸ”— Olimpiu G. Urcan (@olimpiuurcan)