π 35.d5!
A great idea. White will show that in addition to the two advanced passed pawns, there is a third important factor in the position. The chance to use the presence of opposite-colored bishops to assist in building an attack on black's king.
A great idea. White will show that in addition to the two advanced passed pawns, there is a third important factor in the position. The chance to use the presence of opposite-colored bishops to assist in building an attack on black's king.
πUnity Chess Multiple Choice 263
A: Bb5 β 7
πππππππ 58%
C: Qa4 β 4
ππππ 33%
B: b4 β 1
π 8%
π₯ 12 people voted so far.
A: Bb5 β 7
πππππππ 58%
C: Qa4 β 4
ππππ 33%
B: b4 β 1
π 8%
π₯ 12 people voted so far.
πUnity Chess Multiple Choice 264
A: a5 β 9
πππππππ 64%
B: e4 β 4
πππ 29%
C: BΓf6 β 1
π 7%
π₯ 14 people voted so far.
A: a5 β 9
πππππππ 64%
B: e4 β 4
πππ 29%
C: BΓf6 β 1
π 7%
π₯ 14 people voted so far.
At the Amsterdam IBM tournament, May 1981. Vlastimil Hort, Anatoly Karpov, Lubosh Kavalek and Jan Timman.
@UnityChess
@UnityChess
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πΈInternational Fajr Cup (IRI) 2018
πΈRound 1
βͺοΈFirouzja, Alireza (2548)
β«οΈKhamisi, S Jafar (2236)
πΈ1-0
πΈRound 1
βͺοΈFirouzja, Alireza (2548)
β«οΈKhamisi, S Jafar (2236)
πΈ1-0
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πΈInternational Fajr Cup (IRI) 2018
πΈRound 1
βͺοΈHosseinzadeh Nima (2254)
β«οΈIdani Pouya (2595)
πΈ1-0
πΈRound 1
βͺοΈHosseinzadeh Nima (2254)
β«οΈIdani Pouya (2595)
πΈ1-0
π π π π
πΉ Viswanathan Anand
πΉ Indian chess Grandmaster
β¦οΈ Viswanathan "Vishy" Anand is an Indian chess grandmaster, a former World Chess Champion, and the current World Rapid Chess Champion.
Anand became India's first grandmaster in 1988.
βͺοΈ Full name: Anand or Anand Vishwanathan[1]
βͺοΈ Country: India
βͺοΈ Born : 11 December 1969 (age 49) Mayiladuthurai, Tamil Nadu
βͺοΈ Title: Grandmaster (1988)
βͺοΈ World Champion: 2000β2002 (FIDE) 2007β2013
βͺοΈ FIDE rating: 2767 (February 2018)
βͺοΈ Peak rating: 2817 (March 2011)
βͺοΈ Ranking: No. 9 (October 2017)
βͺοΈ Peak ranking : No. 1 (April 2007)
β¦οΈ Anandβs first tilt at the World Championship cycle took place during the last of the traditional FIDE cycles that had been established after World War II, albeit a cycle cut short at the final by Kasparovβs split from FIDE in 1993. Anand kicked off his world championship campaign when he won the gold medal at the 1990 Asian Zonal Championship, qualifying for the Manila Interzonal later that year. He came third at that Interzonal, half a point behind co-leaders Vassily Ivanchuk and Boris Gelfand, thereby qualifying for the Candidates Matches. In 1991, he defeated Alexey Dreev in Chennai in the first round of Candidates matches, but lost to Anatoly Karpov in Brussels in the quarter finals.
β¦οΈ A memorable game by Anand ππΌππΌ
πΈ Mikhail Tal vs Viswanathan Anand
πΈ Cannes GMA (4) (1989), Cannes FRA, Feb-??
πΈ English Opening: Symmetrical Variation. General (A30)
π’Download annotated video file of this game from below URLππΌππΌ
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HRC_xvA8v1Q
β¦οΈ Review and download PGN fileππΌππΌ
@unitychess
πΉ Viswanathan Anand
πΉ Indian chess Grandmaster
β¦οΈ Viswanathan "Vishy" Anand is an Indian chess grandmaster, a former World Chess Champion, and the current World Rapid Chess Champion.
Anand became India's first grandmaster in 1988.
βͺοΈ Full name: Anand or Anand Vishwanathan[1]
βͺοΈ Country: India
βͺοΈ Born : 11 December 1969 (age 49) Mayiladuthurai, Tamil Nadu
βͺοΈ Title: Grandmaster (1988)
βͺοΈ World Champion: 2000β2002 (FIDE) 2007β2013
βͺοΈ FIDE rating: 2767 (February 2018)
βͺοΈ Peak rating: 2817 (March 2011)
βͺοΈ Ranking: No. 9 (October 2017)
βͺοΈ Peak ranking : No. 1 (April 2007)
β¦οΈ Anandβs first tilt at the World Championship cycle took place during the last of the traditional FIDE cycles that had been established after World War II, albeit a cycle cut short at the final by Kasparovβs split from FIDE in 1993. Anand kicked off his world championship campaign when he won the gold medal at the 1990 Asian Zonal Championship, qualifying for the Manila Interzonal later that year. He came third at that Interzonal, half a point behind co-leaders Vassily Ivanchuk and Boris Gelfand, thereby qualifying for the Candidates Matches. In 1991, he defeated Alexey Dreev in Chennai in the first round of Candidates matches, but lost to Anatoly Karpov in Brussels in the quarter finals.
β¦οΈ A memorable game by Anand ππΌππΌ
πΈ Mikhail Tal vs Viswanathan Anand
πΈ Cannes GMA (4) (1989), Cannes FRA, Feb-??
πΈ English Opening: Symmetrical Variation. General (A30)
π’Download annotated video file of this game from below URLππΌππΌ
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HRC_xvA8v1Q
β¦οΈ Review and download PGN fileππΌππΌ
@unitychess
YouTube
The Only Game Ever Played between Mikhail Tal and Viswanathan Anand
Download Mproov and Improve Your Chess Today! https://app.mproov.me/AgadYouTube1
Follow MprooV on Twitter https://twitter.com/mproovapp #agadmator It was the game 5 of a "Youth vs veterans" tournament played as part of the 4th Games Festival of Cannes thatβ¦
Follow MprooV on Twitter https://twitter.com/mproovapp #agadmator It was the game 5 of a "Youth vs veterans" tournament played as part of the 4th Games Festival of Cannes thatβ¦
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πΈ Mikhail Tal vs Viswanathan Anand
πΈ Cannes GMA (4) (1989), Cannes FRA, Feb-??
πΈ English Opening: Symmetrical Variation. General (A30)
@unitychess
πΈ Cannes GMA (4) (1989), Cannes FRA, Feb-??
πΈ English Opening: Symmetrical Variation. General (A30)
@unitychess
@unitychess Tall-Anand 1989.pgn
691 B
πΈ Mikhail Tal - Viswanathan Anand, Cannes 1989
πΈ PGN format
πΈ PGN format
π 23...RΓd4?
A poisoned pawn!
24.Bf2 Rc4 25.Rad1 Nd5 26.Nc5! Qf7 27.NΓe6! 1-0
A poisoned pawn!
24.Bf2 Rc4 25.Rad1 Nd5 26.Nc5! Qf7 27.NΓe6! 1-0