π 21.Nd2
Pourramezanali has missed the strongest continuation: 21.NaΓc5!! BΓc5 22.Rh6+- (with the idea of Rdh1) White is completely winning.
21.Ng6 Ne4 +/-
Pourramezanali has missed the strongest continuation: 21.NaΓc5!! BΓc5 22.Rh6+- (with the idea of Rdh1) White is completely winning.
21.Ng6 Ne4 +/-
π 62.Rd1??
In the time trouble, Amirreza made a fatal blunder.
He should have played 62.Rc8 Nc5+ 63.RΓc5 KΓc5 64.g6 +- and White would be completely winning.
62.Kc4 63.Rd6 Nc5+ 64.Ka5 Rb5#
In the time trouble, Amirreza made a fatal blunder.
He should have played 62.Rc8 Nc5+ 63.RΓc5 KΓc5 64.g6 +- and White would be completely winning.
62.Kc4 63.Rd6 Nc5+ 64.Ka5 Rb5#
π30...h5?
Black has wrongly weakened his kingside. (Better is 30...BΓf6 31.RΓe4 Nc5 32.BΓc5 QΓc5=)
31.Bf5! BΓf6
(31...gΓf5 32.QΓh5 Black cannot escape mate).
32.BΓe4 Qg5+ 33.Rg3 Nf4+ 34.RΓf4 QΓf4 35.BΓc6 BΓd4 36.cΓd4 Rf6 37.Be4 Kg7 38.BΓg6 1-0
Black has wrongly weakened his kingside. (Better is 30...BΓf6 31.RΓe4 Nc5 32.BΓc5 QΓc5=)
31.Bf5! BΓf6
(31...gΓf5 32.QΓh5 Black cannot escape mate).
32.BΓe4 Qg5+ 33.Rg3 Nf4+ 34.RΓf4 QΓf4 35.BΓc6 BΓd4 36.cΓd4 Rf6 37.Be4 Kg7 38.BΓg6 1-0
π 23.Rf1!
An excellent idea. White calculates that the exchange of queens on d4 will enable his c-pawn to provide the passed d6 pawn with some very effective assistance. This requires the rook to immediately return to the b-file which to me all makes quite an impression. 23...Qd4+ 24.Qxd4 cxd4 25.Rb1! Bd7 26.Bf3 b6 27.c5 Rc8 26.c6!
An excellent idea. White calculates that the exchange of queens on d4 will enable his c-pawn to provide the passed d6 pawn with some very effective assistance. This requires the rook to immediately return to the b-file which to me all makes quite an impression. 23...Qd4+ 24.Qxd4 cxd4 25.Rb1! Bd7 26.Bf3 b6 27.c5 Rc8 26.c6!
π16...Na5!
The start of an efficient reorganization of Black's forces which gives fair counterplay on the light squares. 17.b3 Rc8 18.Bd2 Bc6 19.Re1 0-0 20.g3 Nb7 and then 20...Nc5.
The start of an efficient reorganization of Black's forces which gives fair counterplay on the light squares. 17.b3 Rc8 18.Bd2 Bc6 19.Re1 0-0 20.g3 Nb7 and then 20...Nc5.
πUnity Chess Multiple Choice 299
B: e5 β 5
πππππππ 63%
C: g5 β 2
πππ 25%
A: QΓd6 β 1
π 13%
π₯ 8 people voted so far.
B: e5 β 5
πππππππ 63%
C: g5 β 2
πππ 25%
A: QΓd6 β 1
π 13%
π₯ 8 people voted so far.
πUnity Chess Multiple Choice 300
C: Nf7 β 6
πππππππ 67%
A: g4 β 3
ππππ 33%
B: Ne4
β«οΈ 0%
π₯ 9 people voted so far.
C: Nf7 β 6
πππππππ 67%
A: g4 β 3
ππππ 33%
B: Ne4
β«οΈ 0%
π₯ 9 people voted so far.
The official opening of the 1984 Hoogovens Wijk aan Zee tournament. Left foreground: Korchnoi, then (L to R) Predrag NikoliΔ, Aleksandr Beliavsky, Vladimir Tukmakov, ?, Genna Sosonko.
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Sports diplomacy at work: Filipino President Ferdinand Marcos arriving to welcome Anatoly Karpov in Baguio City, July 1978. I've never seen another world chess champion riding in a military jeep to review the troops.
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The 7th round of the Amsterdam IBM tournament, 21st July 1970. Boris Spassky is in play v. Georgi Tringov; Hein Donner is in play v. Hans Ree.
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A brief colour film from the opening round of the 20th Chess Olympiad, Skopje, Yugoslavia, September 19, 1972.
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