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@unitychess Short-Kasparov London1993.pgn
436 B
🔹 Nigel Short - Garry Kasparov, London 1993
🔹 PGN format

@unitychess
🔸Aeroflot Open Moscow 2018
🔸Round 5
⚪️Firouzja,Alireza (2549)
⚫️Debashis,Das (2501)
🔸1-0
📘 27.R×g7+!!
A finishing sacrifice by Alireza Firouzja.
(27...K×g7 28.N×e6+

A)28...Kf7 29.Nd5! K×e6 30.Qg4+ Kf7 31.Rf1 Nf6 32.R×f6#

B)28...Kh8 29.Bd4+ Kg8 30.Rg1+ Kf7 31.Rg7+ K×e6 32.Qg4#)

28.Rg1 B×c3 29.R×g7+ K×g7 30.b×c3 Nf8 31.Qg4+ Kf7 32.Bh6 1-0
In January 2016, he won the Iranian national championship at age 12.
🔸Aeroflot Open Moscow 2018
🔸Round 6
⚪️Fedoseev,Vladimir (2724)
⚫️Tabatabaei,M.Amin (2577)
🔸0-1
📘 26.Qf1??
Fedoseev's blunder.
(26.g6+ Ke7 27.Qf1= Now, The diagonal of the bishop e7 is closed.)
26.Nc5+ 27.Ka3 R×h5! 28.Rg1
(28.g×f6 R×h1 29.Q×h1 Qa6+ 30.Kb4 Qa4#)
28...Qc2 29.b4 a5! 30.g×f6 a×b4+ 31.c×b4 Qa4+ 32.Kb2 Qd4+ -+ Black is completely winning.
Vladimir Fedoseev was the runner-up in 2018 World Rapid Chess Championship.
🔸Aeroflot Open Moscow 2018
🔸Round 6
⚪️Andreikin,Dmitry (2712)
⚫️Paravyan,David (2603)
🔸½-½
📘 31.B×g6?
In mutual time trouble, Andreikin made a blunder.
31...R×f4?
[31...f×g6 32.R×f8
(32.Q×e6+ Q×e6 33.R×e6 Rf×f4 34.g×f4 Kf7 -+)
32...K×f8 33.Qf6+ Bf7 34.Re7 Kg8! 35.R×a7 Qd5 -+]
32.Bh7+! K×h7 33.Q×h5 Kg7 34.Qg5+ Kh7 35.Qh5+ Kg7 36.Qg5+ =
🔸Aeroflot Open Moscow 2018
🔸Round 6
⚪️Sasikiran,Krishnan (2671)
⚫️Tari,Aryan (2597)
🔸1-0
📘 25...N×e5?
Iranian Norwegian Aryan Tari has miscalculated. (25...Rfa8=)
26.B×f8 N×d3 27.Q×d3 Q×f4 28.Bd6!
He probably overlooked this intermediate move.
28...Q×d6 29.Ne5 +-
Open Aeroflot 2018 — excerpt from the results of round 8
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Open Aeroflot 2018-round 8
Pgn_Open Aeroflot 2018-round 1-8.pgn
283.3 KB
🔹 Open Aeroflot 2018 round 1-8
🔹 PGN format
⚪️#303 (Strategy-White to Move)
🔸Polugaevsky,Lev (2595)
🔸Torre,Eugenio (2560)
🔸Biel, 1989
📕 26.d5!
White opens up the position for his bishops and prepares to block the rook's path with tempo. Of course the move also crucially contains a threat to c6 which cannot be ignored. 26...cxd5 27.Bb5!
⚪️#304 (Strategy-White to Move)
🔸Kramnik,Vladimir (2770)
🔸Kasparov,Garry (2849)
🔸World Chess Championship London 2000
📕 20.g4!
Excellent - having achieved the best available rearrangement of his queenside forces, White switches to the king-side. In the absence of queens, this is not so much about the direct attack, but Kramnik well understands the potential of the significant spatial gains his plan will net, even with reduced material.
⚪️#305 (Strategy-White to Move)
🔸Hebden,Mark (2549)
🔸Davies,Nigel R (2502)
🔸Gibraltar Masters Catalan Bay ENG 2004
📕Unity Chess Multiple Choice 305

B: f4 – 4
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍 67%

A: d5 – 2
👍👍👍👍 33%

C: Rdg1
▫️ 0%

👥 6 people voted so far.