π 3...g5!?
A surprising novelty in the 3rd move by Fedoseev.
4.d4 Bg7 5.d5 Ne5 6.dΓe6 fΓe6 7.Nf3 Nf7 8.h4 g4 9.Ng5 Ne5 10.f4 Nc6 11.e3
In 2013 Romanov won the bronze medal at the European Individual Chess Championship.
A surprising novelty in the 3rd move by Fedoseev.
4.d4 Bg7 5.d5 Ne5 6.dΓe6 fΓe6 7.Nf3 Nf7 8.h4 g4 9.Ng5 Ne5 10.f4 Nc6 11.e3
In 2013 Romanov won the bronze medal at the European Individual Chess Championship.
π 43.Nf5+!
A spectacular finish!
43...RΓf5
(43...Kh7 44.Rg7+ Kh8 45.Rd7)
44.Rg6+! 1-0
(if 44...KΓg6 then, 45.eΓf5+ KΓf5 46.c7)
A spectacular finish!
43...RΓf5
(43...Kh7 44.Rg7+ Kh8 45.Rd7)
44.Rg6+! 1-0
(if 44...KΓg6 then, 45.eΓf5+ KΓf5 46.c7)
26.d5!
Emphasising the lack of coordination in Black's position by sticking a wedge between the two wings.
Emphasising the lack of coordination in Black's position by sticking a wedge between the two wings.
π 14.Ra2!
Frees the queen and ensures that any exchange of bishops should lead to pressure against b7.
Frees the queen and ensures that any exchange of bishops should lead to pressure against b7.
πUnity Chess Multiple Choice 307
C: Qc2 β 5
πππππππ 56%
A: Re1 β 3
ππππ 33%
B: Bf4 β 1
π 11%
π₯ 9 people voted so far.
C: Qc2 β 5
πππππππ 56%
A: Re1 β 3
ππππ 33%
B: Bf4 β 1
π 11%
π₯ 9 people voted so far.
πUnity Chess Multiple Choice 308
A: a4 β 6
πππππππ 55%
B: b3 β 4
πππππ 36%
C: h3 β 1
π 9%
π₯ 11 people voted so far.
A: a4 β 6
πππππππ 55%
B: b3 β 4
πππππ 36%
C: h3 β 1
π 9%
π₯ 11 people voted so far.
Seated, 1st row: V. Korchnoi (Leningrad), R. Nezhmetdinov (Kazan), arbiters Magergut, Bogatin & Cherkes, S. Furman (Leningrad), E. Stoliar (Leningrad).
2nd row: L. Polugaevsky (Kuibyshev), I. Veltmander (Izhevsk), G. Bastrikov (Sverdlovsk), G. Borisenko (Leningrad), V. Zagorovsky (Voronezh), V. Sergievsky (Cheboksary), B. Vladimirov (Leningrad). V. Zhilin (Rostov-on-Don), I. Efimov (Saratov), L. Shamkovich (Rostov-on-Don).
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2nd row: L. Polugaevsky (Kuibyshev), I. Veltmander (Izhevsk), G. Bastrikov (Sverdlovsk), G. Borisenko (Leningrad), V. Zagorovsky (Voronezh), V. Sergievsky (Cheboksary), B. Vladimirov (Leningrad). V. Zhilin (Rostov-on-Don), I. Efimov (Saratov), L. Shamkovich (Rostov-on-Don).
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This was the tournament in the famous game Polugaevsky-Nezhmetdinov (24...Rf4!!, etc.) was played.
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Silver medal winners at the 24th Olympiad in Malta - Hungary. Left to right: JΓ³zsef PintΓ©r, IvΓ‘n FaragΓ³, IstvΓ‘n Csom, Gyula Sax, ZoltΓ‘n Ribli, Lajos Portisch.
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Mikhail Tal and Mikhail Botvinnik during the opening ceremony of their first world championship match, March 1960.
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