📘 30...Bf4??
Black should simply have continued with 30...Nd6. Now, White has a winning intermediate move.
31.R×g8 R×g8 32.Nf6! Rc8
(32...Q×f6 33.Qe4+--->Qb7#)
33.Q×c4 +-
Black should simply have continued with 30...Nd6. Now, White has a winning intermediate move.
31.R×g8 R×g8 32.Nf6! Rc8
(32...Q×f6 33.Qe4+--->Qb7#)
33.Q×c4 +-
📘 34.Ra5
White is completely lost. He tries his last chance, but...
34...Q×a5!
Matlakov has calculated to the end!
35.Re7 Rd1+ 36.Kh2 Qe5+ 37.R×e5 N×e5 -+
White is completely lost. He tries his last chance, but...
34...Q×a5!
Matlakov has calculated to the end!
35.Re7 Rd1+ 36.Kh2 Qe5+ 37.R×e5 N×e5 -+
📘 29.Qe2!
This move wins by force.
29...Qf6
(29...Qe6 30.Q×e6+ K×e6 31.Re2+ +-)
30.B×f5 Q×f5 31.Qe7+ Kg6 32.Q×e8+ Kg7 33.Bf8!+ Kf6 34.Be7+ Kg7 35.Bf8+ Kf6 36.Re2 N×h2 37.Kg2 1-0
This move wins by force.
29...Qf6
(29...Qe6 30.Q×e6+ K×e6 31.Re2+ +-)
30.B×f5 Q×f5 31.Qe7+ Kg6 32.Q×e8+ Kg7 33.Bf8!+ Kf6 34.Be7+ Kg7 35.Bf8+ Kf6 36.Re2 N×h2 37.Kg2 1-0
📘 29.R×f7+!!
An excellent sacrifice by 28-year old Ukrainian GM Kravtsiv.
29...K×f7 30.B×e6+ Ke7
(30...K×e6 31.Q×e4+ With checkmate in a few moves)
31.Rc7+ Ke8 32.Q×e4 Qh2+ 33.Kf1 Q×c7 34.Q×g6+ Ke7 35.Qg7+ 1-0
(if 35...Kd6, then 36.Qe5+ Kc6 37.Qc5+ Kb7 38.Na5 +-)
An excellent sacrifice by 28-year old Ukrainian GM Kravtsiv.
29...K×f7 30.B×e6+ Ke7
(30...K×e6 31.Q×e4+ With checkmate in a few moves)
31.Rc7+ Ke8 32.Q×e4 Qh2+ 33.Kf1 Q×c7 34.Q×g6+ Ke7 35.Qg7+ 1-0
(if 35...Kd6, then 36.Qe5+ Kc6 37.Qc5+ Kb7 38.Na5 +-)
📘 23...Nd8!
Aronian has prepared to swap the bishops with ...Bc6. If White prevents it with Nb4, he can also consider ...c5-counterblow.
24.Nb4 Ra5!=.
Aronian has prepared to swap the bishops with ...Bc6. If White prevents it with Nb4, he can also consider ...c5-counterblow.
24.Nb4 Ra5!=.
📘 13.Nd3!
The congestion on the queenside makes Black's life difficult, while White has many different motifs to improve his position. 13...Qb6 14.Ne4+/-.
The congestion on the queenside makes Black's life difficult, while White has many different motifs to improve his position. 13...Qb6 14.Ne4+/-.
📕Unity Chess Multiple Choice 361
A: Ne1 – 6
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍 75%
B: B×d3 – 1
👍 13%
C: Qa4+ – 1
👍 13%
👥 8 people voted so far.
A: Ne1 – 6
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍 75%
B: B×d3 – 1
👍 13%
C: Qa4+ – 1
👍 13%
👥 8 people voted so far.
📕Unity Chess Multiple Choice 362
B: g4 – 8
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍 80%
A: Kb1 – 1
👍 10%
C: Ne5 – 1
👍 10%
👥 10 people voted so far.
B: g4 – 8
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍 80%
A: Kb1 – 1
👍 10%
C: Ne5 – 1
👍 10%
👥 10 people voted so far.
The 2018 GRENKE Chess Classic is a 10-player round-robin held in Germany from 31 March to 9 April. The first 3 rounds are in Karlsruhe alongside the GRENKE Chess Open, then after a rest day the last 6 rounds are in the Kulturhaus LA8 in Baden-Baden. The field features World Champion Magnus Carlsen and fellow Top 10 players Fabiano Caruana, Maxime Vachier-Lagrave, Vishy Anand and Levon Aronian, as well as women's no. 1 Hou Yifan. The time control is 100 minutes for 40 moves, then 50 minutes for 20 moves and then 15 minutes to the end of the game, with a 30-second increment from move 1. If players are tied for first place a rapid play-off will take place.
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