📕 White has a number of factors in his favor here but his pieces do not co-ordinate too well. Fortunately, this is easily taken care of. The most obvious is the knight, which needs to find a better square. On e6 the knight will completely dominate Black (g7, f8, and d8) and keep the e-file closed, until that very special moment when the knight moves and Black suffers a serious invasion. Therefore we should first improve the advanced rook as it occupies the transit square.
24.Rc6!
Here the rook is now perfectly placed and will be relatively undisturbed because it is on a light square (where White is in control). Already a6 is under pressure, while g6 is also a potential target, and in the meantime, the e6-square is under control.
24...fxe6 25.Nc5 Qf7 26.Nxe6+/-
24.Rc6!
Here the rook is now perfectly placed and will be relatively undisturbed because it is on a light square (where White is in control). Already a6 is under pressure, while g6 is also a potential target, and in the meantime, the e6-square is under control.
24...fxe6 25.Nc5 Qf7 26.Nxe6+/-
📕 This is a really interesting position and difficult to evaluate. Luckily we do not need to do so to find the best move! But anyway, let us resort to one of the old methods of evaluation. Where should the pieces be placed? White, for sure, wants the queen's rook on d1, while the queen could go to d7 or d2 and the bishop – who knows? White needs to somehow break a hole in Black's centre, or forever live with a bad bishop. But in the position White is under attack.
17.Rfb1!
The only move that helps White in his quest to obtain his favorite piece placement. Now the idea is Qg5-d1-d2 followed by f2-f3 and Rb1-d1 (maybe), with Bg3-f2 and b2-b4 in some positions. Less good is 17.Rab1 Qc4!.
17.Rfb1!
The only move that helps White in his quest to obtain his favorite piece placement. Now the idea is Qg5-d1-d2 followed by f2-f3 and Rb1-d1 (maybe), with Bg3-f2 and b2-b4 in some positions. Less good is 17.Rab1 Qc4!.
Unity Chess Multiple Choice 405
C: Bg5 – 7
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍 64%
A: Nge2 – 4
👍👍👍👍 36%
B: Nb5
▫️ 0%
👥 11 people voted so far.
C: Bg5 – 7
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍 64%
A: Nge2 – 4
👍👍👍👍 36%
B: Nb5
▫️ 0%
👥 11 people voted so far.
Unity Chess Multiple Choice 406
B: e6 – 7
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍 64%
A: c5 – 3
👍👍👍 27%
C: Ned7 – 1
👍 9%
👥 11 people voted so far.
B: e6 – 7
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍 64%
A: c5 – 3
👍👍👍 27%
C: Ned7 – 1
👍 9%
👥 11 people voted so far.
GM (2011) Sam Shankland (1991- ), now rated 2701, wins the 2018 U.S. chess championship. He won 6, drew 5, and lost none. He scored 1/2 point ahead of Fabiano Caruana. He scored better than 3 of the top 10 players in the world - Caruana (2822), So (2778) and Nakamura (2769).
🔹 Chess Positions on Stamps
🔹 Game story by Botvinnik
🔹 Download this game by PGN format👇🏼👇🏼
@unitychess
🔹 Game story by Botvinnik
🔹 Download this game by PGN format👇🏼👇🏼
@unitychess