39...g5??
Aronian's blunder that is met by a typical breakthrough.
40.g4!! hΓg4 41.h5 Ke6 42.Kf2 Kf7 43.Kg3 Kg7 44.KΓg4 +-
Aronian's blunder that is met by a typical breakthrough.
40.g4!! hΓg4 41.h5 Ke6 42.Kf2 Kf7 43.Kg3 Kg7 44.KΓg4 +-
46. Kxf6?
A carelessness.
Liren Ding could have forced Aronian to resign with the following continuation:
46. e5! fxe5 47. Kxg5 e4 48. Kf4 Kh6 49. Kxe4 Kxh5 50. Kd5+-
46... g4 47. e5 g3 48. e6 g2 49. e7 g1=Q 50. e8=Q Qf2+ 51. Ke7 Qe3+ 52. Kd8 Qxa3 53. Qf7+ Kh8 54. Qf6+ Kh7 55. Qg6+ Kh8 56. h6 Qc3 57. Qg7+ Qxg7 58. hxg7+ Kxg7 59. Kc7 a5 60. bxa5 b4 61. a6 b3 62.a7 b2 1/2-1/2
A carelessness.
Liren Ding could have forced Aronian to resign with the following continuation:
46. e5! fxe5 47. Kxg5 e4 48. Kf4 Kh6 49. Kxe4 Kxh5 50. Kd5+-
46... g4 47. e5 g3 48. e6 g2 49. e7 g1=Q 50. e8=Q Qf2+ 51. Ke7 Qe3+ 52. Kd8 Qxa3 53. Qf7+ Kh8 54. Qf6+ Kh7 55. Qg6+ Kh8 56. h6 Qc3 57. Qg7+ Qxg7 58. hxg7+ Kxg7 59. Kc7 a5 60. bxa5 b4 61. a6 b3 62.a7 b2 1/2-1/2
39. b3!!
Caruana's rook is being trapped.
39...fxg4 40. Na2 Rb5 41. b4! gxf3 42. Kxf3 Bf5 43. Rb2 Kd7 44. Nc3 Kc6 45. Ke3! Be6 46. Kd2 Bf5 47. Rb3 Be6 48. Kc1 Bf5 49. Kb2 Be4 50. g3 Bf5 51. Ka3 Bc2 52. Rb2 Bd3 53. Rf2 1-0
Caruana's rook is being trapped.
39...fxg4 40. Na2 Rb5 41. b4! gxf3 42. Kxf3 Bf5 43. Rb2 Kd7 44. Nc3 Kc6 45. Ke3! Be6 46. Kd2 Bf5 47. Rb3 Be6 48. Kc1 Bf5 49. Kb2 Be4 50. g3 Bf5 51. Ka3 Bc2 52. Rb2 Bd3 53. Rf2 1-0
52. hxg4??
A stunning blunder by the world champion!
52. fxg4 hxg4 53. hxg4 Kxe4 54. Kd2 Kf3 55. Ke1 =
52...h4 0-1
A stunning blunder by the world champion!
52. fxg4 hxg4 53. hxg4 Kxe4 54. Kd2 Kf3 55. Ke1 =
52...h4 0-1
24...Bxe5!
We have an aversion to giving up the 'Indian' bishop for a knight, but here it allows the other pieces to stay active, and so takes the sting out of any aggressive action by White in the center. The game continued:
25.Bxe5+ f6 26.Rb1 Qe7 27.Bf4 Qg7.
We have an aversion to giving up the 'Indian' bishop for a knight, but here it allows the other pieces to stay active, and so takes the sting out of any aggressive action by White in the center. The game continued:
25.Bxe5+ f6 26.Rb1 Qe7 27.Bf4 Qg7.
19.Qb2!
We instinctively dislike having anything of value on the same diagonal as an enemy bishop, so to put the queen on a square with only the thin veil of the pawn on e5 between her and the 'Indian' bishop feels remarkable. In the game, Black tried
19...Ng5 20.Nxe5, and after the dust had settled had a large positional advantage:
20...Nge4 21.Rc2 Nxb3? 22.Ne7+! Qxe7 23.Nxc6 Qe8 24.Qxb3 Qxc6 25.Bf3.
We instinctively dislike having anything of value on the same diagonal as an enemy bishop, so to put the queen on a square with only the thin veil of the pawn on e5 between her and the 'Indian' bishop feels remarkable. In the game, Black tried
19...Ng5 20.Nxe5, and after the dust had settled had a large positional advantage:
20...Nge4 21.Rc2 Nxb3? 22.Ne7+! Qxe7 23.Nxc6 Qe8 24.Qxb3 Qxc6 25.Bf3.
Unity Chess Multiple Choice 469
public poll
B: e5 β 10
πππππππ 59%
Gavin, @Afshin3333, Bryson, Sanjana, Nagaprasad, Venkat, @Sophia_Peng, @RichardPeng, M, Atharva
C: a5 β 5
ππππ 29%
@Omid_s94, Nikhil, @SteveWongso, Vincent, Drew
A: Ne8 β 2
π 12%
Jayden, Mieke
π₯ 17 people voted so far.
public poll
B: e5 β 10
πππππππ 59%
Gavin, @Afshin3333, Bryson, Sanjana, Nagaprasad, Venkat, @Sophia_Peng, @RichardPeng, M, Atharva
C: a5 β 5
ππππ 29%
@Omid_s94, Nikhil, @SteveWongso, Vincent, Drew
A: Ne8 β 2
π 12%
Jayden, Mieke
π₯ 17 people voted so far.
Unity Chess Multiple Choice 470
public poll
B: g4 β 12
πππππππ 48%
Ata, @mahyarebrahimi1983, Gavin, @Afshin3333, Nikhil, @FrozenBlade, Vincent, Mieke, Sanjana, Nagaprasad, Drew, Atharva
A: f5 β 9
πππππ 36%
Esmaeil, @Hesamgrandterminator, Kenneth, Jayden, Bryson, Venkat, Saghana, @roshan_sethuraman, @RichardPeng
C: Qg3 β 4
ππ 16%
@Omid_s94, @SteveWongso, @Sophia_Peng, @SaraNepomniachtchi
π₯ 25 people voted so far.
public poll
B: g4 β 12
πππππππ 48%
Ata, @mahyarebrahimi1983, Gavin, @Afshin3333, Nikhil, @FrozenBlade, Vincent, Mieke, Sanjana, Nagaprasad, Drew, Atharva
A: f5 β 9
πππππ 36%
Esmaeil, @Hesamgrandterminator, Kenneth, Jayden, Bryson, Venkat, Saghana, @roshan_sethuraman, @RichardPeng
C: Qg3 β 4
ππ 16%
@Omid_s94, @SteveWongso, @Sophia_Peng, @SaraNepomniachtchi
π₯ 25 people voted so far.
π
ΎοΈ #Hou_Yifan_chess_quotes_005
π’ Hou Yifan
π’ Chinese chess Grandmaster
π’ 3-time Women's World Chess Champion
@unitychess
π’ Hou Yifan
π’ Chinese chess Grandmaster
π’ 3-time Women's World Chess Champion
@unitychess
π
ΎοΈ #about_Hou_Yifan
π’ Hou Yifan
π’ Chinese chess Grandmaster
π’ 3-time Women's World Chess Champion
β¦οΈ Hou Yifan is a Chinese chess grandmaster and three-time Women's World Chess Champion. A chess prodigy, she is the youngest female player ever to qualify for the title of grandmaster and the youngest ever to win the Women's World Chess Championship.
π Country: China
π Born: 27 February 1994
Xinghua, Jiangsu[2]
π Title: Grandmaster (2008)
π Women's World Champion:
πΉ2010β2012
πΉ2013β2015
πΉ2016β2017
π FIDE rating: 2658 (May 2018)
π Peak rating: 2686 (March 2015)
β¦οΈ Hou has attempted to balance chess with life outside of it. She enrolled in Peking University in 2012, studying International Relations, against the wishes of her trainer. She took a full course load and participated in many extracurricular activities. She did well enough to be offered a Rhodes Scholarship, and will be studying for a MSc in Education at Oxford University in 2018.[15] Compared to the best professional male players who dedicate their lives to chess, Hou's split focus puts her at a disadvantage. These competitors give her credit for what she has achieved in spite of her lack of preparation, and for her life outside of chess. However, they recognize that while Hou can probably remain the best female player in the world without extra effort, she cannot compete with the best male players unless she dedicates herself to chess. Hou is aware of this as well, but nonetheless chooses to treat chess as a hobby, not a career.
β¦οΈ A memorable game by Hou Yifan with a dynamic game against grandmaster Nigel Short ππΌ
πΈ Yifan Hou vs Nigel Short
πΈ Short - Hou (2016), Hoogeveen NED, rd 6, Oct-22
πΈ Spanish Game: Morphy Defense. Chigorin Defense Panov System (C99)
β¦οΈ Review and download PGN fileππΌ
@unitychess
π’ Hou Yifan
π’ Chinese chess Grandmaster
π’ 3-time Women's World Chess Champion
β¦οΈ Hou Yifan is a Chinese chess grandmaster and three-time Women's World Chess Champion. A chess prodigy, she is the youngest female player ever to qualify for the title of grandmaster and the youngest ever to win the Women's World Chess Championship.
π Country: China
π Born: 27 February 1994
Xinghua, Jiangsu[2]
π Title: Grandmaster (2008)
π Women's World Champion:
πΉ2010β2012
πΉ2013β2015
πΉ2016β2017
π FIDE rating: 2658 (May 2018)
π Peak rating: 2686 (March 2015)
β¦οΈ Hou has attempted to balance chess with life outside of it. She enrolled in Peking University in 2012, studying International Relations, against the wishes of her trainer. She took a full course load and participated in many extracurricular activities. She did well enough to be offered a Rhodes Scholarship, and will be studying for a MSc in Education at Oxford University in 2018.[15] Compared to the best professional male players who dedicate their lives to chess, Hou's split focus puts her at a disadvantage. These competitors give her credit for what she has achieved in spite of her lack of preparation, and for her life outside of chess. However, they recognize that while Hou can probably remain the best female player in the world without extra effort, she cannot compete with the best male players unless she dedicates herself to chess. Hou is aware of this as well, but nonetheless chooses to treat chess as a hobby, not a career.
β¦οΈ A memorable game by Hou Yifan with a dynamic game against grandmaster Nigel Short ππΌ
πΈ Yifan Hou vs Nigel Short
πΈ Short - Hou (2016), Hoogeveen NED, rd 6, Oct-22
πΈ Spanish Game: Morphy Defense. Chigorin Defense Panov System (C99)
β¦οΈ Review and download PGN fileππΌ
@unitychess