@Karjakin-Vachier, Altibox Norway 2018 - Round 4.pgn
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🔹 Sergey Karjakin - Maxime Vachier-Lagrave , Altibox Norway Chess 2018- Round four
🔹 PGN format
🔹 Analysed by GM Robert Hess
@unitychess
🔹 PGN format
🔹 Analysed by GM Robert Hess
@unitychess
☸️ #Euwe_chess_quotes_003
🎆 Max Euwe
🎆 Dutch chess Grandmaster
🎆 Former World Chess Champion
@unitychess
🎆 Max Euwe
🎆 Dutch chess Grandmaster
🎆 Former World Chess Champion
@unitychess
☸️ #about_Euwe
🎆 Max Euwe
🎆 Dutch chess Grandmaster
🎆 Former World Chess Champion
♦️ Machgielis "Max" Euwe, PhD was a Dutch chess Grandmaster, mathematician, author, and chess administrator. He was the fifth player to become World Chess Champion. Euwe served as President of FIDE, the World Chess Federation, from 1970 to 1978.
▪️ Full name: Machgielis Euwe
▪️ Country: Netherlands
▪️ Born: May 20, 1901
Amsterdam, Netherlands
▪️ Died: November 26, 1981 (aged 80)
Amsterdam, Netherlands
▪️ Title: Grandmaster (1950)
▪️ World Champion: 1935–37
▪️ Peak rating: 2530 (May 1974)
♦️ Euwe played his first tournament at age 10, winning every game. Euwe won every Dutch chess championship that he contested from 1921 until 1952, and additionally won the title in 1955 – his 12 titles are still a record. The only other winners during this period were Salo Landau in 1936, when Euwe, then world champion, did not compete, and Jan Hein Donner in 1954. He became the world amateur chess champion in 1928, at The Hague, with a score of 12/15.
♦️From 1970 (at age 69) until 1978, Max Euwe was president of the FIDE. As president, Euwe usually did what he considered morally right rather than what was politically expedient. On several occasions this brought him into conflict with the USSR Chess Federation, which thought it had the right to dominate matters because it contributed a very large share of FIDE's budget and Soviet players dominated the world rankings – in effect they treated chess as an extension of the Cold War.
♦️ A memorable game by Euwe against Alekhine which known "Euwe Win This Time" in chessgames.com site! 👇🏼
🔸Max Euwe vs Alexander Alekhine
🔸Alekhine - Euwe World Championship Match (1935), Various Locations NED, rd 2, Oct-06
🔸Gruenfeld Defense: Russian. Accelerated Variation (D81)
♦️ Review and download PGN file👇🏼
@unitychess
🎆 Max Euwe
🎆 Dutch chess Grandmaster
🎆 Former World Chess Champion
♦️ Machgielis "Max" Euwe, PhD was a Dutch chess Grandmaster, mathematician, author, and chess administrator. He was the fifth player to become World Chess Champion. Euwe served as President of FIDE, the World Chess Federation, from 1970 to 1978.
▪️ Full name: Machgielis Euwe
▪️ Country: Netherlands
▪️ Born: May 20, 1901
Amsterdam, Netherlands
▪️ Died: November 26, 1981 (aged 80)
Amsterdam, Netherlands
▪️ Title: Grandmaster (1950)
▪️ World Champion: 1935–37
▪️ Peak rating: 2530 (May 1974)
♦️ Euwe played his first tournament at age 10, winning every game. Euwe won every Dutch chess championship that he contested from 1921 until 1952, and additionally won the title in 1955 – his 12 titles are still a record. The only other winners during this period were Salo Landau in 1936, when Euwe, then world champion, did not compete, and Jan Hein Donner in 1954. He became the world amateur chess champion in 1928, at The Hague, with a score of 12/15.
♦️From 1970 (at age 69) until 1978, Max Euwe was president of the FIDE. As president, Euwe usually did what he considered morally right rather than what was politically expedient. On several occasions this brought him into conflict with the USSR Chess Federation, which thought it had the right to dominate matters because it contributed a very large share of FIDE's budget and Soviet players dominated the world rankings – in effect they treated chess as an extension of the Cold War.
♦️ A memorable game by Euwe against Alekhine which known "Euwe Win This Time" in chessgames.com site! 👇🏼
🔸Max Euwe vs Alexander Alekhine
🔸Alekhine - Euwe World Championship Match (1935), Various Locations NED, rd 2, Oct-06
🔸Gruenfeld Defense: Russian. Accelerated Variation (D81)
♦️ Review and download PGN file👇🏼
@unitychess
10.N×d5??
Mamedyarov's blunder that is not exploited by his opponent.
10...Ne5?
10...B×d5 -+
A)11.Qh3 h6 12.c4 Be6 -+
B)11.Q×d5 Q×d5 12.B×h7+ K×h7 13.R×d5 Bb6 -+
11.Qe4 N×d3+ 12.Q×d3 Qa5 13.Qc3 +/-
Mamedyarov's blunder that is not exploited by his opponent.
10...Ne5?
10...B×d5 -+
A)11.Qh3 h6 12.c4 Be6 -+
B)11.Q×d5 Q×d5 12.B×h7+ K×h7 13.R×d5 Bb6 -+
11.Qe4 N×d3+ 12.Q×d3 Qa5 13.Qc3 +/-
29.Qe2?
29.Q×c6 R×c6 30.Rd7 with counterplay.
29.. Qf6? 30.N×a7 Ra8 31.Nb5 Rad8 -/+
29.Q×c6 R×c6 30.Rd7 with counterplay.
29.. Qf6? 30.N×a7 Ra8 31.Nb5 Rad8 -/+
29...Rd2??
Vachier could have finished the game with 29...Qd7+!
A) 30.g4 h5 31.f3 Qb5 -+
B) 30.Kg2 Qd5+ 31.Kh3 Rg1 -+
C) 30.Kh4 Qf5 -+
30.Re7 Qf6 31.Q×c7 Qf5+ 32.g4 Q×f2 33.Qe5+ Kh6 34.Qe3+ Q×e3 35.R×e3 R×a2 =
Vachier could have finished the game with 29...Qd7+!
A) 30.g4 h5 31.f3 Qb5 -+
B) 30.Kg2 Qd5+ 31.Kh3 Rg1 -+
C) 30.Kh4 Qf5 -+
30.Re7 Qf6 31.Q×c7 Qf5+ 32.g4 Q×f2 33.Qe5+ Kh6 34.Qe3+ Q×e3 35.R×e3 R×a2 =
25.Re1?
More resistance could have been put up with 25.f4.
25...Q×a2 26.Re2 Qa1 27.Bc1 Rb8 28.Re1 Rb1 29.Qd2 Be5 -+
More resistance could have been put up with 25.f4.
25...Q×a2 26.Re2 Qa1 27.Bc1 Rb8 28.Re1 Rb1 29.Qd2 Be5 -+
12...Bg4!
In order to exchange this inactive bishop for the knight on f3 and create pressure on the b-file.
13.0-0 Nbd7 14.h3 Bxf3 15.Qxf3 Rfb8 with sufficient compensation for a pawn.
In order to exchange this inactive bishop for the knight on f3 and create pressure on the b-file.
13.0-0 Nbd7 14.h3 Bxf3 15.Qxf3 Rfb8 with sufficient compensation for a pawn.