Unity Chess Multiple Choice 619
public poll
B: h6 β 8
πππππππ 62%
shafiei M.A, Ψ΄ΫΨ―Ψ§, @soheil_hooshdaran, Gavin, @Afshin3333, @RichardPeng, George, Sanjana
A: d5 β 3
πππ 23%
@Sophia_Peng, Rachel, Zhenrui
C: b5 β 2
ππ 15%
Vincent, @Omid_kh7225
π₯ 13 people voted so far.
public poll
B: h6 β 8
πππππππ 62%
shafiei M.A, Ψ΄ΫΨ―Ψ§, @soheil_hooshdaran, Gavin, @Afshin3333, @RichardPeng, George, Sanjana
A: d5 β 3
πππ 23%
@Sophia_Peng, Rachel, Zhenrui
C: b5 β 2
ππ 15%
Vincent, @Omid_kh7225
π₯ 13 people voted so far.
Unity Chess Multiple Choice 620
public poll
B: g4 β 12
πππππππ 86%
EspaΓ±a πͺπΈ, Ψ΄ΫΨ―Ψ§, @soheil_hooshdaran, Gavin, @Afshin3333, Vincent, Ω ΨΩ Ψ―, Rachel, @EhsAn_0123, George, Zhenrui, Sanjana
A: Qc3 β 2
π 14%
@Sophia_Peng, @RichardPeng
C: Rde1
β«οΈ 0%
π₯ 14 people voted so far.
public poll
B: g4 β 12
πππππππ 86%
EspaΓ±a πͺπΈ, Ψ΄ΫΨ―Ψ§, @soheil_hooshdaran, Gavin, @Afshin3333, Vincent, Ω ΨΩ Ψ―, Rachel, @EhsAn_0123, George, Zhenrui, Sanjana
A: Qc3 β 2
π 14%
@Sophia_Peng, @RichardPeng
C: Rde1
β«οΈ 0%
π₯ 14 people voted so far.
π° Mikhail Botvinnik
π° Soviet and Russian chess grandmaster
π° 6th World Chess Champion
β¦οΈ Today is birthday of Botvinik
@unitychess
π° Soviet and Russian chess grandmaster
π° 6th World Chess Champion
β¦οΈ Today is birthday of Botvinik
@unitychess
β
#Botvinik_chess_quotes_006
πΉ Mikhail Botvinnik
πΉ Soviet and Russian chess grandmaster
πΉ 6th World Chess Champion
@unitychess
πΉ Mikhail Botvinnik
πΉ Soviet and Russian chess grandmaster
πΉ 6th World Chess Champion
@unitychess
β
#about_Botvinik
πΉ Mikhail Botvinnik
πΉ Soviet and Russian chess grandmaster
πΉ 6th World Chess Champion
π° Mikhail Moiseyevich Botvinnik was a Soviet and Russian chess grandmaster and World Chess Champion for most of 1948 to 1963.
πFull name: Mikhail Moiseyevich Botvinnik
πCountry: Soviet Union
πBorn:
π»August 17, 1911
π»Kuokkala, Grand Duchy of Finland, Russian Empire
πDied:
π»May 5, 1995 (aged 83)
π»Moscow, Russia
πTitle: Grandmaster
πWorld Champion:
π»1948β1957
π»1958β1960
π»1961β1963
πPeak rating 2660 (January 1971)
π°Mikhail Moiseevich Botvinnik was born in St Petersburg, Russia in 1911. He learned to play chess at the age of 12. An electrical engineer by training, he was the first Russian to hold the World Championship title after he won the 1948 tournament following the death of Alexander Alekhine. He held on to the world title until his defeat by Petrosian in 1963, except for two occasions when he lost the title for one year, to Smyslov (1957 - 1958) and Tal (1960 - 1961). Botvinnik was very serious about chess and never played for fun.
π°After his defeat to Petrosian he trained other Soviet players and devised a training programme. He advocated practicing with strong players, studying master games, publicizing analysis to be criticized by others, learning to handle the clock to avoid time trouble and to concentrate in spite of disturbances. Although he was a non-smoker, he often practiced with heavy smokers to practice his ability to concentrate in adverse situations. He also stressed the importance of regular physical activity to maintain fitness. In 1970 he gave up playing in order to concentrate on the development of chess computers.
π°Botvinnik served as a consultant to Soviet computer chess developers who developed an early program at ITEP (Moscow Institute for Theoretical and Experimental Physics) which won a correspondence chess match against a Stanford University chess program led by John McCarthy in 1967. Later he advised the team that created the chess prorgram Kaissa at Moscowβs Institute for Control Science.
β¦οΈA memorable game by Botvinikπ
πΈMikhail Botvinnik vs David Bronstein
πΈBotvinnik - Bronstein World Championship Match (1951), Moscow URS, rd 23, May-08
πΈKing's Indian Defense: Fianchetto Variation (E60)
β¦οΈAn informative game about two bishops vs two knights in endgame fighting!!
β¦οΈReview and download PGN fileπ
@unitychess
πΉ Mikhail Botvinnik
πΉ Soviet and Russian chess grandmaster
πΉ 6th World Chess Champion
π° Mikhail Moiseyevich Botvinnik was a Soviet and Russian chess grandmaster and World Chess Champion for most of 1948 to 1963.
πFull name: Mikhail Moiseyevich Botvinnik
πCountry: Soviet Union
πBorn:
π»August 17, 1911
π»Kuokkala, Grand Duchy of Finland, Russian Empire
πDied:
π»May 5, 1995 (aged 83)
π»Moscow, Russia
πTitle: Grandmaster
πWorld Champion:
π»1948β1957
π»1958β1960
π»1961β1963
πPeak rating 2660 (January 1971)
π°Mikhail Moiseevich Botvinnik was born in St Petersburg, Russia in 1911. He learned to play chess at the age of 12. An electrical engineer by training, he was the first Russian to hold the World Championship title after he won the 1948 tournament following the death of Alexander Alekhine. He held on to the world title until his defeat by Petrosian in 1963, except for two occasions when he lost the title for one year, to Smyslov (1957 - 1958) and Tal (1960 - 1961). Botvinnik was very serious about chess and never played for fun.
π°After his defeat to Petrosian he trained other Soviet players and devised a training programme. He advocated practicing with strong players, studying master games, publicizing analysis to be criticized by others, learning to handle the clock to avoid time trouble and to concentrate in spite of disturbances. Although he was a non-smoker, he often practiced with heavy smokers to practice his ability to concentrate in adverse situations. He also stressed the importance of regular physical activity to maintain fitness. In 1970 he gave up playing in order to concentrate on the development of chess computers.
π°Botvinnik served as a consultant to Soviet computer chess developers who developed an early program at ITEP (Moscow Institute for Theoretical and Experimental Physics) which won a correspondence chess match against a Stanford University chess program led by John McCarthy in 1967. Later he advised the team that created the chess prorgram Kaissa at Moscowβs Institute for Control Science.
β¦οΈA memorable game by Botvinikπ
πΈMikhail Botvinnik vs David Bronstein
πΈBotvinnik - Bronstein World Championship Match (1951), Moscow URS, rd 23, May-08
πΈKing's Indian Defense: Fianchetto Variation (E60)
β¦οΈAn informative game about two bishops vs two knights in endgame fighting!!
β¦οΈReview and download PGN fileπ
@unitychess
The U.S. Team at Folkestone 1933. (l-r) Dake, Kashdan and his wife, Simonson, Marshall, and Fine.
#chesshistory
@UnityChess
#chesshistory
@UnityChess
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βοΈ World Student Team Championship (1960), Leningrad
βͺοΈπ·πΊ Boris Spassky
β«οΈπΊπΈ William James Lombardy
Sicilian Defense: Najdorf Variation (B94)
Result : 0-1
@UnityChess
βͺοΈπ·πΊ Boris Spassky
β«οΈπΊπΈ William James Lombardy
Sicilian Defense: Najdorf Variation (B94)
Result : 0-1
@UnityChess
In positions of strategic maneuvering seek the worst placed piece. Activating that piece is often the most reliable way of improving your position.
πΈ Mark Dvoretsky & Artur Yusupov (1996).
"Positional Play"
@UnityChess
πΈ Mark Dvoretsky & Artur Yusupov (1996).
"Positional Play"
@UnityChess
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βοΈ Prague Olympiad (Men) 1931
βͺοΈπ·πΊ Alexander Alekhine
β«οΈπ¦πΉ Ernst Gruenfeld
Queen's Gambit Declined: Semi-Tarrasch Defense. Exchange Variation "D41"
Result : 1-0
@UnityChess
βͺοΈπ·πΊ Alexander Alekhine
β«οΈπ¦πΉ Ernst Gruenfeld
Queen's Gambit Declined: Semi-Tarrasch Defense. Exchange Variation "D41"
Result : 1-0
@UnityChess