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Six hours across a Magnus Carlsen pressing feels like a painfully slow-paced journey through a meat grinder.
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β
Sinquefield Cup 2018 - Round 2
βͺοΈπ³π΄ Carlsen, Magnus (2842)
β«οΈ π·πΊKarjakin, Sergey (2773)
Result : 1-0
@UnityChess
βͺοΈπ³π΄ Carlsen, Magnus (2842)
β«οΈ π·πΊKarjakin, Sergey (2773)
Result : 1-0
@UnityChess
Carlsen,-Magnus_vs_Karjakin,-Sergey_2018-08-19.pgn
8.9 KB
πΉ Magnus Carlsen vs. Sergey Karjakin |Sinquefield Cup 2018
πΉ PGN format
πΉ Analysed by Chess.com
@UnityChess
πΉ PGN format
πΉ Analysed by Chess.com
@UnityChess
β΄οΈ #about_Hansen
πΈ Sune Berg Hansen
πΈ Danish chess grandmaster
π° Sune Berg Hansen is a Danish chess grandmaster. He is a seven-time Danish Chess Champion.
πCountry: Denmark
πBorn: 21 April 1971 (age 47)
π»Gentofte, Denmark
πTitle: Grandmaster (1998)
πFIDE rating: 2589 (August 2018)
πPeak rating: 2603 (November 2010)
π°Hansen earned his international master title in 1993 and his grandmaster title in 1998. He has won the Danish Chess Championship on seven occasions: in 2002, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012 and 2015.
π»He has competed in eight Chess Olympiads: in 1994, 2000, 2002, 2004, 2006, 2010, 2012 and 2016.
π»He has also competed in six European Team Chess Championships: in 2005, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2013 and 2015. As of September 2017, he has a rating of 2580, which makes him the No. 3 ranked Danish player.
β¦οΈ A memorable game by Sune Berg Hansenπ
βͺοΈDavid Navara vs Sune Berg Hansen
βͺοΈEuropean Team Championship (2015), Reykjavik ISL, rd 1, Nov-13
βͺοΈQueen's Gambit Declined: Barmen Variation (D37)
β¦οΈReview and download PGN fileπ
@unitychess
πΈ Sune Berg Hansen
πΈ Danish chess grandmaster
π° Sune Berg Hansen is a Danish chess grandmaster. He is a seven-time Danish Chess Champion.
πCountry: Denmark
πBorn: 21 April 1971 (age 47)
π»Gentofte, Denmark
πTitle: Grandmaster (1998)
πFIDE rating: 2589 (August 2018)
πPeak rating: 2603 (November 2010)
π°Hansen earned his international master title in 1993 and his grandmaster title in 1998. He has won the Danish Chess Championship on seven occasions: in 2002, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2009, 2012 and 2015.
π»He has competed in eight Chess Olympiads: in 1994, 2000, 2002, 2004, 2006, 2010, 2012 and 2016.
π»He has also competed in six European Team Chess Championships: in 2005, 2007, 2009, 2011, 2013 and 2015. As of September 2017, he has a rating of 2580, which makes him the No. 3 ranked Danish player.
β¦οΈ A memorable game by Sune Berg Hansenπ
βͺοΈDavid Navara vs Sune Berg Hansen
βͺοΈEuropean Team Championship (2015), Reykjavik ISL, rd 1, Nov-13
βͺοΈQueen's Gambit Declined: Barmen Variation (D37)
β¦οΈReview and download PGN fileπ
@unitychess
38. g5??
Anand underestimates his opponent's threats.
38.Rg1! Re8 39. Kf1=
38... Qh2+ 39. Kf1 Qh1+ 40. Ke2 Re8+ 0-1
Anand underestimates his opponent's threats.
38.Rg1! Re8 39. Kf1=
38... Qh2+ 39. Kf1 Qh1+ 40. Ke2 Re8+ 0-1
50. Kxf5??
Wesley could have saved the game with 50. e6!
50...Nd5 51. Bd4 and now:
A) 51...f4 52. Kg4 Ke7 53. Bc5+ Kxe6 54. Bxb4 Nxb4 55. Kxf4 Nd3+ 56. Ke4 Nxb2 57. Kd4 Kf5 58. Kc3 Ke4 59. Kxb2 Kd3 60. Kc1=
B) 51... b3 52. Kxf5 c3 53. Bxc3 Nxc3 54.Ke5 Ke7 55. Kd4 Na2 56. Kc4 Nc1 57. Kd5 Nd3 58. Kc4 =
50... c3 0-1
If 51. bxc3, then 51...b3
Wesley could have saved the game with 50. e6!
50...Nd5 51. Bd4 and now:
A) 51...f4 52. Kg4 Ke7 53. Bc5+ Kxe6 54. Bxb4 Nxb4 55. Kxf4 Nd3+ 56. Ke4 Nxb2 57. Kd4 Kf5 58. Kc3 Ke4 59. Kxb2 Kd3 60. Kc1=
B) 51... b3 52. Kxf5 c3 53. Bxc3 Nxc3 54.Ke5 Ke7 55. Kd4 Na2 56. Kc4 Nc1 57. Kd5 Nd3 58. Kc4 =
50... c3 0-1
If 51. bxc3, then 51...b3
54. Re7??
A strange blunder. Fabiano has completely forgotten that the e3-knight is pinned. βΊοΈ
54. Rg1 Qe5 55. R8g6+ Kh7 56. R6g5 Kh6 57. Rxf5 +-
54... Qxe7 0-1
A strange blunder. Fabiano has completely forgotten that the e3-knight is pinned. βΊοΈ
54. Rg1 Qe5 55. R8g6+ Kh7 56. R6g5 Kh6 57. Rxf5 +-
54... Qxe7 0-1
46... Re8?
Mamedyarov missed an opportunity to win the game.
46... Re1!+ 47. Rxe1 Qxd5 48. c8=Q Qxd6 -+
47. Qxb3 axb3 48. Rb1 b2 49. Ba3 Rc8 50. Bxb2 Rxc7 1/2-1/2
Mamedyarov missed an opportunity to win the game.
46... Re1!+ 47. Rxe1 Qxd5 48. c8=Q Qxd6 -+
47. Qxb3 axb3 48. Rb1 b2 49. Ba3 Rc8 50. Bxb2 Rxc7 1/2-1/2
17...Qd7!
Black vacates the d6-square for the knight and tries to defend against the threat of Qa4. 17...Qd7 prepares ...Nb7-d6. The game continuation avoids 17...Rae8? 18 Bd2 and White is better because he can exchange on a5, destroying Black's queenside, and if 18...Nb7 then 19 Qa4 is winning.
18.Ng3 Rae8! 19.Bd2 Nb7 20.Ne4 Nd6 21.Nxd6 Qxd6 22.Qa4?!
Boris: My opponent evaluated the position too optimistically and decided to take the a7 pawn. However, the queen on a7 will be excluded from the game, allowing Black a strong and sudden kingside counterattack.
22...Bc8 23.Qxa7 Be5! 24.h3?! Bd4!
After provoking the weakness on h3, Black is ready to sacrifice on h3 and give check on g3. In order to accomplish this, I need to pin the f2-pawn.
Black vacates the d6-square for the knight and tries to defend against the threat of Qa4. 17...Qd7 prepares ...Nb7-d6. The game continuation avoids 17...Rae8? 18 Bd2 and White is better because he can exchange on a5, destroying Black's queenside, and if 18...Nb7 then 19 Qa4 is winning.
18.Ng3 Rae8! 19.Bd2 Nb7 20.Ne4 Nd6 21.Nxd6 Qxd6 22.Qa4?!
Boris: My opponent evaluated the position too optimistically and decided to take the a7 pawn. However, the queen on a7 will be excluded from the game, allowing Black a strong and sudden kingside counterattack.
22...Bc8 23.Qxa7 Be5! 24.h3?! Bd4!
After provoking the weakness on h3, Black is ready to sacrifice on h3 and give check on g3. In order to accomplish this, I need to pin the f2-pawn.