Unity Chess Multiple Choice 657
public poll
B: b3 β 11
πππππππ 100%
@TakTakin, Morteza, Nikhil, @chess_chess, @Sophia_Peng, @RichardPeng, Rachel, Zhenrui, Alan, Sanjana, @Raymond666
A: Bg5
β«οΈ 0%
C: f4
β«οΈ 0%
π₯ 11 people voted so far.
public poll
B: b3 β 11
πππππππ 100%
@TakTakin, Morteza, Nikhil, @chess_chess, @Sophia_Peng, @RichardPeng, Rachel, Zhenrui, Alan, Sanjana, @Raymond666
A: Bg5
β«οΈ 0%
C: f4
β«οΈ 0%
π₯ 11 people voted so far.
Unity Chess Multiple Choice 658
public poll
A: g4 β 7
πππππππ 70%
Nikhil, @Sophia_Peng, @RichardPeng, Rachel, Zhenrui, Alan, Sanjana
B: Be2 β 2
ππ 20%
Morteza, @hosssein_G
C: Rd3 β 1
π 10%
@TakTakin
π₯ 10 people voted so far.
public poll
A: g4 β 7
πππππππ 70%
Nikhil, @Sophia_Peng, @RichardPeng, Rachel, Zhenrui, Alan, Sanjana
B: Be2 β 2
ππ 20%
Morteza, @hosssein_G
C: Rd3 β 1
π 10%
@TakTakin
π₯ 10 people voted so far.
β¦οΈ Only one day left to register for the Unity Open Grand Prix Tournament!!
β¦οΈ Share with your friends!!
Rules & Regulationsπ
πΊ https://t.me/unitychess/11710 πΊ
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β¦οΈ Share with your friends!!
Rules & Regulationsπ
πΊ https://t.me/unitychess/11710 πΊ
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β»οΈ Today is birthday of Danican Philidor!!
French composer and chess Master
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French composer and chess Master
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π’ Today is birthday of Johannes Zukertort
German-Polish chess master
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German-Polish chess master
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Berlin Grandmasters 1918 at the Kerkau-Palast . Seated (L to R): Emanuel Lasker, Akiba Rubinstein, Carl Schlechter, Siegbert Tarrasch. Standing is the organiser, Bernhard Kagan.
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βοΈ Berlin Grandmasters (1918)
In 1918, toward the end of the Great War, Bernhard Kagan organized several chess events in the city of Berlin, Germany. Among these events was a GroΓmeister-Turnier held in the Kerkau-Palast from September 28th to October 11th. Four famous, top players participated in the double round robin tournament, including the world champion Emanuel Lasker, former world crown challenger Dr. Siegbert Tarrasch, potential world challenger Akiba Rubinstein, and former world crown challenger Carl Schlechter. Lasker had managed well during the course of the war and was in fine shape for the event. Rubinstein had journeyed to Berlin earlier in the spring and had improved his form over the year. As to the other players, Dr. Tarrasch had suffered tragedies, losing three of his sons to the war, and Schlechter arrived for the event obviously sick and malnourished. These facts can be said to outline the course of the tournament, with Lasker triumphing and both he and Rubinstein going undefeated, while Schlechter and Tarrasch had terrible results, especially in the second half, each losing to Lasker. Lasker was awarded the grand prize of 1200 marks for his win, while the remaining prize purse was divided among the final three with Rubinstein being awarded 1000 marks, Schlechter 900 marks, and Tarrasch 700 marks. The final tragedy of the tournament was that it proved to be Schlechter's last elite competition with the best in the world. The great gentleman chess master, who had been the only challenger ever to draw Lasker in a match, died two months later on December 27th, 1918.
The final standings and crosstable:
1 Lasker Β½Β½ Β½1 11 4Β½
2 Rubinstein Β½Β½ 1Β½ Β½1 4
3 Schlechter Β½0 0Β½ Β½Β½ 2
4 Tarrasch 00 Β½0 Β½Β½ 1Β½
http://www.chessgames.com/perl/chess.pl?tid=80765
@UnityChess
In 1918, toward the end of the Great War, Bernhard Kagan organized several chess events in the city of Berlin, Germany. Among these events was a GroΓmeister-Turnier held in the Kerkau-Palast from September 28th to October 11th. Four famous, top players participated in the double round robin tournament, including the world champion Emanuel Lasker, former world crown challenger Dr. Siegbert Tarrasch, potential world challenger Akiba Rubinstein, and former world crown challenger Carl Schlechter. Lasker had managed well during the course of the war and was in fine shape for the event. Rubinstein had journeyed to Berlin earlier in the spring and had improved his form over the year. As to the other players, Dr. Tarrasch had suffered tragedies, losing three of his sons to the war, and Schlechter arrived for the event obviously sick and malnourished. These facts can be said to outline the course of the tournament, with Lasker triumphing and both he and Rubinstein going undefeated, while Schlechter and Tarrasch had terrible results, especially in the second half, each losing to Lasker. Lasker was awarded the grand prize of 1200 marks for his win, while the remaining prize purse was divided among the final three with Rubinstein being awarded 1000 marks, Schlechter 900 marks, and Tarrasch 700 marks. The final tragedy of the tournament was that it proved to be Schlechter's last elite competition with the best in the world. The great gentleman chess master, who had been the only challenger ever to draw Lasker in a match, died two months later on December 27th, 1918.
The final standings and crosstable:
1 Lasker Β½Β½ Β½1 11 4Β½
2 Rubinstein Β½Β½ 1Β½ Β½1 4
3 Schlechter Β½0 0Β½ Β½Β½ 2
4 Tarrasch 00 Β½0 Β½Β½ 1Β½
http://www.chessgames.com/perl/chess.pl?tid=80765
@UnityChess
Chessgames
Berlin Grandmasters (1918)
Berlin Grandmasters (1918) chess tournament: games, players, results, crosstables, discussion forums, etc.
Alexander Alekhine v. Paul Keres, from the 11th round of the tournament in Prague, 20th April 1943.
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βοΈ Prague (1943), Prague CSR, rd 11
βͺοΈ Alexander Alekhine
β«οΈ Paul Keres
Semi-Slav Defense: Meran. Blumenfeld Variation (D49)
Result : 1/2-1/2
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βͺοΈ Alexander Alekhine
β«οΈ Paul Keres
Semi-Slav Defense: Meran. Blumenfeld Variation (D49)
Result : 1/2-1/2
@UnityChess
Arnold Denker meets Sammy Reshevsky in the 1946 US Championship.
#USChessChamps
#chesshistory
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#USChessChamps
#chesshistory
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βοΈ USA-ch (1946), New York, NY USA, rd 3
βͺοΈ Arnold Denker
β«οΈ Samuel Reshevsky
Nimzo-Indian Defense: Classical. Noa Variation (E34)
Result : 0-1
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βͺοΈ Arnold Denker
β«οΈ Samuel Reshevsky
Nimzo-Indian Defense: Classical. Noa Variation (E34)
Result : 0-1
@UnityChess
Unity Chess Club
Boris Spassky and Bobby Fischer, Siegen 1970. @UnityChess
Bobby Fischer in play v. Boris Spassky, 19th Olympiad, in Siegen 1970, West Germany, rd 15, Sep-19 . Spassky won this game and the Soviet team won the match 2Β½:1Β½.
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UNITY CHESS INFOGRAPHIC
βοΈ Chess History - Tournaments
β¦οΈ Groningen 1946
#chess_history_tornaments
#Groningen_1946
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βοΈ Chess History - Tournaments
β¦οΈ Groningen 1946
#chess_history_tornaments
#Groningen_1946
@unitychess
βοΈβοΈβοΈβοΈ
βοΈ Chess History - Tournaments
πΉ Groningen 1946
π° The tournament held at Groningen, Netherlands 13 Aug-7 Sept 1946, was a watershed in chess history. Not only was it the first major international tournament after World War II, it marked the first time the Soviet Union sent a team of players to a foreign event. Their results confirmed the growing recognition of the great strength of Soviet players: Smyslov finished third, Boleslavsky and Flohr tied for sixth; though Kotov finished out of the running, he defeated both of the top finishers.
π° These were Mikhail Botvinnik and Max Euwe, who were in a close race to the end. Botvinnik had a lead much of the way, but successive losses to Kotov and Yanofsky in rounds 14-15 let Euwe go ahead by a point. However, Euwe then drew three in a row while Botvinnik won three in a row to pull ahead by a half-point going into the last round.
π° And nerves took over. Botvinnik was outplayed by Najdorf, but Euwe blundered and lost a drawn position against Kotov leaving the final standings unchanged. For Botvinnik, it was his first outright victory outside the Soviet Union, on his road to the World Championship; for Euwe, it was his last great international success.
π° Groningen was the first tournament outside the Soviet Union to which the Soviets sent a team of masters to compete. The Soviet players were very successful, Botvinnik taking first, Vasily Smyslov third, and Isaac Boleslavsky and Salo Flohr tied for sixth and seventh, beginning an era of Soviet domination of international chess.
π° The tournament was a twenty-player round-robin. Although the field was strong, some top players were not present. From the United States Samuel Reshevsky and Reuben Fine were missing. From the Soviet Union Paul Keres was missing, as Soviet authorities would not let him play outside the country during this period.
πΉ The final standings and crosstable was as aboveπ
πΉ Download "Groningen 1946 Games Database" by PGN formatπ
#chess_history_tornaments
#Groningen_1946
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess
βοΈ Chess History - Tournaments
πΉ Groningen 1946
π° The tournament held at Groningen, Netherlands 13 Aug-7 Sept 1946, was a watershed in chess history. Not only was it the first major international tournament after World War II, it marked the first time the Soviet Union sent a team of players to a foreign event. Their results confirmed the growing recognition of the great strength of Soviet players: Smyslov finished third, Boleslavsky and Flohr tied for sixth; though Kotov finished out of the running, he defeated both of the top finishers.
π° These were Mikhail Botvinnik and Max Euwe, who were in a close race to the end. Botvinnik had a lead much of the way, but successive losses to Kotov and Yanofsky in rounds 14-15 let Euwe go ahead by a point. However, Euwe then drew three in a row while Botvinnik won three in a row to pull ahead by a half-point going into the last round.
π° And nerves took over. Botvinnik was outplayed by Najdorf, but Euwe blundered and lost a drawn position against Kotov leaving the final standings unchanged. For Botvinnik, it was his first outright victory outside the Soviet Union, on his road to the World Championship; for Euwe, it was his last great international success.
π° Groningen was the first tournament outside the Soviet Union to which the Soviets sent a team of masters to compete. The Soviet players were very successful, Botvinnik taking first, Vasily Smyslov third, and Isaac Boleslavsky and Salo Flohr tied for sixth and seventh, beginning an era of Soviet domination of international chess.
π° The tournament was a twenty-player round-robin. Although the field was strong, some top players were not present. From the United States Samuel Reshevsky and Reuben Fine were missing. From the Soviet Union Paul Keres was missing, as Soviet authorities would not let him play outside the country during this period.
πΉ The final standings and crosstable was as aboveπ
πΉ Download "Groningen 1946 Games Database" by PGN formatπ
#chess_history_tornaments
#Groningen_1946
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess