62.Bd3! [In order to put more pressure on the enemy camp.]
[62.Rc6?! Ne3+ 63.Kc1 Rxc2+ 64.Rxc2 Nxc2 65.Kxc2 Kf6 66.b4 axb4 67.Kb3 (67.a5 e4 68.a6 e3 69.Kd3 b3 70.a7 b2 71.a8Q b1Q+ 72.Kxe3=) 67...e4 68.Kxb4 Kxf5 69.a5 e3 70.Kc3 Kf4 71.a6 Kg3! 72.Kd3 Kf2 73.a7 e2 74.a8Q e1Q=; 62.Kc1?! Rh1+ 63.Kb2 Rh2=]
62...Nf6 63.Bc4+ Ke7 64.Rg7+ Kd6 65.Rg6?! [It seems that White does not intend to win the game!]
[65.Ra7! Ng4 66.Rxa5 Ne3+ 67.Kc1 Nxc4 (67...Rc2+ 68.Kb1 Rh2 69.f6 Nxc4 70.bxc4 Ke6 71.f7 Kxf7 72.Rxe5Β±) 68.bxc4 Rh4 69.Ra6+ Kc5 70.a5 Rxc4+ 71.Kd2 Rf4 (71...Kb5 72.Re6 Kxa5 73.Ke3 Kb5 74.f6 Rc1 75.Ke4 Re1+ 76.Kd5 Rf1 77.Kxe5 Kc5 78.Re7+β) 72.Rf6 Rd4+ 73.Ke3 Ra4 74.a6 Kd5 75.Re6 Re4+ 76.Kd3 Rd4+ 77.Kc3 Ra4 78.Kb3 Ra5 79.Kb4 Ra1 80.Kb5 Rb1+ 81.Ka5 Kc5 82.Rxe5+ Kc6 83.f6 Rf1 84.Re6+ Kc5 85.Re4!! Rxf6 86.a7 Rf8 87.Re2 Rh8 88.Rc2+ Kd5 89.Rc7 Rf8 90.Ka6+β The white would win after a tough war.]
65...Ke7 66.Rg7+ Kd6 67.Rg6 Ke7 68.Rg7+ Kd6 Β½βΒ½
[62.Rc6?! Ne3+ 63.Kc1 Rxc2+ 64.Rxc2 Nxc2 65.Kxc2 Kf6 66.b4 axb4 67.Kb3 (67.a5 e4 68.a6 e3 69.Kd3 b3 70.a7 b2 71.a8Q b1Q+ 72.Kxe3=) 67...e4 68.Kxb4 Kxf5 69.a5 e3 70.Kc3 Kf4 71.a6 Kg3! 72.Kd3 Kf2 73.a7 e2 74.a8Q e1Q=; 62.Kc1?! Rh1+ 63.Kb2 Rh2=]
62...Nf6 63.Bc4+ Ke7 64.Rg7+ Kd6 65.Rg6?! [It seems that White does not intend to win the game!]
[65.Ra7! Ng4 66.Rxa5 Ne3+ 67.Kc1 Nxc4 (67...Rc2+ 68.Kb1 Rh2 69.f6 Nxc4 70.bxc4 Ke6 71.f7 Kxf7 72.Rxe5Β±) 68.bxc4 Rh4 69.Ra6+ Kc5 70.a5 Rxc4+ 71.Kd2 Rf4 (71...Kb5 72.Re6 Kxa5 73.Ke3 Kb5 74.f6 Rc1 75.Ke4 Re1+ 76.Kd5 Rf1 77.Kxe5 Kc5 78.Re7+β) 72.Rf6 Rd4+ 73.Ke3 Ra4 74.a6 Kd5 75.Re6 Re4+ 76.Kd3 Rd4+ 77.Kc3 Ra4 78.Kb3 Ra5 79.Kb4 Ra1 80.Kb5 Rb1+ 81.Ka5 Kc5 82.Rxe5+ Kc6 83.f6 Rf1 84.Re6+ Kc5 85.Re4!! Rxf6 86.a7 Rf8 87.Re2 Rh8 88.Rc2+ Kd5 89.Rc7 Rf8 90.Ka6+β The white would win after a tough war.]
65...Ke7 66.Rg7+ Kd6 67.Rg6 Ke7 68.Rg7+ Kd6 Β½βΒ½
Unity Chess Strategy Multiple Choice 9
public poll
A: Be3 β 7
πππππππ 54%
@mahyarebrahimi1983, Ramin, @RichardPeng, @AryanLeekha, @Passanger1500, Michael, Alan
C: f4 β 4
ππππ 31%
@Sophia_Peng, @roshan_sethuraman, @Taxialborz2008, Zhenrui
B: b4 β 2
ππ 15%
@Rashidi_1997, Nikhil
π₯ 13 people voted so far.
public poll
A: Be3 β 7
πππππππ 54%
@mahyarebrahimi1983, Ramin, @RichardPeng, @AryanLeekha, @Passanger1500, Michael, Alan
C: f4 β 4
ππππ 31%
@Sophia_Peng, @roshan_sethuraman, @Taxialborz2008, Zhenrui
B: b4 β 2
ππ 15%
@Rashidi_1997, Nikhil
π₯ 13 people voted so far.
Unity Chess Endgame Multiple Choice 9
public poll
A: 41...Nb5 β 11
πππππππ 73%
@Rashidi_1997, Nikhil, @Sophia_Peng, @roshan_sethuraman, @RichardPeng, @Taxialborz2008, @AryanLeekha, Zhenrui, Alan, @chessnoob, Matthew
C: 41...Kf7 β 4
πππ 27%
@mahyarebrahimi1983, @hosein_sedighi, @Passanger1500, Michael
B: 41...Nc6
β«οΈ 0%
π₯ 15 people voted so far.
public poll
A: 41...Nb5 β 11
πππππππ 73%
@Rashidi_1997, Nikhil, @Sophia_Peng, @roshan_sethuraman, @RichardPeng, @Taxialborz2008, @AryanLeekha, Zhenrui, Alan, @chessnoob, Matthew
C: 41...Kf7 β 4
πππ 27%
@mahyarebrahimi1983, @hosein_sedighi, @Passanger1500, Michael
B: 41...Nc6
β«οΈ 0%
π₯ 15 people voted so far.
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Rare footage with Garry Kasparov, Nigel Short and Yasser Seirawan from the decisive round of the 27th Chess Olympiad, Dubai, November/December 1986.
@UnityChess
@UnityChess
Karpov vs Orekhov, USSR Armed Forces Zonal 1965 - this was the first game of the future World Champion (b. May 1951) to be published in 'Shakhmatnyi Byulleten'.
@UnityChess
@UnityChess
"By some ardent enthusiasts Chess has been elevated into a science or an art. It is neither; but its principal characteristic seems to be - what human nature mostly delights in - a fight."
πΈ Emanuel Lasker (1965). βCommon Sense in Chessβ
@UnityChess
πΈ Emanuel Lasker (1965). βCommon Sense in Chessβ
@UnityChess
β
Today is birthday of Amir Bagheri !!
Iranian chess grandmaster
βοΈβοΈβοΈβοΈ Happy birthday Dear Bagheri!!
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess
Iranian chess grandmaster
βοΈβοΈβοΈβοΈ Happy birthday Dear Bagheri!!
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess
UNITY CHESS INFOGRAPHIC
π΅ Chess History - Tournaments
πΉ Odesa 1929
#chess_history_tornaments
#Odessa_1929
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess
π΅ Chess History - Tournaments
πΉ Odesa 1929
#chess_history_tornaments
#Odessa_1929
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess
UNITY CHESS INFOGRAPHIC
π΅ Chess History - Tournaments
πΉ Odesa 1929
πΉ 2β20 September, 1929
β»οΈ CHAMPION: Boris Verlinsky
Points ππ
1/ 5Β½/8 (+4β1=3),
2/ 4/5 (+4β1=0),
3/ and 3Β½/4 (+3β0=1)
βͺοΈ The 6th USSR Championship was held in Odessa from October 2-20, 1929, and was weird. The site was strange enough, with the event being held outside Moscow or Leningrad for the first time. And the set-up was different as well. First, 36 players completed in four quarterfinal sections, with the top three in each section advancing into two six-player semifinals. The top two from each semi section were then to play a double round final to determine the champion.
However, the event was plagued by an accelerated schedule requiring three rounds every two days. Botvinnik later blamed the resulting fatigue and bad nutrition for his failure to qualify for the final.
βͺοΈ In addition, three of the favorites--defending champions Bohatirchuk and Romanovsky, plus Levenfish--did not participate. It seems they made "unacceptable financial demands", seeking compensation for their expenses. And maybe the decision of Those At The Top to abolish prizes had something to do with it.
βͺοΈ Izmailov did not play in the finals, and the reason remains murky. Officially, he had to leave to take his final exams at university, and there were other contemporary reports that he was ill or physically exhausted. However, many years later, his son stated Izmailov had revealed to his wife that he was fit and ready to continue, but was "forced" to leave.
At any rate, this should not detract from Verlinsky's dominating performance in the finals.
βͺοΈ Boris Verlinsky was awarded the Soviet Grandmaster title for this tournament, though it was later taken away when the title was abolished in 1931. Botvinnik went on to become the "first" Soviet Grandmaster in 1935.
πΉ The final standings and crosstable was as aboveπ
πΉ Download "Odesa 1929 Games Database" by PGN formatπ
#chess_history_tornaments
#Odessa_1929
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess
π΅ Chess History - Tournaments
πΉ Odesa 1929
πΉ 2β20 September, 1929
β»οΈ CHAMPION: Boris Verlinsky
Points ππ
1/ 5Β½/8 (+4β1=3),
2/ 4/5 (+4β1=0),
3/ and 3Β½/4 (+3β0=1)
βͺοΈ The 6th USSR Championship was held in Odessa from October 2-20, 1929, and was weird. The site was strange enough, with the event being held outside Moscow or Leningrad for the first time. And the set-up was different as well. First, 36 players completed in four quarterfinal sections, with the top three in each section advancing into two six-player semifinals. The top two from each semi section were then to play a double round final to determine the champion.
However, the event was plagued by an accelerated schedule requiring three rounds every two days. Botvinnik later blamed the resulting fatigue and bad nutrition for his failure to qualify for the final.
βͺοΈ In addition, three of the favorites--defending champions Bohatirchuk and Romanovsky, plus Levenfish--did not participate. It seems they made "unacceptable financial demands", seeking compensation for their expenses. And maybe the decision of Those At The Top to abolish prizes had something to do with it.
βͺοΈ Izmailov did not play in the finals, and the reason remains murky. Officially, he had to leave to take his final exams at university, and there were other contemporary reports that he was ill or physically exhausted. However, many years later, his son stated Izmailov had revealed to his wife that he was fit and ready to continue, but was "forced" to leave.
At any rate, this should not detract from Verlinsky's dominating performance in the finals.
βͺοΈ Boris Verlinsky was awarded the Soviet Grandmaster title for this tournament, though it was later taken away when the title was abolished in 1931. Botvinnik went on to become the "first" Soviet Grandmaster in 1935.
πΉ The final standings and crosstable was as aboveπ
πΉ Download "Odesa 1929 Games Database" by PGN formatπ
#chess_history_tornaments
#Odessa_1929
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess
βΌοΈ Our selected game from Odessa 1929 tournament:π
πΈ Ilia Abramovich Kan vs Mikhail Botvinnik
πΈ USSR Championship (1929), Odessa URS, rd 4, Sep-12
πΈ Italian Game: Evans Gambit (C51)
This game is a another example for positional sacrificing by Evance Gambit in opening!! and named "The Kan Can" in chessgames.com site!
See how 18 -years-old Botvinnik has resigned game in only 18 moves!!! ππ
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess
πΈ Ilia Abramovich Kan vs Mikhail Botvinnik
πΈ USSR Championship (1929), Odessa URS, rd 4, Sep-12
πΈ Italian Game: Evans Gambit (C51)
This game is a another example for positional sacrificing by Evance Gambit in opening!! and named "The Kan Can" in chessgames.com site!
See how 18 -years-old Botvinnik has resigned game in only 18 moves!!! ππ
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess