49...Bxf5? [49...Kf3! 50.Nb6 Bxf5 51.Nd5 Bg6 52.Nf4 Bf7 53.Kd4 h4! (53...Kf2β+) 54.Kd3 hxg3 55.hxg3 Kxg3 56.Ke3 Kh2 57.Ke4 Be8 58.Kf5 Kg3 59.Nd3 (59.Ne2+ Kf2 60.Nc1 (60.Kxg4 Bd7+ 61.Kf4 Kxe2β+) 60...g3 61.Nd3+ Ke2 62.Nf4+ Kf3 63.Nd3 Bb5 64.Ne1+ Kf2 65.Kg4 Kxe1 66.Kxg3 Ke2 67.Kf4 Bd3) 59...Bb5 60.Nb4 Kf3 61.Kxf6 g3 62.Nc2 Kf2 63.Nd4 Bf1 64.Nf5 g2β+; 49...Bd7 50.Kd2 Bxf5 51.Nd6+ Ke5 52.Nb5 Bd7 53.Nc3 Kd4 54.Ne2+ Ke4 55.Nc3+ Ke5 (55...Kf3 56.Nd5 f5 (56...Bf5 57.Nxf6 Bg6 58.Nd5 Kf2 59.Nf4 Bf7 60.Nd3+ Kg2 61.Ke3 Kxh2 62.Ne5 h4 (62...Kxg3 63.Nxf7 h4 64.Nh6 h3 65.Nf5+ Kg2 66.Kf4=) 63.gxh4 g3 (63...Bh5) 64.Nf3+ Kg2 65.Ne1+ Kf1 66.Kf4 Kf2 67.Nd3+ Kg2 68.Ne1+=) 57.Nf6 Bb5 58.Nxh5 Kg2 59.Ke3 Kxh2 60.Kf4 Bd3 61.Nf6 Kh3 62.Nh5=) 56.Ke3 Be8 57.Ne2 Bf7 58.Nf4 Kf5 59.Ng2 Kg5 60.Kf2 Bb3 61.Ke3 Be6 62.Nf4 Bc4 63.Ng2 Bd5 64.Nf4 Ba2 65.Ne2 Bc4 66.Nd4 Bf7 67.Ne2 Bb3 68.Nd4=]
50.Nd6+ Ke5 51.Nc4+ Kd5 52.Ne3+ Ke4 53.Kd2 Be6 54.Ke2 f5 55.Ng2 Bf7 56.Kf2 Bc4 57.Nf4 h4 58.Ng2 h3 59.Nf4 Bf7 Β½βΒ½
50.Nd6+ Ke5 51.Nc4+ Kd5 52.Ne3+ Ke4 53.Kd2 Be6 54.Ke2 f5 55.Ng2 Bf7 56.Kf2 Bc4 57.Nf4 h4 58.Ng2 h3 59.Nf4 Bf7 Β½βΒ½
Unity Chess Strategy Multiple Choice 17
public poll
A: 23... Ne6 β 5
πππππππ 56%
@YaminiG, @MerissaWongso, @Sophia_Peng, vivek, Rachel
C: 23...c5 β 4
ππππππ 44%
Gavin, @RichardPeng, Michael, Alan
B: 23...Nf6
β«οΈ 0%
π₯ 9 people voted so far.
public poll
A: 23... Ne6 β 5
πππππππ 56%
@YaminiG, @MerissaWongso, @Sophia_Peng, vivek, Rachel
C: 23...c5 β 4
ππππππ 44%
Gavin, @RichardPeng, Michael, Alan
B: 23...Nf6
β«οΈ 0%
π₯ 9 people voted so far.
Unity Chess Endgame Multiple Choice 17
public poll
B: 52.Rd7 β 7
πππππππ 64%
@Anasiri6889, Khalouei, Gavin, @YaminiG, @Sophia_Peng, @Emc2_Em, Rachel
A: 52.a4 β 4
ππππ 36%
@MerissaWongso, @RichardPeng, Michael, Alan
C: 52.Re7
β«οΈ 0%
π₯ 11 people voted so far.
public poll
B: 52.Rd7 β 7
πππππππ 64%
@Anasiri6889, Khalouei, Gavin, @YaminiG, @Sophia_Peng, @Emc2_Em, Rachel
A: 52.a4 β 4
ππππ 36%
@MerissaWongso, @RichardPeng, Michael, Alan
C: 52.Re7
β«οΈ 0%
π₯ 11 people voted so far.
βοΈ Today is birthday of Aleksandra Goryachkina!!
Russian chess grandmaster
β€οΈπΉπβοΈπ·πΊπΈβ€οΈ Happy birthday Dear Aleksandra! ππππ
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@unitychess
Russian chess grandmaster
β€οΈπΉπβοΈπ·πΊπΈβ€οΈ Happy birthday Dear Aleksandra! ππππ
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@unitychess
UNITY CHESS INFOGRAPHIC
π Chess History - Tournaments
πΉ Bled 1931
#chess_history_tornaments
#Bled_1931
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@unitychess
π Chess History - Tournaments
πΉ Bled 1931
#chess_history_tornaments
#Bled_1931
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess
ππππ
π Chess History - Tournaments
πΉ Bled 1931
πΉ August 23 - September 28
πΉ CHAMPION: Alexander Alekhine | 20.5/26 (+15 -0 =11)
π° Bled 1931 chess tournament was a major chess tournament proposed by Milan Vidmar and held in 1931 in Bled and Ljubljana, Slovenia, then part of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. His idea was well received in both Ljubljana (his birthplace) and the nearby health resort of Bled. An organizing committee was set up, and at the end of July 1931, following the 4th Chess Olympiad in Prague, this committee commissioned Hans Kmoch to conduct the negotiations with the competitors for a double round tournament to be held at Lake Bled.
π° JosΓ© RaΓΊl Capablanca could not be invited due to his disputes with world champion Alexander Alekhine. Noted master and writer Al Horowitz noted that Alekhine used his position as world champion to keep Capablanca out of the event. Akiba Rubinstein was invited, but was replaced by Stoltz because Rubinstein accepted the invitation too late.
π° Fourteen leading chess masters accepted their invitations. The players stayed at the Hotel Toplice and it was here that most of the tournament except Round 19 (held in Ljubljana) took place. Round one started in the large salon on August 23. Alekhine won decisively, not losing a single game and winning the tournament 5Β½ points ahead of Efim Bogoljubow. His gambit style was humiliating for the other players.
β¦οΈ The final standings and crosstable was as aboveπ
β¦οΈ Download "Bled 1931 Games Database" by PGN formatπ
#chess_history_tornaments
#Bled_1931
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess
π Chess History - Tournaments
πΉ Bled 1931
πΉ August 23 - September 28
πΉ CHAMPION: Alexander Alekhine | 20.5/26 (+15 -0 =11)
π° Bled 1931 chess tournament was a major chess tournament proposed by Milan Vidmar and held in 1931 in Bled and Ljubljana, Slovenia, then part of the Kingdom of Yugoslavia. His idea was well received in both Ljubljana (his birthplace) and the nearby health resort of Bled. An organizing committee was set up, and at the end of July 1931, following the 4th Chess Olympiad in Prague, this committee commissioned Hans Kmoch to conduct the negotiations with the competitors for a double round tournament to be held at Lake Bled.
π° JosΓ© RaΓΊl Capablanca could not be invited due to his disputes with world champion Alexander Alekhine. Noted master and writer Al Horowitz noted that Alekhine used his position as world champion to keep Capablanca out of the event. Akiba Rubinstein was invited, but was replaced by Stoltz because Rubinstein accepted the invitation too late.
π° Fourteen leading chess masters accepted their invitations. The players stayed at the Hotel Toplice and it was here that most of the tournament except Round 19 (held in Ljubljana) took place. Round one started in the large salon on August 23. Alekhine won decisively, not losing a single game and winning the tournament 5Β½ points ahead of Efim Bogoljubow. His gambit style was humiliating for the other players.
β¦οΈ The final standings and crosstable was as aboveπ
β¦οΈ Download "Bled 1931 Games Database" by PGN formatπ
#chess_history_tornaments
#Bled_1931
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess
π΅ Our selected game from Bled 1931
A short and 19 moves game from Bled 1931 which in that, Alekhine has won Nimzowitsch by a brilliancy and sacrificing pawns in the opening game.
This game named "Excuse My French" in chessgames.com site!!π
πΉ Alexander Alekhine vs Aron Nimzowitsch
πΉ Bled (1931), Bled YUG, rd 6, Aug-30
πΉ French Defense: Winawer Variation (C15)
β¦οΈReview this gameπ
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@unitychess
A short and 19 moves game from Bled 1931 which in that, Alekhine has won Nimzowitsch by a brilliancy and sacrificing pawns in the opening game.
This game named "Excuse My French" in chessgames.com site!!π
πΉ Alexander Alekhine vs Aron Nimzowitsch
πΉ Bled (1931), Bled YUG, rd 6, Aug-30
πΉ French Defense: Winawer Variation (C15)
β¦οΈReview this gameπ
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess
"It is a well known fact that almost all the outstanding chess-players have been first-class analysts."
πΈ Mikhail Botvinnik (1960). βBotvinnik: 100 Selected Gamesβ
@UnityChess
πΈ Mikhail Botvinnik (1960). βBotvinnik: 100 Selected Gamesβ
@UnityChess