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⚫️#111 (Strategy-Black to Move)
πŸ”ΈMoayed,Obied (2125)
πŸ”ΈNeiksans,Arturs (2566)
πŸ”ΈOlympiad 2018 Batumi
25...Nb6! [The knight threatens to penetrate White's's camp through the weak light squares.]

[25...e4 26.f3 Be5 27.Nf4 Nxf4 28.gxf4 Bf6Β³; 25...Qc4 26.Qd2 e4 27.Nf4 Nxf4 28.Qxf4 (28.gxf4 Bf6Β΅) 28...Bxc3+ 29.bxc3 Qxc3+ 30.Kf1 Qxa3Β΅]

26.Be7 Nc4 27.h5 gxh5 28.b4 e4 29.Nf4 Bxc3+ 30.Kf1 [30.Qxc3 Qb1+ 31.Qc1 Qxc1#]

30...Bd2 31.Qd1 Ne3+!! [A brilliant knight sacrifice in order to trap the enemy queen.]

32.fxe3 Bb3 33.Bh3 Bxd1 34.Bxf5+ Kg7 35.Be6 Qxe6 [35...Qxe6 36.Nxe6+ Kf7–+; 35...Qb1! 36.Kg2 Bxe3–+]

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βšͺ️#111 (Endgame-β€ŒWhite to Move)
πŸ”ΈBlagojevic,Dragisa (2476)
πŸ”ΈHamitevici,Vladimir (2505)
πŸ”ΈWorld Chess Olympiad 2018 Batumi
34.hxg5 [34.Bh3! Rf6 35.Ra1 Rf7 36.Qd1 g4 37.Bg2 Qc8 38.Ra2 Rb7 39.e4 h5 40.exf5 Rxf5 41.Re4 Rbf7 42.Rae2 d5 43.Re8 Qd7 44.cxd5 cxd5 45.R2e5 Rxe5 46.Rxe5 Bg7 47.Rxd5+–; 34.Ra1! Re8 35.hxg5 hxg5 36.Ra6 Qb7 37.Ra4 Rb8 38.Rxd6 Qb1+ 39.Bf1 Qxd3 40.Rxd3 Rb7 41.Rd8 Kg7 42.Ra6 Rf7 43.f4 gxf4 44.gxf4 Rc7 45.Ra2 Rf7 46.Kf2 Kf6 47.Raa8 Bg7 48.Rd6+ Ke7 49.Rad8 Bc3 50.Be2 Ba5 51.R8d7+ Kf8 52.Bh5 Rxd7 53.Rxd7 Rxc4 54.Rf7+ Kg8 55.Rxf5Β±]

½–½
βšͺ️#112 (Strategy-White to Move)
πŸ”ΈBernotas,Arturs (2408)
πŸ”ΈIssa,Rafat (2388)
πŸ”ΈOlympiad 2018 Batumi
Unity Chess Strategy Multiple Choice 112
public poll

B) Be1 – 8
πŸ‘πŸ‘πŸ‘πŸ‘πŸ‘πŸ‘πŸ‘ 67%
@M_L_110213, @Talamag, Nikhil, @SteveWongso, Ali.m, @Sophia_Peng, @RichardPeng, @WataxPin

A) b3 – 3
πŸ‘πŸ‘πŸ‘ 25%
@mahyarebrahimi1983, @Noono, Jayden

C) Qf3 – 1
πŸ‘ 8%
@MmliSafa

πŸ‘₯ 12 people voted so far.
⚫️#112 (Endgame-β€ŒBlack to Move)
πŸ”ΈGong,Qianyun (2321)
πŸ”ΈDamaso,Rui (2440)
πŸ”ΈWorld Chess Olympiad 2018 Batumi
Unity Chess Endgame Multiple Choice 112
public poll

A) Kg5 – 11
πŸ‘πŸ‘πŸ‘πŸ‘πŸ‘πŸ‘πŸ‘ 69%
@dotleo, @Talamag, @sepehr_j7, @Mey_ro, Nikhil, @BehroudR, Jayden, @SteveWongso, Ali.m, @RichardPeng, @WataxPin

B) Ke5 – 4
πŸ‘πŸ‘πŸ‘ 25%
M, @Arminya66, @mahyarebrahimi1983, @Sharifian_2004

C) Rg3 – 1
πŸ‘ 6%
@Sophia_Peng

πŸ‘₯ 16 people voted so far.
◼️ Today is death day of Arnold Denker
β–ͺ️ American chess Grandmaster

β–ͺ️ Born: February 20, 1914, New York City, NY
β–ͺ️ Died: January 2, 2005, Fort Lauderdale, FL
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess
At the ZΓΌrich/Neuhausen Candidates' Tournament of 1953 - L to R: Paul Keres, Miguel Najdorf, Vasily Smyslov, Mark Taimanov.

@UnityChess
"I understood that through chess I could express myself and chess became my natural language."

πŸ”Έ Boris Spassky

@UnityChess
UNITY CHESS INFOGRAPHIC

πŸ”΅ Chess History - Tournaments
πŸ”ΉLeningrad 1924/35
πŸ”Ή
9th Soviet Chess Champion

#chess_history_tornaments
#Leningrad1934/35
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@unitychess
πŸ”΅ Chess History - Tournaments
πŸ”Ή Leningrad 1924/35
πŸ”Ή 7 December - 2 January
πŸ”Ή 9th Soviet Chess Champion

πŸ”° CHAMPION: Grigory Levenfish | 12/19 (+8 -3 =8) |
SHARED WITH: Ilya Rabinovich | 12/19 (+9βˆ’4=6) |

πŸ“š The 9th Soviet Chess Championship was played in the city of Leningrad from December 7th, 1934 to January 2nd, 1935. Twenty of the Soviet Union's best chess masters competed in the round robin event, with only one noticeable absence: Mikhail Botvinnik. The winner of the previous two Soviet championships had accepted an invitation to the chess festival held at Hastings at the end of the year 1934, and therefore could not participate as his nation's returning champion. Thus, two of Botvinnik's main rivals at the time were able to succeed at the top of their game in their opponent's absence. They were Fedor Bohatirchuk and Grigory Levenfish, and succeed they did. In the first half of the tournament Bohatirchuk led the field, closely followed by Vladimir Alatortsev, but he fell behind in the second half, allowing Levenfish to finish first, which he shared with Ilya Rabinovich. Bohatirchuk had to settle for third place, tying with Nikolai Riumin, half a point behind the winners. It was the first of two titles that Levenfish would win, while Rabinovich would never win another USSR crown.

🌐 SOURCE: CHESSGAMES.COM

πŸ”Ή The final standings and crosstable was as aboveπŸ‘†
πŸ”Ή Download " Leningrad 1034/35 Games Database " by PGN formatπŸ‘‡
πŸ”Ή Review our selected game from this tournamentπŸ‘‡

#chess_history_tornaments
#Leningrad1934-35
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@unitychess
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♦️ Review our selected game from "Leningrad 1934/35 Chess Tournament"πŸ‘‡
β–ͺ️ Grigory Levenfish vs Peter Vasilievich Dubinin
β–ͺ️ USSR Championship (1934/35), Leningrad URS, rd 3
β–ͺ️ Four Knights Game: Spanish Variation (C48)
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess
@Leningrad1934-35.pgn
123.9 KB
πŸ”Ή Leningrad 1934/35 Games Database
πŸ”Ή PGN format
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess
πŸ”Έchess.com IoM Masters Douglas ENG 2018
πŸ”ΈRound 4
βšͺ️Meier,Georg (2639)
⚫️Rapport,Richard (2725)
πŸ”Έ0-1
62.Bg8? [A carelessness. Meier shouldn't have allowed the black king to penetrate.]

[62.Bf3! Bxf3 (62...Bf7 63.Be2 Ke5 64.Bd3 Be6 65.Be2 Bf5 66.Bd1 Bg6 67.Be2=) 63.Kxf3 h5 64.a4 Ke5 65.Ke3 Kf5 66.Kf3 Ke5 67.Ke3=]

62...Bd1! [62...Be8!? 63.Kf3 Bc6+ 64.Kg3 Ke5 65.Kg4 Be8 66.Kf3 Kd4 67.Ke2 Bg6 68.Kd2 Bd3 69.Be6 Bxc4–+]

63.Bf7 Bb3 64.Kf3 Ba4 65.Bd5 Bd1+! [And White can no longer stop the black king from penetrating.]

66.Ke3 [66.Kg3 Ke5 67.Bg8 Kd4 68.Kf4 Be2 69.Kf5 Bxc4 70.Bxc4 Kxc4 71.Kg6 Kd3 72.Kxh6 c4 73.Kg6 c3 74.h5 c2 75.h6 c1Q 76.h7 Qc3–+]

66...Kg4 67.Ke4 Kxh4–+

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