Unity Chess Endgame Multiple Choice 157
public poll
A) g4 – 14
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍 74%
@batonik107, @Shaysho, Jonas, Nikhil, Mieke, @SophiaCat_does_Chess, @A_Somewhat_Cool_Guy, Sahil, Jai, @marryjey, @Qwerty123Tseries, Michael, Hansika, Daniel
C) Be1 – 4
👍👍 21%
Hossein, Max, Gavin, @FrozenBlade
B) Ke2 – 1
👍 5%
@Armin41
👥 19 people voted so far.
public poll
A) g4 – 14
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍 74%
@batonik107, @Shaysho, Jonas, Nikhil, Mieke, @SophiaCat_does_Chess, @A_Somewhat_Cool_Guy, Sahil, Jai, @marryjey, @Qwerty123Tseries, Michael, Hansika, Daniel
C) Be1 – 4
👍👍 21%
Hossein, Max, Gavin, @FrozenBlade
B) Ke2 – 1
👍 5%
@Armin41
👥 19 people voted so far.
Los Angeles, 2nd July 1963. The opening round of the 1st Piatigorsky Cup, which was held in the Embassy Room of the city's Ambassador Hotel.
The pairings were: Keres-Petrosian; Najdorf-Panno; Ólafsson-Gligorić & Reshevsky-Benko.
@UnityChess
The pairings were: Keres-Petrosian; Najdorf-Panno; Ólafsson-Gligorić & Reshevsky-Benko.
@UnityChess
“Don't be afraid of losing, be afraid of playing a game and not learning something.”
🔸 Dan Heisman
@UnityChess
🔸 Dan Heisman
@UnityChess
Amsterdam, 4th September 1954. The 11th Olympiad, Preliminary Group 'A', Round 1; the match USSR v. Finland.
Board 1: M. Botvinnik (URS) v. T. Salo (FIN)
Board 2: J. Vesterinen (FIN) v. V. Smyslov (URS)
@UnityChess
Board 1: M. Botvinnik (URS) v. T. Salo (FIN)
Board 2: J. Vesterinen (FIN) v. V. Smyslov (URS)
@UnityChess
3rd Sharjah Master (2019) will be from 21st of March to 31st of March, 2019
For more info. and registration
https://shjchessmasters.com/
For more info. and registration
https://shjchessmasters.com/
🔸chess.com IoM Masters Douglas ENG 2018
🔸Round 6
⚪️Tregubov,Pavel V (2588)
⚫️Artemiev,Vladislav (2706)
🔸0-1
🔸Round 6
⚪️Tregubov,Pavel V (2588)
⚫️Artemiev,Vladislav (2706)
🔸0-1
27...f5! [Artemiev opens up the diagonal of the g7–bishop and attacks the center.]
28.Bxc5? [¹28.Bg5 Qe8 29.Re1 fxe4 30.Nc3 Bf5 31.fxe4 Bd7-/+]
28...fxe4! [A strong intermediate move that brings a dangerous initiative for Black.]
[28...dxc5!? 29.d6 cxd6 30.Qxd6 Rf7 31.Qxg6 fxe4 32.fxe4 Ra6! 33.Qg3 Kh7-/+ △Rg6]
29.Be3? [29.fxe4? dxc5 30.d6 Qh4 31.dxc7 Qf2+ 32.Kh1 Bg4 33.Re1 Qh4+ 34.Kg1 Be5–+; ¹29.f4! dxc5 30.d6 cxd6 31.Qxd6 Qxd6 32.Rxd6 Bf5 33.Ng3 Bd4+ 34.Kh2 Rae8-/+]
29...exf3 30.Nf4 Rfe8?!-/+ [Black allows the opponent to put up more resistance.]
[The easiest way to achieve a win would be 30...fxg2 31.Nxg6 Qe4! 32.Nxf8 Rxf8–+ △Bh3]
0–1
28.Bxc5? [¹28.Bg5 Qe8 29.Re1 fxe4 30.Nc3 Bf5 31.fxe4 Bd7-/+]
28...fxe4! [A strong intermediate move that brings a dangerous initiative for Black.]
[28...dxc5!? 29.d6 cxd6 30.Qxd6 Rf7 31.Qxg6 fxe4 32.fxe4 Ra6! 33.Qg3 Kh7-/+ △Rg6]
29.Be3? [29.fxe4? dxc5 30.d6 Qh4 31.dxc7 Qf2+ 32.Kh1 Bg4 33.Re1 Qh4+ 34.Kg1 Be5–+; ¹29.f4! dxc5 30.d6 cxd6 31.Qxd6 Qxd6 32.Rxd6 Bf5 33.Ng3 Bd4+ 34.Kh2 Rae8-/+]
29...exf3 30.Nf4 Rfe8?!-/+ [Black allows the opponent to put up more resistance.]
[The easiest way to achieve a win would be 30...fxg2 31.Nxg6 Qe4! 32.Nxf8 Rxf8–+ △Bh3]
0–1
18.Ne4 [18.Nxd5! Rapport missed a golden opportunity to obtain a significant advantage. 18...exd5 (18...Bxd5 19.Bxc4±; 18...Qxd5 19.e4 Qd6 20.Bxc4±) 19.Qg4+ Kh8 20.Qf5 and then mate next move.; 18.Nb1? f5³]
18...Nxb2 19.Nxf6+ Bxf6 20.Qxb2+/=
1–0
18...Nxb2 19.Nxf6+ Bxf6 20.Qxb2+/=
1–0
36.g4? [36.Ke2! Ke6 (36...c3 37.bxc3 bxc3 38.a3 Re8+ 39.Be3 Re4 40.Kd3 Nxe3 41.fxe3 Rg4 42.Rxc3 Rxg3 43.Rc4=) 37.Be3= a5 38.Bd4; 36.Be1 a5 37.a3 Ke6 38.axb4 axb4-/+]
36...fxg4+ 37.Kxg4 c3 38.bxc3 bxc3 39.Be1 Rc4+ 40.Kf3 Rxh4 41.Ke2 Rh3–+
0–1
36...fxg4+ 37.Kxg4 c3 38.bxc3 bxc3 39.Be1 Rc4+ 40.Kf3 Rxh4 41.Ke2 Rh3–+
0–1