Artemiev (2754.4, World #13) wins the European Individual Championship with 8.5/11, increasing his unbeaten streak in classical chess to 49 games
20.Rad1! [A finishing move. Black is completely helpless due to his back-rank weakness and his poor king's position.]
20...Bxf6β’ [20...Rf8? 21.Qd3+β β³Qh7]
21.Qxh6+ Kg8 22.Qxf6 Rf8 [22...Rd7 23.Nxf7! Qf4 24.Qg6+ Kf8 25.Ng5 Nd4 26.Rd3 Ke7 27.Rfd1 Qf6 28.Qh7+ Kd8 29.Ne4 Qe5 30.Qh4+ Kc7 31.Nf6 Rd8 32.Rxd4 Rxd4 33.Qxd4 Qxd4 34.Rxd4+β]
23.f4! [β³Ne4]
23...e5 24.fxe5 Qb6 25.Rd6 Qa5 26.Nxf7+β
20...Bxf6β’ [20...Rf8? 21.Qd3+β β³Qh7]
21.Qxh6+ Kg8 22.Qxf6 Rf8 [22...Rd7 23.Nxf7! Qf4 24.Qg6+ Kf8 25.Ng5 Nd4 26.Rd3 Ke7 27.Rfd1 Qf6 28.Qh7+ Kd8 29.Ne4 Qe5 30.Qh4+ Kc7 31.Nf6 Rd8 32.Rxd4 Rxd4 33.Qxd4 Qxd4 34.Rxd4+β]
23.f4! [β³Ne4]
23...e5 24.fxe5 Qb6 25.Rd6 Qa5 26.Nxf7+β
17.g4!? [17.Be2! after this strong move, if Black keeps his king in the center, White can play f4βf5 and exploit the e8βh5 diagonal by the bishop and in case of ...0β0, White's rooks are connected for the attack. 17...g6 (17...Be7 18.Kb1) 18.Bd3 Nc5 (18...0β0 19.g3 Bxg3 (19...Be7 20.Rxh6+β) 20.Rxh6+β) 19.g4 Ne4 20.Qh2 Be7 21.Kb1 Qd7 22.f5 0β0β0 23.Nxb5 axb5 24.Bxe4 Qc7 25.Bf3 Bc5 26.Bd4 Bxd4 27.Rxd4 Bc6 28.Be2Β±; 17.Kb1 Nc5 18.Bd3 Be7 19.f5 Qc7 20.fxe6 Nxe6 21.Rdf1 Nxd4 (21...Qxe5 22.Nxe6 Qxe6 23.Re1 Qc6 24.Bd4+β) 22.Bxd4 Bc8 23.e6 Bxe6 24.Bxg7 Rg8 25.Bf6 0β0β0 26.a4 Rg4 27.Bxe7 Qxe7 28.axb5 axb5 29.Bxb5Β±]
17...g6 18.Bd3Β±
1β0
17...g6 18.Bd3Β±
1β0
33.Rf1 [33.Rxf8+! Nxf8 34.Rf1 Nh7 35.Rf7 Qg1+ 36.Bf1 Qd4+ 37.Qd2 Qxe4 38.Qg2 Qxg2 (38...Qd4+ 39.Bd3 Qa1+ 40.Ke2 Bg7 41.Qxg6 Qe5+ 42.Kf1+β) 39.Bxg2 g5 (39...Kg8 40.Bd5) 40.b4 Nf6 41.b5 Kg8 42.Ra7 g4 43.b6 h4 44.Ra8+ Kh7 45.b7 d5 46.b8Q Bxb8 47.Rxb8 h3 48.Bf1 Ne4 49.Ke2+β; 33.Bc4 Qg4+ 34.Kc1 Rxa8 35.Qxa8+ Kg7 36.Qa7+ Kh6 37.Bxe6 Bf4+! 38.Kb1 Qxe6 39.Qd4+/=]
33...Rxa8 34.Qxa8+ Kg7 35.Qc8 Nf4 36.b4 Qe7 37.b5 Qa7 38.Qc4 Ng2 39.Ke2 Qe3+ 40.Kd1 Qa7 41.Ke2 Qe3+ 42.Kd1
Β½βΒ½
33...Rxa8 34.Qxa8+ Kg7 35.Qc8 Nf4 36.b4 Qe7 37.b5 Qa7 38.Qc4 Ng2 39.Ke2 Qe3+ 40.Kd1 Qa7 41.Ke2 Qe3+ 42.Kd1
Β½βΒ½
Unity Chess Strategy Multiple Choice 179
public poll
B) Ng4 β 8
πππππππ 62%
@PouyaMO1360, Kavian, Gavin, Nikhil, @A_Wild_Richard, @AryanLeekha, Hansika, Kasyap
A) Nd7 β 5
ππππ 38%
@aadiib, M, @Sophia_Giraffe, Erdal, Matthew
C) b5
β«οΈ 0%
π₯ 13 people voted so far.
public poll
B) Ng4 β 8
πππππππ 62%
@PouyaMO1360, Kavian, Gavin, Nikhil, @A_Wild_Richard, @AryanLeekha, Hansika, Kasyap
A) Nd7 β 5
ππππ 38%
@aadiib, M, @Sophia_Giraffe, Erdal, Matthew
C) b5
β«οΈ 0%
π₯ 13 people voted so far.
Unity Chess Endgame Multiple Choice 179
public poll
A) Kc3 β 10
πππππππ 77%
@PouyaMO1360, farhad, Gavin, Nikhil, Babak, @A_Wild_Richard, @AryanLeekha, Hansika, @Nirvana9877, Kasyap
C) Kd3 β 2
π 15%
@aadiib, @Sophia_Giraffe
B) Ke1 β 1
π 8%
Masoud
π₯ 13 people voted so far.
public poll
A) Kc3 β 10
πππππππ 77%
@PouyaMO1360, farhad, Gavin, Nikhil, Babak, @A_Wild_Richard, @AryanLeekha, Hansika, @Nirvana9877, Kasyap
C) Kd3 β 2
π 15%
@aadiib, @Sophia_Giraffe
B) Ke1 β 1
π 8%
Masoud
π₯ 13 people voted so far.
Akiba Rubinstein, Salomon Landau, Edgard Colle and Savielly Tartakower at the Rotterdam tournament in 1931.
@UnityChess
@UnityChess