Unity Chess Club
1.61K subscribers
18.2K photos
1.96K videos
4.35K files
6.66K links
Download Telegram
⚪️#204 (Strategy-White to Move)
🔸Sjugirov,S (2663)
🔸Maltsevskaya,Aleksandra (2243)
🔸ch-RUS Rapid GP Final 201
Unity Chess Strategy Multiple Choice 204
public poll

C) c4 – 9
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍 75%
عباس, Nikhil, Vincent, @Sophia_Giraffe, @AryanLeekha, Atharva, on the run faster then…, Michael, Hansika, Kasyap

B) N×g6 – 2
👍👍 17%
خوای دلووان, Matthew

A) b4 – 1
👍 8%
@Zamani9899

👥 12 people voted so far.
⚪️#204 (Endgame-White to Move)
🔸Chigaev,M (2606)
🔸Kokarev,Dm (2598)
🔸ch-RUS Rapid GP Final 201
Unity Chess Endgame Multiple Choice 204
public poll

B) b5 – 7
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍 58%
@Zamani9899, @Sophia_Giraffe, Atharva, on the run faster then…, Michael, Hansika, Matthew, Kasyap

C) g3 – 4
👍👍👍👍 33%
Nikhil, Vincent, @VORMIR_KING, @AryanLeekha

A) K×g6 – 1
👍 8%
خوای دلووان

👥 12 people voted so far.
Caruana wins the tournament, but Magnus Carlsen wins the exhibition! 7 Conclusions from the 2019 #GRENKEChess Classic:

http://bit.ly/2L9kkQi
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
2990 Perfomance! | Impressions Round 9 | GRENKE Chess Classic 2019
Media is too big
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Carlsen vs Lagrave | Chess Analysis with Magnus Carlsen, Gustafsson & Leko
A photo of a 1928 game between the Armenian master and legendary composer of studies, Genrikh Kasparian (left) & the Georgian master Archil Ebralidze, who was trainer to Tigran Petrosian during the latter's childhood years in Tbilisi.

@UnityChess
"The strength of the playing ability is much more important. Only if the strength of the opponent’s playing ability is comparable, does the game develop."

🔸 Vladimir Kramnik (2005). "About Art, Chess, Beauty..." Interview with Ugo Dossi. Chessbase.

@UnityChess
55th USSR-ch, Moscow 1988. Karpov v. Salov (in the background, A. Sokolov & Smirin).

@UnityChess
judit polgar is in play v. Leonid Yudasin. The late Lembit Oll is standing on Yudasin's right. It was quite a tricky one to identify, as it seems to be a mirror image of the original.

@UnityChess
This media is not supported in your browser
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
The earliest known film about chess is “A Chess Dispute” (1903), a one-minute silent black and white comedy by British film pioneer Robert W. Paul.
Two gentlemen play chess, and while one looks away, the other moves two pieces at once, and that’s where the dispute begins.

@UnityChess
🔸Tournament of Peace 2018
🔸Round 8
⚪️Malakhov,V (2654)
⚫️Palac,M (2548)
🔸1-0
44...Qe6? [Palac missed a winning intermediate check.]

[He should have first played: 44...Ra2+! 45.Kh1 (45.R1d2 Rxd2+ 46.Rxd2 c3 47.Re2 Kg8 48.e6 Rc8! 49.f5 c2–+) 45...Qe6! 46.Qf3 Ra3 47.Qg2 Rh3+!–+ △R×h6]

45.Qg5! [By taking advantage of his opponent's mistake, Malakhov tries to activate the queen.]

45...Ra2+ 46.Kg1 c3?? [A fatal blunder. Palac should have covered his own back-rank weakness:]

[46...Raa8! 47.R1d6 Ra1+ 48.Kf2 Ra2+ 49.Kg3 Ra3+=]

47.Rd8! Ra8 48.Rxa8 [△Rd8]

48...Qb6+ 49.Kf1 Rxa8 50.Qe7!+–
⚪️#204 (Strategy-White to Move)
🔸Sjugirov,S (2663)
🔸Maltsevskaya,Aleksandra (2243)
🔸ch-RUS Rapid GP Final 201
14.c4! [White launches a central pawn storm to open up lines against the opponent's king and remove the obstructions in his path to attack.]

[14.Nxg6 fxg6 15.Nf7 Rg8 16.d5 Nxd5 (16...exd5 17.Bf4 Qb6 18.e6+ Kxe6 19.Qf3 Qb3 (19...Kxf7?? 20.Bc7+ Ke8 21.Bxb6+–) 20.Ng5+ Kd7 21.Qe2 Nd8 22.Rfe1+–) 17.c4 Ke8 18.cxd5 Kxf7 19.dxc6 bxc6 20.Qf3+ Ke8 21.Bf4±; 14.b4 Nd8 15.c4 Nc8 16.c5±]

14...Nxd4? [14...Nf5 15.Nhxf5 Bxf5 (15...exf5 16.Bf4 Bxd6 17.exd6 Qb6 18.d5+–) 16.Nxf7 Rg8 17.Bf4+–]

15.Be3 Nec6 16.Bxd4 Bxd6 17.exd6 Qxd6 18.Bxg7 Rhg8 19.Qf3 Ke8 20.Rad1+–

1–0
⚪️#204 (Endgame-White to Move)
🔸Chigaev,M (2606)
🔸Kokarev,Dm (2598)
🔸ch-RUS Rapid GP Final 201