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11-year-old Luke McShane in May 1995, after he played a game against Garry Kasparov, the world champion, via Internet from his headmaster's office at Westminster Lower School, Central London (AP archive).
@UnityChess
@UnityChess
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Summary of the 5th Global Chess Festival. It was a fantastic day!
#GlobalChessFestival #ChessConnectsUs
#GlobalChessFestival #ChessConnectsUs
Round 6 of #IOMchess, the results on the top boards:
1. Caruana (4) 1-0 Fedoseev (4)
2. Maghsoodloo (4) ½-½ Grischuk (4)
3. Wang (4) 1-0 McShane (4)
4. Carlsen (3½) 1-0 Shirov (4)
There is a rest day tomorrow, round 7 will be played on October 17.
1. Caruana (4) 1-0 Fedoseev (4)
2. Maghsoodloo (4) ½-½ Grischuk (4)
3. Wang (4) 1-0 McShane (4)
4. Carlsen (3½) 1-0 Shirov (4)
There is a rest day tomorrow, round 7 will be played on October 17.
The #iomchess r7 pairings are out and we'll see these top clashes on Thursday:
Grischuk (4½) vs. Caruana (5)
Aronian (4½) vs. Wang Hao (5)
Alekseenko (4½) vs. Carlsen (4½)
Anton (4½) vs. Vitiugov (4½)
Yu Yangyi (4) vs. Maghsoodloo (4½)
https://chess24.com/en/watch/live-tournaments/fide-grand-swiss-2019/7/1/1
Grischuk (4½) vs. Caruana (5)
Aronian (4½) vs. Wang Hao (5)
Alekseenko (4½) vs. Carlsen (4½)
Anton (4½) vs. Vitiugov (4½)
Yu Yangyi (4) vs. Maghsoodloo (4½)
https://chess24.com/en/watch/live-tournaments/fide-grand-swiss-2019/7/1/1
chess24.com
Grischuk, Alexander vs. Caruana, Fabiano | FIDE Chess.com Grand Swiss 2019
Replay the FIDE Chess.com Grand Swiss Round 7 game played on 17/10/2019 with computer analysis
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Tournament leader and world #2 Fabiano Caruana analyzes his fantastic win over Russian star Vladimir Fedoseev in round six.
Caruana is the sole leader with 5/6.
Overnight joint leader, Parham Maghsoodloo also joins in and shares his inputs.
#iomchess
Caruana is the sole leader with 5/6.
Overnight joint leader, Parham Maghsoodloo also joins in and shares his inputs.
#iomchess
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Yesterday, Magnus Carlsen said it's not too late to "catch fire" and today he delivered a masterful middlegame sequence starting with 22.Qf2 and which ended with him nonchalantly dismissing 28.Qh4 for the more prosaic 28.c3.
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Magnus Carlsen explains Alexei Shirov's resignation.