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📘 27...Qc8? 28.e5!
Carlsen punishes black's last move quickly.
28...d×e5 (B×e5 29.Ne7+) 29.d6! Ra8 (c×d6 30.Ne7+) 30.Ne7+ B×e7 31.d×e7 1-0
🔸Champions Showdown MCDL 2017
🔸Round 8
⚪️Ding,Liren (2772)
⚫️Carlsen,Magnus (2826)
🔸0-1
📘 31.Q×c5??
World Cup runner-up, Ding Liren committed a bad mistake.
31..Qb1 32.Kg2 c2 33.Qd6 Qd1 34.Bd3 Qd2+ 35.Kh3 Qh6+ 0-1
⚫️#115 (Strategy-Black to Move)
🔸Ivanchuk,Vassily (2475)
🔸Manor,Ilan (2405)
🔸Groningen 1986
21...Re7!
This subtle move initiates the concept of fighting for the long dark diagonal by adding the queen behind it from h8: 22.a5 Qh8!
21...bxa4? 22.Nxa4 and black's queenside pawn structure is ruined.
21...Nd7!? 22.Bxg7 Kxg7 with the idea of ...f5 is also interesting. However, this plan somewhat weakens the Black king.
⚪️#116 (Strategy-White to Move)
🔸Ivanchuk,Vassily (2390)
🔸Hansen,Lars
🔸Wch U16 Champigny sur Marne 1984
19.Bh3!
Sometimes, we have this blind spot where we don't even consider such minor piece exchanges as giving up a fianchettoed bishop for a knight, basing our decisions on intuition or personal dogma rather than proper calculation. After 19...Ne7(otherwise 20.Bxf5) 20.Nd6 white is much better.
19.c5? A wrong decision because after 19...dxc5 20.Nxc5 d6, the problem of black d6-square is solved.
19.Rd2 This logical move allows black to complete his development with 19...Bb7 and prevent white Bh3 move.
⚪️#117 (Strategy-White to Move)
🔸Ivanchuk,Vassily (2680)
🔸Zapata,Alonso (2545)
🔸Novi Sad ol (Men) 1990
📕Unity Chess Multiple Choice 117

B: Nc5 – 10
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍 63%

A: Rc1 – 4
👍👍👍 25%

C: Be2 – 2
👍 13%

👥 16 people voted so far.
⚪️#118 (Strategy-White to Move)
🔸Ivanchuk,Vassily (2731)
🔸Ye,Jiangchuan (2681)
🔸FIDE-Wch k.o. Moscow 2001
📕Unity Chess Multiple Choice 118

A: h4 – 14
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍 61%

B: Rd7 – 8
👍👍👍👍 35%

C: Na7 – 1
👍 4%

👥 23 people voted so far.
⚪️#117 (Strategy-White to Move)
🔸Ivanchuk,Vassily (2680)
🔸Zapata,Alonso (2545)
🔸Novi Sad ol (Men) 1990
📕 14.Rc1!
White with placing his rook in the opposite of enemy queen threatens to win a pawn with 15.cxb5. The immediate effect is that Black must remove his queen from c7 and lose control of the a5- and b6-squares too.
14.Nc5? Due to white's poor development on the kingside, this exchange is in Black's favor: 14...Nxc5 15.Bxc5 Rfd8.
14.Be2 This normal move reduces white's advantage after 14...Rfd8.
⚪️#118 (Strategy-White to Move)
🔸Ivanchuk,Vassily (2731)
🔸Ye,Jiangchuan (2681)
🔸FIDE-Wch k.o. Moscow 2001
31.h4!!
How very cruel! This move shows black's helplessness who is denied even the g5-square.
31.Rd7? of course, Ivanchuk would never let the black queen get out with 31...Qa5.
31.Na7? black's position is squeezed and exchanging the knights lets him breathe.
⚫️#119 (Strategy-Black to Move)
🔸Keres,Paul
🔸Botvinnik,Mikhail
🔸Leningrad/Moscow 1941