πUnity Chess Multiple Choice 153
anonymous poll
C: Ra4 β 8
πππππππ 73%
B: Qf1 β 2
ππ 18%
A: NΓb5 β 1
π 9%
π₯ 11 people voted so far.
anonymous poll
C: Ra4 β 8
πππππππ 73%
B: Qf1 β 2
ππ 18%
A: NΓb5 β 1
π 9%
π₯ 11 people voted so far.
πUnity Chess Multiple Choice 154
anonymous poll
A: Bd4 β 9
πππππππ 60%
C: h4 β 6
πππππ 40%
B: BΓc5
β«οΈ 0%
π₯ 15 people voted so far.
anonymous poll
A: Bd4 β 9
πππππππ 60%
C: h4 β 6
πππππ 40%
B: BΓc5
β«οΈ 0%
π₯ 15 people voted so far.
Soviet grandmasters Viktor Korchnoi, Tigran Petrosian and Yuri Averbakh in a training session. Early 1970.
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The opening game of the epic Kasparov v Deep Blue match, May 1997. Or, in AlphaZero's vocabulary, Stone Age.
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Future grandmaster Vladimir Akopian (born 7th December, 1971) with his then-trainer, Soviet Master Oleg Dementiev. Akopian was born in Baku, but moved to Yerevan with his family in 1985
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The 1948 World Championship match-tournament (The Hague/Moscow); Mikhail Botvinnik (USSR) faces Sammy Reshevsky (USA) in the Hall of Columns in the House of Unions in the Soviet capital.
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πΈ Alexandra Kosteniuk
πΈ Russian chess Grandmaster
πΈ 12th Womenβs World Chess Champion and Chess Queen of Russia
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πΈ Russian chess Grandmaster
πΈ 12th Womenβs World Chess Champion and Chess Queen of Russia
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πΈπΈπΈπΈ
πΈ Alexandra Konstantinovna Kosteniuk Russian chess grandmaster and Women's World Chess Champion from 2008 to 2010.
π Born: April 23, 1984 (age 33), Perm, Russia
π Title: Grandmaster (2004)
π FIDE rating 2557 (December 2017)
π Peak rating 2557 (April 2016)
π Spouse: Pavel Tregubov (m. 2015)
π Books: Diary of a Chess Queen
πΈ Kosteniuk became the inaugural Fischerandom (Chess960) Women's World Champion in 2006, and successfully defended her title in 2008 against Kateryna Lahno. There did not appear to be a Fischerandom world championship in 2010.
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πΈ Alexandra Konstantinovna Kosteniuk Russian chess grandmaster and Women's World Chess Champion from 2008 to 2010.
π Born: April 23, 1984 (age 33), Perm, Russia
π Title: Grandmaster (2004)
π FIDE rating 2557 (December 2017)
π Peak rating 2557 (April 2016)
π Spouse: Pavel Tregubov (m. 2015)
π Books: Diary of a Chess Queen
πΈ Kosteniuk became the inaugural Fischerandom (Chess960) Women's World Champion in 2006, and successfully defended her title in 2008 against Kateryna Lahno. There did not appear to be a Fischerandom world championship in 2010.
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πΈ A memorable game from Kosteniuk
πΈ Alexandra Kosteniuk won Magnus Calsen at World Blitz Championship - Moscow 2009
ππΌππΌππΌ
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πΈ Alexandra Kosteniuk won Magnus Calsen at World Blitz Championship - Moscow 2009
ππΌππΌππΌ
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πΈ Magnus Carlsen -Alexandra Kosteniuk
πΈ World Blitz Championship (2009), Moscow RUS, rd 4, Nov-16
πΈDownload PGN file ππΌππΌππΌ
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πΈ World Blitz Championship (2009), Moscow RUS, rd 4, Nov-16
πΈDownload PGN file ππΌππΌππΌ
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carlsen_kosteniuk_2009.pgn
818 B
πΈ Magnus Carlsen -Alexandra Kosteniuk
πΈ World Blitz Championship (2009), Moscow RUS, rd 4, Nov-16
πΈ PGN Format
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πΈ World Blitz Championship (2009), Moscow RUS, rd 4, Nov-16
πΈ PGN Format
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π22.f4
Black could have played 22.a3! to deprive the opponent of any counter-play:
A)22...Rd4 23.Rdh1 With the idea of f4 +-
B)22...d4 23.Qf4 +-
C)22...Rb8 23.Rdh1 +-)
22...d4 23.Qg1? dΓc3 24.Qh2? Qa5 -+
Black could have played 22.a3! to deprive the opponent of any counter-play:
A)22...Rd4 23.Rdh1 With the idea of f4 +-
B)22...d4 23.Qf4 +-
C)22...Rb8 23.Rdh1 +-)
22...d4 23.Qg1? dΓc3 24.Qh2? Qa5 -+
π 25...Re4?
Mosadeghpour could have finished the game by playing 25...Ra4! with a forced checkmate.
26.f5 Qb4 0-1
White lost on time in a better position, for example:
27.fΓg6 fΓg6 28.Bc1! With the idea of a3 β>RΓh4
Mosadeghpour could have finished the game by playing 25...Ra4! with a forced checkmate.
26.f5 Qb4 0-1
White lost on time in a better position, for example:
27.fΓg6 fΓg6 28.Bc1! With the idea of a3 β>RΓh4
π 31...NΓf2?
The only move was 31...Qc6!:
[31...Qc6! 32.NΓe4
(NΓf8? Ng5 -/+) QΓe6=]
32.Rd2+- (RΓd5! +-)
The only move was 31...Qc6!:
[31...Qc6! 32.NΓe4
(NΓf8? Ng5 -/+) QΓe6=]
32.Rd2+- (RΓd5! +-)