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Levan Pantsulaia-Judit Polgar, 2011-03-28.pgn
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🌸 "Levan Pantsulaia (2595)- Judit Polgar (2686), 12th European Individual Championship 2011"
🌸PGN Format
🌸 Notes By GM Sergey Shipov From CHESS.COM Site

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🔸London Chess Classic 2017
🔸Round 9
⚪️Aronian,Levon (2805)
⚫️Carlsen,Magnus (2837)
🔸0-1
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🔸London Chess Classic 2017
🔸Round 9
⚪️Anand,Viswanathan (2782)
⚫️So,Wesley (2788)
🔸0-1
The press centre at the 1984 World Chess Championship in Moscow: Vasiukov, Tal, Polugaevsky, Gipslis, Bykhovsky...

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Analysis of the game Korchnoi-Kasparov, 25th Olympiad, Lucerne 1982
Maia Chiburdanidze, Nana Ioselani, Aivars Gipslis, Nona Gaprindashvili, Nana Alexandria, Garry Kasparov, Eduard Gufeld.

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Former World Champion Max Euwe in play v. Wolfgang Unzicker, Round 1, top board of the Netherlands-West Germany match, Utrecht, 13th March 1954.

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🔸London Chess Classic 2017
🔸Round 6
⚪️Nakamura,Hikaru (2781)
⚫️Carlsen,Magnus (2837)
🔸½-½
📘 59.R×f5?=
It gives black an opportunity to equalize the game with Re8 and then Re1.
The winning continuation was:
59.Ra3! with the idea of Rf3 —-> K×f5. White with Covering 3rd-rank prevents the black rook to transfer the 8th-rank, for example, 59.Ra3 Rh8 60.Ne2+ Kd5 61.Rc3 +- Please see the diagram below👇👇👇
🔸London Chess Classic 2017
🔸Round 6
⚪️Nakamura,Hikaru (2781)
⚫️Carlsen,Magnus (2837)
🔸½-½
📘 In this position, white can win the game with the following processes:
1-transferring the king to d2.
2-Ne2
3-Rf1
4-Moving the king to f2 to defend g2-pawn.
5-Now Rc1
6- Maneuvering Ng1-Nf3-Ne1 and c2-pawn will eventually fall.
🔸London Chess Classic 2017
🔸Round 6
⚪️Adams,Michael (2715)
⚫️Nepomniachtchi,Ian (2729)
🔸0-1
📘 36.c4?
It turns out to be a blunder that costs a pawn.
36...Nd6 37.Rc7 d×c4 38.B×c4 Ra1+ 39.Kf2 Rc1 40.b6 N×c4 41.b7 Rb1 42.R×c4 R×b7 -/+
🔸London Chess Classic 2017
🔸Round 6
⚪️Adams,Michael (2715)
⚫️Nepomniachtchi,Ian (2729)
🔸0-1
📘 70.Rh4?!
Allowing black to play f5.
70.g4! was simpler and more logical which white draw should be secure: 70.g4 Ra6 71.Kg3 Kf7 72.Rh6! Ke6 73.g5 =
⚪️#161 (Strategy-White to Move)
🔸Ivanchuk,Vassily (2769)
🔸Vachier Lagrave,Maxime (2686)
🔸Istanbul ol (Men) 2012
📘 12.Nb3!
White has more space so he keeps his knight on the board. Ivanchuk retreats his knight to b3 instead of f3 because the typical square for Black's dark-squared bishop is h6; with the knight on f3, the f4-pawn would then require guarding by the queen (of course White is not going to weaken the long light diagonal with g2-g3 just to guard the f-pawn).َ Also In some lines, Black castles long and it won't hurt for White to station a piece on the queenside to facilitate matters there.
⚫️#162 (Strategy-Black to Move)
🔸Carlsen,Magnus (2837)
🔸Ivanchuk,Vassily (2769)
🔸Wch Rapid Astana 2012