Unity Chess Club
1.61K subscribers
18.2K photos
1.96K videos
4.35K files
6.66K links
Download Telegram
Henrik and Magnus Carlsen. Bilbao 2010.

πŸ”— David Llada β™ž (@davidllada)
Daily chess puzzle
Solve here: https://chesspuzzle.net/Puzzle/262233
Dear #Chess Lovers,
I invite you to watch my
'CHESS DIVAS' first song
YouTube premiere!
β€οΈβ™ŸπŸŒΉπŸ§žβ€β™€οΈπŸŽΌ

β–ͺ️▫️
Lyrics by Alexandra Kosteniuk
🌹
On March 8th for
#InternationalWomensDay
Thanks for sharing!
πŸ€—

πŸ”— ᒍ α‘Œ G α—© (@JugadiPrima)
CHESS DIVAS: 'Polya Chornye' - JUGA
CHESS DIVAS: 'Polya Chornye' - JUGA
The Magnus Carlsen Invitational, the 4th event on the $1.5 million Meltwater Champions Chess Tour, starts Saturday at 17:00 CET! Check out all the details:

https://chess24.com/en/read/news/space-themed-magnus-carlsen-invitational-returns
Judit Polgar in June 1994 (Sygma Collection).

πŸ”— Olimpiu G. Urcan (@olimpiuurcan)
The game of chess is the most fascinating and intellectual pastime which the wisdom of antiquity has bequeathed to us."

πŸ”Έ Howard Staunton

@UnityChessClub
A superb picture of the PolgΓ‘r family
TASS agency

πŸ”— Diego Rasskin Gutman (@drasskin)
Daily chess puzzle in memory of Paul Devos, seven times Belgian champion, who was born on this day in 1911.
Solve here: https://chesspuzzle.net/Puzzle/203681
GM Alexander Riazantsev brings chess to new heights πŸ”β™Ÿ

The 2016 Russian champion climbed Mount Kilimanjaro's Uhuru Peak and played chess at its top. At 5,895 metres above sea level, it is the world's tallest free-standing mountain.

πŸ“·: riazantsev_alexander
πŸ‘ Congratulations to GM Vladislav Artemiev for winning today's Titled Tuesday with a score of 10/11! πŸ‘
The pairings are out for the #MagnusInvitational, with Magnus himself facing Van Foreest, MVL, Firouzja and Giri on Day 1!

https://chess24.com/en/read/news/magnus-carlsen-faces-firouzja-giri-on-day-1-of-his-invitational
This advice from Aron Nimzowitsch is still worth remembering: "First restrain, next blockade, lastly destroy." Or, in short, RBD. https://bit.ly/3bM9rzr

πŸ”— Olimpiu G. Urcan (@olimpiuurcan)
"In order to improve your game you must study the endgame before everything else; for, whereas the endings can be studied and mastered by themselves, the middlegame and the opening must be studied in relation to the endgame."

πŸ”Έ Jose Raul Capablanca

@UnityChessClub
Blitz, Moscow, 1973.
Clockwise, from the left: Anatoly Karpov, Tigran Petrosian, Aleksandr Roshal, Semyon Furman, Mikhail Tal, Efim Geller.
(πŸ“·: Novosti Press.)

πŸ”— Douglas Griffin (@dgriffinchess)