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A second draw in the finals of the FIDE Grand Prix means the winner of the event will be decided in Thursday’s tiebreaks.

Game 2 featured Nakamura grabbing what Aronian considered to be a poisoned pawn on b2!
2022 FIDE Grand Prix Berlin Final: Nakamura Wins First Leg After 2-0 Tiebreak Sweep
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Hikaru Nakamura and Levon Aronian after the final tie-break of the first leg of the FIDE Grand Prix
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«The Key To Invincibility? No Pressure!» — Hikaru Nakamura after winning first leg of the Grand Prix
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Closing Ceremony of FIDE Grand Prix First Leg. Hikaru Nakamura Receives the Medal, Gives a Speech.
Schiphol Airport, Netherlands, 30th November 1948. Ex-World Champion Max Euwe is pictured with his wife Carolina, en route to a tour of Iceland, and North & South America.

🔗 Douglas Griffin (@dgriffinchess)
"Chess is so inspiring that I do not believe a good player is capable of having an evil thought during the game."

🔸 Wilhelm Steinitz

@UnityChessClub
Prizewinners at the European Junior Championship, Groningen, Netherlands, 1972/73.
Left to right: Aurel Urzică (Romania; 3rd), Oleg Romanishin (USSR; 1st), Tony Miles (England; 2nd).

🔗 Douglas Griffin (@dgriffinchess)
Mom with legendary Judit and Susan Polgar in the 90’s!

🔗 Anna Cramling (@AnnaCramling)
"Bobby Fischer in a doorway in Iceland, 1972".

🔗 Douglas Griffin (@dgriffinchess)
White to play and draw
Taimanov - Geller, Moscow 1951
https://chesspuzzle.net/Puzzle/67531
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Solution explained by Daniel King
Chess puzzle of the week - White to play shorts
Lev Psakhis (centre) kindly presented me with a lilac coloured book, in Russian, on Rashid Nezhmetdinov - a brilliant but obscure figure whose foreign excursions were limited to Bucharest and Ulaanbaatar. He has subsequently become famous thanks to the streaming generation.

🔗 Nigel Short (@nigelshortchess)
A portrait of the Dutch grandmaster and former World #3 Jan Timman (b. 1951), taken in early 2021.

🔗 Douglas Griffin (@dgriffinchess)