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🔸World Blitz Championship 2017
🔸Round 4
⚪️Amin,Bassem (2689)
⚫️Yu,Yangyi (2751)
🔸1-0
🔸Round 4
⚪️Amin,Bassem (2689)
⚫️Yu,Yangyi (2751)
🔸1-0
🔵🔵🔵🔵
▪️ Mikhail Botvinnik
▪️ Russian-Soviet electrical engineer and chess grandmaster
♦️ Mikhail Botvinnik was a Soviet and Russian International Grandmaster and World Chess Champion for most of 1948 to 1963.
🔹 Full name: Mikhail Moiseyevich Botvinnik
🔹 Country: Soviet Union
🔹 Born: August 17, 1911 Kuokkala, Grand Duchy of Finland, Russian Empire (now Repino, Russia)
🔹 Died: May 5, 1995 (aged 83) Moscow, Russia
🔹 Title: Grandmaster
🔹 World Champion: 1948–1957 1958–1960 1961–1963
🔹 Peak rating: 2660 (January 1971)
♦️ Mikhail Moiseevich Botvinnik was born in Kuokkala.
He was raised in Leningrad (now St. Petersburg). He learned the game early and progressed rapidly, winning the 1st of his 6 USSR Championships in 1931; the other 5 victories were in 1933, 1939, 1944, 1945 and 1952. He also won the Leningrad tournament of 1934, the Absolute Soviet Championship in 1941, and the Sverdlovsk super tournament of 1943. Other significant achievements include equal first with Salomon Flohr in Moscow 1935, 2nd at Moscow 1936 behind Jose Raul Capablanca, equal first with Capablanca at Nottingham 1936, 3rd at AVRO 1938, and first at Groningen 1946 before playing for the World Championship in 1948. He also won the Tchigorin Memorial tournament of 1947 and came equal first with David Bronstein in the Alekhine Memorial of 1956.
♦️ Today's game selected from 14th Chess Olympiad, Leipzig 1960 which Botvinnik won Lothar Schmid, the grandmaster of west Germany by a excellent central pawn game!! 👇🏼👇🏼👇🏼
💢 Mikhail Botvinnik vs Lothar Schmid
💢 Leipzig ol (Men) fin-A (1960), Leipzig GDR, rd 7, Nov-03
💢 Benoni Defense: Old Benoni (A43)
♦️ Review this informative game and download it's PGN file👇🏼👇🏼
@UnityChess
▪️ Mikhail Botvinnik
▪️ Russian-Soviet electrical engineer and chess grandmaster
♦️ Mikhail Botvinnik was a Soviet and Russian International Grandmaster and World Chess Champion for most of 1948 to 1963.
🔹 Full name: Mikhail Moiseyevich Botvinnik
🔹 Country: Soviet Union
🔹 Born: August 17, 1911 Kuokkala, Grand Duchy of Finland, Russian Empire (now Repino, Russia)
🔹 Died: May 5, 1995 (aged 83) Moscow, Russia
🔹 Title: Grandmaster
🔹 World Champion: 1948–1957 1958–1960 1961–1963
🔹 Peak rating: 2660 (January 1971)
♦️ Mikhail Moiseevich Botvinnik was born in Kuokkala.
He was raised in Leningrad (now St. Petersburg). He learned the game early and progressed rapidly, winning the 1st of his 6 USSR Championships in 1931; the other 5 victories were in 1933, 1939, 1944, 1945 and 1952. He also won the Leningrad tournament of 1934, the Absolute Soviet Championship in 1941, and the Sverdlovsk super tournament of 1943. Other significant achievements include equal first with Salomon Flohr in Moscow 1935, 2nd at Moscow 1936 behind Jose Raul Capablanca, equal first with Capablanca at Nottingham 1936, 3rd at AVRO 1938, and first at Groningen 1946 before playing for the World Championship in 1948. He also won the Tchigorin Memorial tournament of 1947 and came equal first with David Bronstein in the Alekhine Memorial of 1956.
♦️ Today's game selected from 14th Chess Olympiad, Leipzig 1960 which Botvinnik won Lothar Schmid, the grandmaster of west Germany by a excellent central pawn game!! 👇🏼👇🏼👇🏼
💢 Mikhail Botvinnik vs Lothar Schmid
💢 Leipzig ol (Men) fin-A (1960), Leipzig GDR, rd 7, Nov-03
💢 Benoni Defense: Old Benoni (A43)
♦️ Review this informative game and download it's PGN file👇🏼👇🏼
@UnityChess
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VIEW IN TELEGRAM
💢 Mikhail Botvinnik vs Lothar Schmid
💢 Leipzig ol (Men) fin-A (1960), Leipzig GDR, rd 7, Nov-03
💢 Benoni Defense: Old Benoni (A43)
@UnityChess
💢 Leipzig ol (Men) fin-A (1960), Leipzig GDR, rd 7, Nov-03
💢 Benoni Defense: Old Benoni (A43)
@UnityChess
📘 22.B×f6!+
Amin Bassem with using a tactical game brings the Black king to e2 and checkmates him.
22...K×f6 23.Qh4+ Kf5 24.g4+ Ke5 25.Rhe1 Kf4 26.Rd4+ K×f3 27.Qh3+ Kf2 28.Rf1# 1-0
Amin Bassem with using a tactical game brings the Black king to e2 and checkmates him.
22...K×f6 23.Qh4+ Kf5 24.g4+ Ke5 25.Rhe1 Kf4 26.Rd4+ K×f3 27.Qh3+ Kf2 28.Rf1# 1-0
📘 20...Kd8?? (Rf7=)
Dmitry's blunder. He puts his king on the same file as an enemy rook and also with his own queen on a5-d8 diagonal. everything is ready for a combination.
21.f5?
He could have won with 21.N×e6!+ d×e6 22.Bb6 +-
Dmitry's blunder. He puts his king on the same file as an enemy rook and also with his own queen on a5-d8 diagonal. everything is ready for a combination.
21.f5?
He could have won with 21.N×e6!+ d×e6 22.Bb6 +-
📘 37.Nd3? (37.Kg2) 0-1
Ivanchuk resigned without waiting for the decisive 37...Kf3, with a forcing mate.
Ivanchuk resigned without waiting for the decisive 37...Kf3, with a forcing mate.
📘 18.B×a6? 18.B×f3?
The world champion was very lucky. Akobian could have instantly punished him: 18...R×a6! 19.Q×a6 Bc4 -+.
19.g×f3 Nf6 20.Bb5 +/-
The world champion was very lucky. Akobian could have instantly punished him: 18...R×a6! 19.Q×a6 Bc4 -+.
19.g×f3 Nf6 20.Bb5 +/-
📕 22.g4!
A very strong move to restrict Black bishop. A pawn move of this type doesn't dazzle us like a storming piece sacrifice or an 'acrobatic' piece maneuver.On the other hand, it plays a vital role in the defeat of the strongest ever Grandmaster of the former East Germany. You should try to find these quiet, unobtrusive pawn moves in your own games as they are the hallmark of positional understanding.
A very strong move to restrict Black bishop. A pawn move of this type doesn't dazzle us like a storming piece sacrifice or an 'acrobatic' piece maneuver.On the other hand, it plays a vital role in the defeat of the strongest ever Grandmaster of the former East Germany. You should try to find these quiet, unobtrusive pawn moves in your own games as they are the hallmark of positional understanding.
📕 17.Bxd7!
Kramnik loves the bishop pair, but he is astute enough to know when it should be renounced in favor of a more definite positional edge. 17...Rxd7 18.Nd5! Nxd5 19.cxd5 Structurally speaking, it is the black pawns which are the more compact mass, being divided into only two clusters or 'islands', In contrast, the white pawns are split into three islands, including an isolated pawn on d5 and doubled pawns on the f-file. But when we forget about structure and think about dynamics, we see that the 'scruffy' white pawn on d5 is working hard for the white pieces in providing an outpost for the rook on c6. Meanwhile, the 'neat and tidy' black pawns aren't doing any work; on the contrary, the pawn on e7 is a target.
Kramnik loves the bishop pair, but he is astute enough to know when it should be renounced in favor of a more definite positional edge. 17...Rxd7 18.Nd5! Nxd5 19.cxd5 Structurally speaking, it is the black pawns which are the more compact mass, being divided into only two clusters or 'islands', In contrast, the white pawns are split into three islands, including an isolated pawn on d5 and doubled pawns on the f-file. But when we forget about structure and think about dynamics, we see that the 'scruffy' white pawn on d5 is working hard for the white pieces in providing an outpost for the rook on c6. Meanwhile, the 'neat and tidy' black pawns aren't doing any work; on the contrary, the pawn on e7 is a target.