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🔸Gibraltar Masters 2018
🔸Round 8
⚪️Ju,Wenjun (2572)
⚫️Gelfand,Boris (2697)
🔸0-1
🔸Round 8
⚪️Ju,Wenjun (2572)
⚫️Gelfand,Boris (2697)
🔸0-1
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🔸Gibraltar Masters 2018
🔸Round 9
⚪️Gunina,Valentina (2502)
⚫️Short,Nigel D (2681)
🔸1-0
🔸Round 9
⚪️Gunina,Valentina (2502)
⚫️Short,Nigel D (2681)
🔸1-0
🔹 Richard Réti
🔹 Chess Grandmaster and Composer
♦️ Richard Réti was an Austro-Hungarian, later Czechoslovak chess grandmaster, chess author, and composer of endgame studies. He was one of the principal proponents of hypermodernism in chess.
▪️ Full name: Richard Réti
▪️ Country: Austria-Hungary, Czechoslovakia
▪️ Born: 28 May 1889 Bösing, Austria-Hungary (now Pezinok, Slovakia)
▪️ Died: 6 June 1929 (aged 40) Prague, Czechoslovakia (now Czech Republic)
♦️ Richard Réti was born in 1889 in Bösing. At the age of 12, he had already submitted a chess problem to the chess column in Über Land und Meer run by Hermann von Gottschall. Von Gottschall advised him to continue working on his chess. In 1903, the then 13-year old Réti was introduced to Carl Schlechter who remarked "for his age, this is certainly exceptional". He went on to fare well at the 2nd Hungarian National tournament in Székesfehérvár, 1907.(Edo) Réti's interest in chess was dampened following some disappointing tournament results, although he won smaller events in Vienna 1909 and the 2nd Trebitsch Memorial in 1910.(Edo) His main interests then became mathematics and, to some extent, physics. He was about to finish his doctorate when World War I broke out. Réti was assigned to clerical work due to his "somewhat weak constitution".
♦️ A memorable game by Reti against Bogoljubov in New York 1924 wich known "Richard VIII" in chessgames.com site !! 👇🏼👇🏼
🔹 Richard Reti vs Efim Bogoljubov
🔹 New York (1924), New York, NY USA, rd 12, Apr-02
🔹 English Opening: Agincourt Defense. Bogoljubow Defense (A13)
♦️ Review and download full annotated PGN file by Dr. Alekhine👇🏼👇🏼
@unitychess
🔹 Chess Grandmaster and Composer
♦️ Richard Réti was an Austro-Hungarian, later Czechoslovak chess grandmaster, chess author, and composer of endgame studies. He was one of the principal proponents of hypermodernism in chess.
▪️ Full name: Richard Réti
▪️ Country: Austria-Hungary, Czechoslovakia
▪️ Born: 28 May 1889 Bösing, Austria-Hungary (now Pezinok, Slovakia)
▪️ Died: 6 June 1929 (aged 40) Prague, Czechoslovakia (now Czech Republic)
♦️ Richard Réti was born in 1889 in Bösing. At the age of 12, he had already submitted a chess problem to the chess column in Über Land und Meer run by Hermann von Gottschall. Von Gottschall advised him to continue working on his chess. In 1903, the then 13-year old Réti was introduced to Carl Schlechter who remarked "for his age, this is certainly exceptional". He went on to fare well at the 2nd Hungarian National tournament in Székesfehérvár, 1907.(Edo) Réti's interest in chess was dampened following some disappointing tournament results, although he won smaller events in Vienna 1909 and the 2nd Trebitsch Memorial in 1910.(Edo) His main interests then became mathematics and, to some extent, physics. He was about to finish his doctorate when World War I broke out. Réti was assigned to clerical work due to his "somewhat weak constitution".
♦️ A memorable game by Reti against Bogoljubov in New York 1924 wich known "Richard VIII" in chessgames.com site !! 👇🏼👇🏼
🔹 Richard Reti vs Efim Bogoljubov
🔹 New York (1924), New York, NY USA, rd 12, Apr-02
🔹 English Opening: Agincourt Defense. Bogoljubow Defense (A13)
♦️ Review and download full annotated PGN file by Dr. Alekhine👇🏼👇🏼
@unitychess
@unitychess Reti-Bogoljubov 1924.pgn
3.2 KB
🔹 Richard Reti - Efim Bogoljubov, New York (1924) Round 12
🔹 PGN format
🔹 Full annotated by Dr. Alekhine
@unitychess
🔹 PGN format
🔹 Full annotated by Dr. Alekhine
@unitychess
📘 18...Ne7!
A strong maneuver to transfer the knight to f4-square.
19.Qd2 g5 20.Rfe1 Ng6 21.Nh2 Nf4 22.Re3 h5 23.Qd1 Qg6 =/+
A strong maneuver to transfer the knight to f4-square.
19.Qd2 g5 20.Rfe1 Ng6 21.Nh2 Nf4 22.Re3 h5 23.Qd1 Qg6 =/+
📘 44...Bc7? (44...Nf4) 45.d4!!
World Blitz Chess Champion 2013 Le Quang Liem, finishes off the game with a few strong moves.
45...e×d4 6.e5! Rdd8
(46...f×e5 47.B×g5+ +-)
47.R×b6! B×b6 48.R×b6 Nf4 49.R×f6+ +-
World Blitz Chess Champion 2013 Le Quang Liem, finishes off the game with a few strong moves.
45...e×d4 6.e5! Rdd8
(46...f×e5 47.B×g5+ +-)
47.R×b6! B×b6 48.R×b6 Nf4 49.R×f6+ +-
📘 20.Bg6!!
39-year-old Motylev wins the game by sacrificing a rook and a bishop in the romantic style!
20...Be7 21.B×f7+! K×f7 22.Ng6 Re8 23.f4 Qa2 24.Rb2! N×b2 25.f5 Rg8 26.f6 g×f6 27.e×f6 B×f6 28.Ne5+ Ke7 29.Q×g8 Nb6+ 30.Qf7+ 1-0
Motylev was Russian champion in 2001 and European champion in 2014. He is also Sergey Karjakin's trainer and one of the coaches of the Russian national team.
39-year-old Motylev wins the game by sacrificing a rook and a bishop in the romantic style!
20...Be7 21.B×f7+! K×f7 22.Ng6 Re8 23.f4 Qa2 24.Rb2! N×b2 25.f5 Rg8 26.f6 g×f6 27.e×f6 B×f6 28.Ne5+ Ke7 29.Q×g8 Nb6+ 30.Qf7+ 1-0
Motylev was Russian champion in 2001 and European champion in 2014. He is also Sergey Karjakin's trainer and one of the coaches of the Russian national team.
📘46.Bc5??
Rapport's blunder. He could have defended by 46.Bd2 Re7 47.Kf1! and Black can not easily win. Now if 47...Re2?? 48.R×c2! +/-.
46...Rd7 47.Be3 N×e3 0-1
Rapport's blunder. He could have defended by 46.Bd2 Re7 47.Kf1! and Black can not easily win. Now if 47...Re2?? 48.R×c2! +/-.
46...Rd7 47.Be3 N×e3 0-1
📕 15.g4!
Quite simply it starts to rather resemble an open Sicilian in which the fixed center denies black the customary counterplay. The ease with which the pawn-storm hits the spot is impressive.
Quite simply it starts to rather resemble an open Sicilian in which the fixed center denies black the customary counterplay. The ease with which the pawn-storm hits the spot is impressive.