π46.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.RΓc2! +/-.
46...Rd7 47.Be3 NΓe3 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.RΓc2! +/-.
46...Rd7 47.Be3 NΓe3 0-1
π 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.
π 10.g4!
Goes without saying! The right moment cannot be missed. By pushing the knight from f6, White creates disharmony among black's pieces, which becomes a crucial factor when the position is opened.
Goes without saying! The right moment cannot be missed. By pushing the knight from f6, White creates disharmony among black's pieces, which becomes a crucial factor when the position is opened.
πUnity Chess Multiple Choice 288
B: d5 β 6
πππππππ 46%
A: g5 β 5
ππππππ 38%
C: g6 β 2
ππ 15%
π₯ 13 people voted so far.
B: d5 β 6
πππππππ 46%
A: g5 β 5
ππππππ 38%
C: g6 β 2
ππ 15%
π₯ 13 people voted so far.
Boris Spassky (USSR) v. Georgi Tringov (Bulgaria), Rd. 7, Amsterdam IBM, 21st July 1970. The game was drawn in 21 moves.
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Winner of the 1975 Amsterdam IBM tournament - Yugoslav grandmaster Ljubomir LjubojeviΔ. He had just secured first place by winning his final-round game v. Robert HΓΌbner in only 22 moves.
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Anatoly Karpov and Victor Korchnoi during their match in the final of the 1974 Candidates (Moscow, October 1974).
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πΈGibraltar Masters 2018
πΈRound 10
βͺοΈMotylev,Alexander (2673)
β«οΈPeralta,Fernando (2559)
πΈ1-0
πΈRound 10
βͺοΈMotylev,Alexander (2673)
β«οΈPeralta,Fernando (2559)
πΈ1-0
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πΈGibraltar Masters 2018
πΈPlayoff - Rapid Rd1
βͺοΈRapport,Richard (2700)
β«οΈAronian,Levon (2797)
πΈ0-1
πΈPlayoff - Rapid Rd1
βͺοΈRapport,Richard (2700)
β«οΈAronian,Levon (2797)
πΈ0-1
βͺοΈ David Bronstein
βͺοΈ Soviet Chess Grandmaster
β¦οΈ David Ionovich Bronstein was a Soviet chess grandmaster, who narrowly missed becoming World Chess Champion in 1951.
πΉ Full name: David Ionovich Bronstein
πΉ Country: Soviet Union
πΉ Born: February 19, 1924 Bila Tserkva, Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union
πΉ Died: December 5, 2006 (aged 82) Minsk, Belarus
πΉ Title : Grandmaster (1950)
πΉ Peak rating: 2595 (May 1974)
β¦οΈDavid Bronstein was born in Bila Tserkva, Ukraine, to Jewish parents. Growing up in a poor family, he learned chess at age six from his grandfather. As a youth in Kiev, he was trained by the renowned International Master Alexander Konstantinopolsky. He finished second in the Kiev Championship when he was only 15, and achieved the Soviet Master title at age 16 for his second-place result in the 1940 Ukrainian Chess Championship, behind Isaac Boleslavsky, with whom he became close friends both on and off the chessboard. He later went on to marry Boleslavsky's daughter, Tatiana, in 1984.
β¦οΈ A memorable game by Bronstein against Ludek Pachman in Prague which known "Pachman Ghosted" in chessgames.com site ππΌππΌ
πΈ Ludek Pachman vs David Bronstein
πΈ Prague-Moscow (1946), Prague CSR, rd 2, Mar-??
πΈ King's Indian , Double Fianchetto Attack (A54)
β¦οΈ Review and download PGN fileππΌππΌ
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βͺοΈ Soviet Chess Grandmaster
β¦οΈ David Ionovich Bronstein was a Soviet chess grandmaster, who narrowly missed becoming World Chess Champion in 1951.
πΉ Full name: David Ionovich Bronstein
πΉ Country: Soviet Union
πΉ Born: February 19, 1924 Bila Tserkva, Ukrainian SSR, Soviet Union
πΉ Died: December 5, 2006 (aged 82) Minsk, Belarus
πΉ Title : Grandmaster (1950)
πΉ Peak rating: 2595 (May 1974)
β¦οΈDavid Bronstein was born in Bila Tserkva, Ukraine, to Jewish parents. Growing up in a poor family, he learned chess at age six from his grandfather. As a youth in Kiev, he was trained by the renowned International Master Alexander Konstantinopolsky. He finished second in the Kiev Championship when he was only 15, and achieved the Soviet Master title at age 16 for his second-place result in the 1940 Ukrainian Chess Championship, behind Isaac Boleslavsky, with whom he became close friends both on and off the chessboard. He later went on to marry Boleslavsky's daughter, Tatiana, in 1984.
β¦οΈ A memorable game by Bronstein against Ludek Pachman in Prague which known "Pachman Ghosted" in chessgames.com site ππΌππΌ
πΈ Ludek Pachman vs David Bronstein
πΈ Prague-Moscow (1946), Prague CSR, rd 2, Mar-??
πΈ King's Indian , Double Fianchetto Attack (A54)
β¦οΈ Review and download PGN fileππΌππΌ
@unitychess