šUnity Chess Multiple Choice 310
C: Ne7 ā 5
ššššššš 42%
B: Rad8 ā 4
šššššš 33%
A: Be7 ā 3
šššš 25%
š„ 12 people voted so far.
C: Ne7 ā 5
ššššššš 42%
B: Rad8 ā 4
šššššš 33%
A: Be7 ā 3
šššš 25%
š„ 12 people voted so far.
More
Belarusian Grandmaster Vladislav Kovalev (2650) won the 15th Aeroflot Open, held in Moscow Feb 19-March 1, 2018. He had 5 wins and 4 draws. 1st place prize was equivalent to $22,000. There were 92 players and 60 Grandmasters. Gata Kamsky was the only American GM in the event.
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Belarusian Grandmaster Vladislav Kovalev (2650) won the 15th Aeroflot Open, held in Moscow Feb 19-March 1, 2018. He had 5 wins and 4 draws. 1st place prize was equivalent to $22,000. There were 92 players and 60 Grandmasters. Gata Kamsky was the only American GM in the event.
@UnityChess
Moscow, 1978. Following their return from the 1978 World Junior in Graz (Austria) - Sergei Dolmatov, Artur Jussupow, Anatoly Matsukevich. Standing: Mark Dvoretsky, Yakov Neishtadt.
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@UnityChess
Young Judit Polgar playing simultaneously (Jun 16, 2011) against the Hungarian chess kids in 1992. She beat them all.
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@UnityChess
Soviet grandmaster Vitaly Valerevich Tseshkovsky (1944-2011). Winner of two USSR Championships - the 46th (Tbilisi, 1978) and the 53rd (Kiev, 1986). Pictured here in the 1970s.
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šøAeroflot Open Moscow 2018
šøRound 8
āŖļøParavyan,David (2603)
ā«ļøErigaisi,Arjun (2458)
šø1-0
šøRound 8
āŖļøParavyan,David (2603)
ā«ļøErigaisi,Arjun (2458)
šø1-0
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šøAeroflot Open Moscow 2018
šøRound 9
āŖļøSjugirov,Sanan (2652)
ā«ļøEsipenko,Andrey (2571)
šø1-0
šøRound 9
āŖļøSjugirov,Sanan (2652)
ā«ļøEsipenko,Andrey (2571)
šø1-0
š· Garry Kasparov
š· Russian-Soviet chess Grandmaster
ā¦ļø Garry Kimovich Kasparov is a Russian, and formerly Soviet, chess grandmaster, former world chess champion, writer, and political activist, who many consider to be the greatest chess player of all time.
āŖļø Full name: Garry Kimovich Kasparov
āŖļø Country: Soviet Union Russia (since 1992) Croatia (since 2014)
āŖļø Born: 13 April 1963 (age 54) Baku, Azerbaijan SSR, Soviet Union (now Baku, Azerbaijan)
āŖļø Title: Grandmaster (1980)
āŖļø World Champion: 1985ā93 (undisputed) 1993ā2000 (classical)
āŖļø FIDE rating: 2812 (March 2018) [inactive]
āŖļø Peak rating: 2851 (July 1999, January 2000)
āŖļø Peak rankin:g No. 1 (January 1984)
ā¦ļøKasparov played in eight Olympiads. He represented the Soviet Union four times, in 1980, 1982, 1986 and 1988, and Russia four times: in 1992, 1994, 1996 and 2002 playing board 1 on each occasion apart from 1980 (2nd reserve) and 1982 (2nd board). In 82 games, he scored (+50 =29 -3), for 78.7% and won a total of 19 medals, including 8 team gold medals, 5 board golds, 2 performance golds, 2 performance silvers and 2 board bronzes. Kasparov also represented the USSR once in Youth Olympiad competition at Graz in 1981, when he played board 1 for the USSR board 1, scoring 9/10 (+8 =2 -0), the team winning the gold medal.
ā¦ļø A memorable game by Kasparovšš¼šš¼
šø Anatoly Karpov vs Garry Kasparov
šø Linares (1993), Linares ESP, rd 10, Mar-09
šø King's Indian Defense: Saemisch Variation (E86)
ā¦ļøReview and download PGN filešš¼šš¼
@unitychess
š· Russian-Soviet chess Grandmaster
ā¦ļø Garry Kimovich Kasparov is a Russian, and formerly Soviet, chess grandmaster, former world chess champion, writer, and political activist, who many consider to be the greatest chess player of all time.
āŖļø Full name: Garry Kimovich Kasparov
āŖļø Country: Soviet Union Russia (since 1992) Croatia (since 2014)
āŖļø Born: 13 April 1963 (age 54) Baku, Azerbaijan SSR, Soviet Union (now Baku, Azerbaijan)
āŖļø Title: Grandmaster (1980)
āŖļø World Champion: 1985ā93 (undisputed) 1993ā2000 (classical)
āŖļø FIDE rating: 2812 (March 2018) [inactive]
āŖļø Peak rating: 2851 (July 1999, January 2000)
āŖļø Peak rankin:g No. 1 (January 1984)
ā¦ļøKasparov played in eight Olympiads. He represented the Soviet Union four times, in 1980, 1982, 1986 and 1988, and Russia four times: in 1992, 1994, 1996 and 2002 playing board 1 on each occasion apart from 1980 (2nd reserve) and 1982 (2nd board). In 82 games, he scored (+50 =29 -3), for 78.7% and won a total of 19 medals, including 8 team gold medals, 5 board golds, 2 performance golds, 2 performance silvers and 2 board bronzes. Kasparov also represented the USSR once in Youth Olympiad competition at Graz in 1981, when he played board 1 for the USSR board 1, scoring 9/10 (+8 =2 -0), the team winning the gold medal.
ā¦ļø A memorable game by Kasparovšš¼šš¼
šø Anatoly Karpov vs Garry Kasparov
šø Linares (1993), Linares ESP, rd 10, Mar-09
šø King's Indian Defense: Saemisch Variation (E86)
ā¦ļøReview and download PGN filešš¼šš¼
@unitychess
š 7...b6?!
He should have played 7...0-0.
8.cxd5!
Volkov has completely exploited the opponent's wrong move order.
8...eĆd5
(8...cĆd5 9.Nb5 Bc5 10.b4! BĆb4 11.Qa4 Be7 12.Ne5 +/=)
9.Nd4 Bb7 10.Nf5 Bf8 11.g4!
He should have played 7...0-0.
8.cxd5!
Volkov has completely exploited the opponent's wrong move order.
8...eĆd5
(8...cĆd5 9.Nb5 Bc5 10.b4! BĆb4 11.Qa4 Be7 12.Ne5 +/=)
9.Nd4 Bb7 10.Nf5 Bf8 11.g4!
š 40.Qh2? ( better is 40.Kg2 or 40.h4)
A carelessness.
40...Nf7
Now that the e5 pawn is protected, White is ready to take the b3 pawn.
41.Qc2 BĆh3 -+
Danyyil Dvirnyy has won the Italian championship three times.
A carelessness.
40...Nf7
Now that the e5 pawn is protected, White is ready to take the b3 pawn.
41.Qc2 BĆh3 -+
Danyyil Dvirnyy has won the Italian championship three times.
š 47...Ke6??
White intends to take the g6-pawn to win the game. therefore, the Black king should have been kept close to the f2-pawn to draw the game.
(47...Kc5!
A)48.Kh4 d5 49.Kg5 Kd4 50.KĆg6 Ke4 51.Kg5 d4 52.Bc7 d3 53.Ba5 Kf3 =
B)48.Kg3 d5 49.Kf3 Kd4 50.Bd6 Kd3 51.Be7 Kd2=)
48.Kh4 d5 49.Kg5 d4 50.KĆg6 h4 51.Kg5 h3 52.Kg4 Kd5 1-0
White intends to take the g6-pawn to win the game. therefore, the Black king should have been kept close to the f2-pawn to draw the game.
(47...Kc5!
A)48.Kh4 d5 49.Kg5 Kd4 50.KĆg6 Ke4 51.Kg5 d4 52.Bc7 d3 53.Ba5 Kf3 =
B)48.Kg3 d5 49.Kf3 Kd4 50.Bd6 Kd3 51.Be7 Kd2=)
48.Kh4 d5 49.Kg5 d4 50.KĆg6 h4 51.Kg5 h3 52.Kg4 Kd5 1-0
š 19.Ng5?
(19.c4 or 19.Rd2)
19... Bb3! 20.Qc1
(20.aĆb3 aĆb3 21.Qd2 Ra1+! Mate in 3 Moves)
20...BĆd1 21.BĆd1 Ke7 1-0
āļø GM Pouria Darini was runner-up in the 2017 Iran chess champion.
(19.c4 or 19.Rd2)
19... Bb3! 20.Qc1
(20.aĆb3 aĆb3 21.Qd2 Ra1+! Mate in 3 Moves)
20...BĆd1 21.BĆd1 Ke7 1-0
āļø GM Pouria Darini was runner-up in the 2017 Iran chess champion.