π 26.NΓa8? Ng5!!
A surprising intermediate move by 15-year-old FM Arash Daghli.
27.Kg1
(27.QΓg5 Be4+ 28.Kg1 Qh3 -+)
(27.b5 Qd5+ 28.Kg1 Bh3 -+)
27...Ne5! 28.c6 bΓc6 (better is 28...Qxd5) 29.Rc5 Nef3+ 30.Kh1 Be4 31.RΓd3 Qh3 32.Rd8+ Kg7 33.Bg1 NΓh2+ 34.QΓe4 Nhf3 0-1
A surprising intermediate move by 15-year-old FM Arash Daghli.
27.Kg1
(27.QΓg5 Be4+ 28.Kg1 Qh3 -+)
(27.b5 Qd5+ 28.Kg1 Bh3 -+)
27...Ne5! 28.c6 bΓc6 (better is 28...Qxd5) 29.Rc5 Nef3+ 30.Kh1 Be4 31.RΓd3 Qh3 32.Rd8+ Kg7 33.Bg1 NΓh2+ 34.QΓe4 Nhf3 0-1
π 32.Reg1?
Black has an advantage so White takes the risks to find the counterplay. (32.Ke3 RΓd5 33.Ke3 It seems logical and Black has a long way to win the game).
32...RΓd5! Deep calculation by Mohsen Sharbaf.
33.Rg8+ RΓg8 34.RΓg8 KΓg8 35.KΓd5 Kg7 36.b3 Kh6 37.Ke6 Kg5! 38.h6 b5 39.Kf7 KΓf5! 40.Kg7 Ke6! 41.KΓh7 Kf7 42.a4 f5 43.aΓb5 aΓb5 44.d4 eΓd4 45.b4 d3 46.bΓc5 d2 47.c6 d1=Q 48.c7 Qg4 0-1
Black has an advantage so White takes the risks to find the counterplay. (32.Ke3 RΓd5 33.Ke3 It seems logical and Black has a long way to win the game).
32...RΓd5! Deep calculation by Mohsen Sharbaf.
33.Rg8+ RΓg8 34.RΓg8 KΓg8 35.KΓd5 Kg7 36.b3 Kh6 37.Ke6 Kg5! 38.h6 b5 39.Kf7 KΓf5! 40.Kg7 Ke6! 41.KΓh7 Kf7 42.a4 f5 43.aΓb5 aΓb5 44.d4 eΓd4 45.b4 d3 46.bΓc5 d2 47.c6 d1=Q 48.c7 Qg4 0-1
π 16.Bxa6!
An admirably instructive minor-piece exchange. Concretely it slightly misplaces Black's rook and prepares the further exchange of knights on c5. More generally, in the resulting structure White's remaining knight has a choice of promising destinations, whereas the bishop on f5 is not really biting on anything. 16...Rxa6 17.Nc5.
An admirably instructive minor-piece exchange. Concretely it slightly misplaces Black's rook and prepares the further exchange of knights on c5. More generally, in the resulting structure White's remaining knight has a choice of promising destinations, whereas the bishop on f5 is not really biting on anything. 16...Rxa6 17.Nc5.
π 23.Qa2
White has a wonderful bind, using both open files and clamping down on all breaks potential pawn breaks. 23...h6 24.a6+/-. The immediate 23.a6 is also good.
White has a wonderful bind, using both open files and clamping down on all breaks potential pawn breaks. 23...h6 24.a6+/-. The immediate 23.a6 is also good.
πUnity Chess Multiple Choice 315
C: c5 β 3
πππππππ 50%
B: f3 β 2
πππππ 33%
A: a6 β 1
ππ 17%
π₯ 6 people voted so far.
C: c5 β 3
πππππππ 50%
B: f3 β 2
πππππ 33%
A: a6 β 1
ππ 17%
π₯ 6 people voted so far.
πUnity Chess Multiple Choice 316
A: Rc4 β 7
πππππππ 64%
B: Ne4 β 2
ππ 18%
C: b5 β 2
ππ 18%
π₯ 11 people voted so far.
A: Rc4 β 7
πππππππ 64%
B: Ne4 β 2
ππ 18%
C: b5 β 2
ππ 18%
π₯ 11 people voted so far.
Tall Memorial 2018 Blitz All Games.pgn
154.8 KB
πΉ Tal Memorial Blitz Chess
πΉ PGN format
πΉ PGN format
πΈ Improve your chess game
πΉ Only four days left for registration in the tournament!!
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πΉ Only four days left for registration in the tournament!!
@unitychess
βοΈβοΈβοΈβοΈ
βͺοΈ Fred Reinfeld
βͺοΈ American Chess Master and Writer
β¦οΈ Fred Reinfeld was an American writer on chess and many other subjects. He was also a strong chess master, often among the top ten American players from the early 1930s to the early 1940s, as well as a college chess instructor.
πΈ Born: January 27, 1910, New York City, New York, United States
πΈ Died: May 29, 1964, East Meadow, New York, United States
β¦οΈ Fred Reinfeld, born in New York, was an American master best known as a chess writer. He won the New York State Championship twice (Rome 1931 and Syracuse 1933) and played in several national level tournaments, but gradually abandoned play for writing. He tied for 1st with Sidney Norman Bernstein in the Manhattan Chess Club championship in 1942.
He was ranked sixth in the country, with a rating of 2593, on the first rating list issued by the United States Chess Federation in 1950, after Reuben Fine, Samuel Reshevsky, Alexander Kevitz, Arthur Dake, and Albert Simonson. Chessmetrics ranks him as the 64th best player in the world in March and April 1943. During his playing career, he won tournament games against such eminent players as Reshevsky (twice), Fine, Frank Marshall, and Denker, and drew against world champion Alexander Alekhine.
β¦οΈ Reinfeld was an editor for Chess Review. His first books from the 1930s were geared toward experienced players, but he soon discovered a knack for writing instructional books and compiling quiz collections that appealed to the novice and sold well enough for him to make a living.
β¦οΈ Eventually Reinfeld wrote over 100 books on chess and other topics, though many were repackaged versions of earlier works. However, they helped teach several generations of new players and remain popular today.
π΅ A memorable game by ReinfeldππΌππΌ
πΉ Samuel Reshevsky vs Fred Reinfeld
πΉ Pasadena (1932), Pasadena, CA USA, rd 9, Aug-25
πΉ Neo-GrΓΌnfeld Defense: Ultra-delayed Exchange Variation (D79)
β¦οΈ Review and download PGN file
@unitychess
βͺοΈ Fred Reinfeld
βͺοΈ American Chess Master and Writer
β¦οΈ Fred Reinfeld was an American writer on chess and many other subjects. He was also a strong chess master, often among the top ten American players from the early 1930s to the early 1940s, as well as a college chess instructor.
πΈ Born: January 27, 1910, New York City, New York, United States
πΈ Died: May 29, 1964, East Meadow, New York, United States
β¦οΈ Fred Reinfeld, born in New York, was an American master best known as a chess writer. He won the New York State Championship twice (Rome 1931 and Syracuse 1933) and played in several national level tournaments, but gradually abandoned play for writing. He tied for 1st with Sidney Norman Bernstein in the Manhattan Chess Club championship in 1942.
He was ranked sixth in the country, with a rating of 2593, on the first rating list issued by the United States Chess Federation in 1950, after Reuben Fine, Samuel Reshevsky, Alexander Kevitz, Arthur Dake, and Albert Simonson. Chessmetrics ranks him as the 64th best player in the world in March and April 1943. During his playing career, he won tournament games against such eminent players as Reshevsky (twice), Fine, Frank Marshall, and Denker, and drew against world champion Alexander Alekhine.
β¦οΈ Reinfeld was an editor for Chess Review. His first books from the 1930s were geared toward experienced players, but he soon discovered a knack for writing instructional books and compiling quiz collections that appealed to the novice and sold well enough for him to make a living.
β¦οΈ Eventually Reinfeld wrote over 100 books on chess and other topics, though many were repackaged versions of earlier works. However, they helped teach several generations of new players and remain popular today.
π΅ A memorable game by ReinfeldππΌππΌ
πΉ Samuel Reshevsky vs Fred Reinfeld
πΉ Pasadena (1932), Pasadena, CA USA, rd 9, Aug-25
πΉ Neo-GrΓΌnfeld Defense: Ultra-delayed Exchange Variation (D79)
β¦οΈ Review and download PGN file
@unitychess