🔸 Robert Hübner
🔸 German Grandmaster and Writer
♦️ Robert Hübner is a German chess Grandmaster, chess writer, and papyrologist. He was one of the world's leading players in the 1970s and early 1980s.
▪️ Full name: Robert Hübner
▪️ Country: Germany
▪️ Born: November 6, 1948 , Cologne, West Germany[1]
▪️ Title: International Master (1969) Grandmaster (1971)
▪️ FIDE rating: inactive (not rated)
▪️ Peak rating: 2640 (July 1981)
♦️Dr. Robert Huebner was born in Cologne in 1948. At age sixteen, he tied for first in the European Championship, and in 1971 he earned the International Grandmaster title by qualifying into the World Championship Candidates. He also qualified in 1980 (when he reached the finals before losing to Viktor Korchnoi) and in 1983 (when he lost his quarterfinal match to Vasily Smyslov on the spin of a roulette wheel). Huebner still lives in Germany and, as of January 2005, was still rated in FIDE's world top 100 players.
♦️ A memorable game by Robert Huebner against Makhail Tal👇🏼👇🏼
💢 Mikhail Tal vs Robert Huebner
💢 Leningrad Interzonal (1973), Leningrad URS, rd 4, Jun-07
💢 Sicilian Defense: Kan. Knight Variation (B43)
♦️ Review and download PGN file👇🏼👇🏼
@unitychess
🔸 German Grandmaster and Writer
♦️ Robert Hübner is a German chess Grandmaster, chess writer, and papyrologist. He was one of the world's leading players in the 1970s and early 1980s.
▪️ Full name: Robert Hübner
▪️ Country: Germany
▪️ Born: November 6, 1948 , Cologne, West Germany[1]
▪️ Title: International Master (1969) Grandmaster (1971)
▪️ FIDE rating: inactive (not rated)
▪️ Peak rating: 2640 (July 1981)
♦️Dr. Robert Huebner was born in Cologne in 1948. At age sixteen, he tied for first in the European Championship, and in 1971 he earned the International Grandmaster title by qualifying into the World Championship Candidates. He also qualified in 1980 (when he reached the finals before losing to Viktor Korchnoi) and in 1983 (when he lost his quarterfinal match to Vasily Smyslov on the spin of a roulette wheel). Huebner still lives in Germany and, as of January 2005, was still rated in FIDE's world top 100 players.
♦️ A memorable game by Robert Huebner against Makhail Tal👇🏼👇🏼
💢 Mikhail Tal vs Robert Huebner
💢 Leningrad Interzonal (1973), Leningrad URS, rd 4, Jun-07
💢 Sicilian Defense: Kan. Knight Variation (B43)
♦️ Review and download PGN file👇🏼👇🏼
@unitychess
📘 19.Nc3?
White should have chosen 19.Bc2 to protect his king and coordinate his pieces.
19...Bf5!
A surprising winning move!
20.Q×d5
(20.g4 N×c3 21.Q×c3 Rdc8 -+)
20...R×d5 21.R×d5 Qe3+ 22.Rd2 Rc8 23.Bc2 R×c3! 24.b×c3 Q×c3 0-1
White should have chosen 19.Bc2 to protect his king and coordinate his pieces.
19...Bf5!
A surprising winning move!
20.Q×d5
(20.g4 N×c3 21.Q×c3 Rdc8 -+)
20...R×d5 21.R×d5 Qe3+ 22.Rd2 Rc8 23.Bc2 R×c3! 24.b×c3 Q×c3 0-1
19.Rf2?
White has missed his opportunity to win the game: (19.N×e4! d×e4 20.Bc4 +- intending N×c7 )
19...a6 20.Nc3 Be6
White has missed his opportunity to win the game: (19.N×e4! d×e4 20.Bc4 +- intending N×c7 )
19...a6 20.Nc3 Be6
📘 38.R×c6
The easiest way to win the game is 38.Ra7 intending Ra4+-.
38...B×d7 39.Rd6 Bg4+ 40.Ke3
However, White is still winning.
The easiest way to win the game is 38.Ra7 intending Ra4+-.
38...B×d7 39.Rd6 Bg4+ 40.Ke3
However, White is still winning.
📘 25.Rfe1?
White has committed a blunder that is fully exploited by Arash Daghli.
25...R×e1+ 26.R×e1! Qg5+ 27.Kf1 R×d5! +-
(If 28.Q×d5?? then, Ne3+)
White has committed a blunder that is fully exploited by Arash Daghli.
25...R×e1+ 26.R×e1! Qg5+ 27.Kf1 R×d5! +-
(If 28.Q×d5?? then, Ne3+)
📘 27.Na2!
A regrouping maneuver. White intends to transfer the knight to b4-square and put more pressure on the Black's camp.
A regrouping maneuver. White intends to transfer the knight to b4-square and put more pressure on the Black's camp.
📘 21...e5!
Whit's idea is simple enough: Pushing his g-pawn to rip open the kingside. Black responds correctly, counterattacking in the center. White's attack suffers a lot once a later g5 cannot be supported by an f4 or h4 pawn. 22.f5 d5! 23.exd5 e4! 24.Bxe4 Re8.
Whit's idea is simple enough: Pushing his g-pawn to rip open the kingside. Black responds correctly, counterattacking in the center. White's attack suffers a lot once a later g5 cannot be supported by an f4 or h4 pawn. 22.f5 d5! 23.exd5 e4! 24.Bxe4 Re8.
📕Unity Chess Multiple Choice 319
A: d5 – 9
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍 69%
B: Bf8 – 3
👍👍 23%
C: Rhe8 – 1
👍 8%
👥 13 people voted so far.
A: d5 – 9
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍 69%
B: Bf8 – 3
👍👍 23%
C: Rhe8 – 1
👍 8%
👥 13 people voted so far.