πUnity Chess Multiple Choice 326
A: Bf4 β 7
πππππππ 64%
B: Ra3 β 2
ππ 18%
C: Bg5 β 2
ππ 18%
π₯ 11 people voted so far.
A: Bf4 β 7
πππππππ 64%
B: Ra3 β 2
ππ 18%
C: Bg5 β 2
ππ 18%
π₯ 11 people voted so far.
Rd 2 of the Candidates tourney in Berlin: Grischuk (who lost in Rd 1) beat So. The other games were drawn. Rd 3 pairings: Karjakin-Grischuk, Aronian-Kramnik, Caruana-Memedyarov, and So-Ding Liren. Kramnik, Caruana, and Memedyarov have 1.5 points to lead the tournament so far.
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Publicity leaflet for 1959 Candidates' Tournament, held in Bled, Zagreb & Belgrade, Yugoslavia.
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Wonderful Hungarian footage from the 1950 Candidates tournament (Budapest, April/May 1950), with Bronstein, Boleslavsky, Lilienthal, Najdorf and SzabΓ³. http://bit.ly/2GfkwYa
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At the USSR Young Masters' Championship, Odessa 1968. Left to right: Viktor Kupreichik, Lev Alburt, Albert Kapengut, Vladimir Tukmakov, Vadim Faibisovich, Aleksandr Bakh.
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πΈ Cecil Purdy
πΈ Australian Chess International Master
β¦οΈ Cecil John Seddon Purdy was an Australian chess International Master, writer, and inaugural World Correspondence Chess champion. Purdy earned the Grandmaster of Correspondence Chess title in 1953.
πΉ Full name: Cecil John Seddon Purdy
πΉ Country: Australia Egypt
πΉ Born: 27 March 1906 Port Said, Egypt
πΉ Died: 6 November 1979 (aged 73) Sydney, Australia
πΉ Title: International Master (1951)
πΉ ICCF Grandmaster (1953)
πΉ ICCF World Champion 1950β53
β¦οΈCecil John Seddon Purdy was a Grandmaster of Correspondence Chess (1953) and winner of the first world correspondence chess championship (1950-1953). In 1923, at the age of 17, he won the New Zealand Championship. In 1929 he founded the Australasian Chess Review (later named Check!, then Chess World). He was the editor for nearly 40 years. He won the Australian Correspondence Championship in 1937 and 1945. He was the champion of Australia in 1935, 1937, 1949, and 1951. He earned the International Master title in 1951. His son was the junior champion of Australia. He won the Australian championship four times and held the Australian Correspondence Championship for 16 years in a row. Both Purdy's father-in-law Spencer Crakenthorp (champion from 1926 to 1929), and his son John (champion in 1962) have been champions of Australia. He died of a heart attack while playing a game of chess during the Sydney Championships. His last words were, "I have a win, but it will take some time." His opponent was Ian Parsonage. Purdy was born in Egypt. He learned to play chess from an encyclopedia at age 15. He played only 46 correspondence games in his entire life (won 34, drew 10, lost 2).
Bobby Fischer was once asked how to go about setting up a great chess library. He started his reply by saying, βFirstly I would get my hands on everything written by Cecil Purdy.
β¦οΈA memorable game by PurdyππΌππΌ
βͺοΈ Cecil John Seddon Purdy vs Leopold Watzl
βͺοΈ 1st World Correspondence Chess Championship (1950), May-01
βͺοΈ Queen's Gambit Declined: Modern Variation. Normal Line (D55)
β¦οΈ Review and download PGN fileππΌππΌ
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πΈ Australian Chess International Master
β¦οΈ Cecil John Seddon Purdy was an Australian chess International Master, writer, and inaugural World Correspondence Chess champion. Purdy earned the Grandmaster of Correspondence Chess title in 1953.
πΉ Full name: Cecil John Seddon Purdy
πΉ Country: Australia Egypt
πΉ Born: 27 March 1906 Port Said, Egypt
πΉ Died: 6 November 1979 (aged 73) Sydney, Australia
πΉ Title: International Master (1951)
πΉ ICCF Grandmaster (1953)
πΉ ICCF World Champion 1950β53
β¦οΈCecil John Seddon Purdy was a Grandmaster of Correspondence Chess (1953) and winner of the first world correspondence chess championship (1950-1953). In 1923, at the age of 17, he won the New Zealand Championship. In 1929 he founded the Australasian Chess Review (later named Check!, then Chess World). He was the editor for nearly 40 years. He won the Australian Correspondence Championship in 1937 and 1945. He was the champion of Australia in 1935, 1937, 1949, and 1951. He earned the International Master title in 1951. His son was the junior champion of Australia. He won the Australian championship four times and held the Australian Correspondence Championship for 16 years in a row. Both Purdy's father-in-law Spencer Crakenthorp (champion from 1926 to 1929), and his son John (champion in 1962) have been champions of Australia. He died of a heart attack while playing a game of chess during the Sydney Championships. His last words were, "I have a win, but it will take some time." His opponent was Ian Parsonage. Purdy was born in Egypt. He learned to play chess from an encyclopedia at age 15. He played only 46 correspondence games in his entire life (won 34, drew 10, lost 2).
Bobby Fischer was once asked how to go about setting up a great chess library. He started his reply by saying, βFirstly I would get my hands on everything written by Cecil Purdy.
β¦οΈA memorable game by PurdyππΌππΌ
βͺοΈ Cecil John Seddon Purdy vs Leopold Watzl
βͺοΈ 1st World Correspondence Chess Championship (1950), May-01
βͺοΈ Queen's Gambit Declined: Modern Variation. Normal Line (D55)
β¦οΈ Review and download PGN fileππΌππΌ
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@unitychess Purdy-Watzl 1950.pgn
873 B
βͺοΈ Cecil John Seddon Purdy - Leopold Watzl, 1st World Correspondence Chess Championship (1950)
βͺοΈ PGN format
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βͺοΈ PGN format
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