41...Ka7
What has Black achieved? Firstly, his king is no longer in danger of being attacked by the white kingside pawns and is reunited with his knight. And, secondly, White's projected maneuver Qc4, Qb5, and Qc6 loses some of its stings once the black king is near the scene and able to help deal with the passed pawn. So much for the objective merits of the king march. We might also talk about psychology β White has been distracted from the plan of Qc4 and Qb5 by the chance to attack the black king with Qh7 and Qh8.
42.Kh3 Ne4 43.Rf1 Nc5 44.Rf2 g5.
What has Black achieved? Firstly, his king is no longer in danger of being attacked by the white kingside pawns and is reunited with his knight. And, secondly, White's projected maneuver Qc4, Qb5, and Qc6 loses some of its stings once the black king is near the scene and able to help deal with the passed pawn. So much for the objective merits of the king march. We might also talk about psychology β White has been distracted from the plan of Qc4 and Qb5 by the chance to attack the black king with Qh7 and Qh8.
42.Kh3 Ne4 43.Rf1 Nc5 44.Rf2 g5.
14.Qe2
Ivanchuk is imperturbable. He has found a useful waiting maneuver β transferring the queen to b1. He hopes with 14.Qe2 that his opponent will play the natural freeing move and saddle himself with an isolated pawn: 14...e5, when 15.dxe5 Nxe5 16.cxd5 cxd5 17.Bb5 is better for White. But Carlsen isn't so easily tricked.
14...a6 15.b3 Rcd8 16.Qc2 Rc8 17.Bf1 Bf8 18.Qb1 Rcd8 19.g3 Bg7 20.Bg2 h5?! 21.Ne2 h4? 22.g4!+/-
Ivanchuk is imperturbable. He has found a useful waiting maneuver β transferring the queen to b1. He hopes with 14.Qe2 that his opponent will play the natural freeing move and saddle himself with an isolated pawn: 14...e5, when 15.dxe5 Nxe5 16.cxd5 cxd5 17.Bb5 is better for White. But Carlsen isn't so easily tricked.
14...a6 15.b3 Rcd8 16.Qc2 Rc8 17.Bf1 Bf8 18.Qb1 Rcd8 19.g3 Bg7 20.Bg2 h5?! 21.Ne2 h4? 22.g4!+/-
Unity Chess Multiple Choice 455
public poll
C: Nb1 β 5
πππππππ 71%
Kenneth, Gavin, Jayden, Vincent, @RichardPeng
A: Rae1 β 2
πππ 29%
@Sophia_Peng, Atharva
B: Qb3
β«οΈ 0%
π₯ 7 people voted so far.
public poll
C: Nb1 β 5
πππππππ 71%
Kenneth, Gavin, Jayden, Vincent, @RichardPeng
A: Rae1 β 2
πππ 29%
@Sophia_Peng, Atharva
B: Qb3
β«οΈ 0%
π₯ 7 people voted so far.
Unity Chess Multiple Choice 456
public poll
B: Kg3 β 4
πππππππ 36%
Kenneth, Gavin, Vincent, βSβ¬β¬Yβ¬Dβ
C: Nh3 β 4
πππππππ 36%
@mahyarebrahimi1983, @Sophia_Peng, Louis, @RichardPeng
A: a4 β 3
πππππ 27%
Jayden, @MerissaWongso, Atharva
π₯ 11 people voted so far.
public poll
B: Kg3 β 4
πππππππ 36%
Kenneth, Gavin, Vincent, βSβ¬β¬Yβ¬Dβ
C: Nh3 β 4
πππππππ 36%
@mahyarebrahimi1983, @Sophia_Peng, Louis, @RichardPeng
A: a4 β 3
πππππ 27%
Jayden, @MerissaWongso, Atharva
π₯ 11 people voted so far.
βUnlike other games in which lucre is the end and aim, [chess] recommends itself to the wise by the fact that its mimic battles are fought for no prize but honor. It is eminently and emphatically the philosopherβs game.β
πΉ Paul Morphy
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πΉ Paul Morphy
#chessquotes
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β΄οΈ #Koblencs_chess_quotes_001
πΈ Alexander Koblencs
πΈ Latvian chess master, trainer and writer
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πΈ Alexander Koblencs
πΈ Latvian chess master, trainer and writer
@unitychess