29.Bd1!
Black's problems are obvious. His two knights – both the 'bad' one and the 'good' one – are in a kind of impasse.
29...Ra3?!
The final oversight in a very difficult position.
30.g3 Nh5 31.Qb2 Qa8
Alas, the control of the a-file is of no importance.
32.Bxh5 Bxe3 33.Rxe3 gxh5 34.Kg2
The exchange of a couple of pairs of minor pieces has not brought Black any relief. To his 'bad' knight has been added a catastrophic weakening of the pawns covering his king.
Black's problems are obvious. His two knights – both the 'bad' one and the 'good' one – are in a kind of impasse.
29...Ra3?!
The final oversight in a very difficult position.
30.g3 Nh5 31.Qb2 Qa8
Alas, the control of the a-file is of no importance.
32.Bxh5 Bxe3 33.Rxe3 gxh5 34.Kg2
The exchange of a couple of pairs of minor pieces has not brought Black any relief. To his 'bad' knight has been added a catastrophic weakening of the pawns covering his king.
15.a4
Playing for a bind and to restrict the opponent's possibilities. White is threatening also to play h2-h3, and so Browne tries to improve the placing of his minor pieces, before he becomes too cramped.
15...Ng4 16.Nb5 Bb7 17.e4 a6 18.Na3!
With the intention of creating a striking force with Nc4 and Bc3, exploiting the fact that the black bishop is not on the long diagonal. White's advantage is becoming increasingly obvious – in the words of Nikitin, 'he has succeeded in consistently accumulating small positional pluses'.
Playing for a bind and to restrict the opponent's possibilities. White is threatening also to play h2-h3, and so Browne tries to improve the placing of his minor pieces, before he becomes too cramped.
15...Ng4 16.Nb5 Bb7 17.e4 a6 18.Na3!
With the intention of creating a striking force with Nc4 and Bc3, exploiting the fact that the black bishop is not on the long diagonal. White's advantage is becoming increasingly obvious – in the words of Nikitin, 'he has succeeded in consistently accumulating small positional pluses'.
Unity Chess Multiple Choice 485
public poll
B: Nf1 – 7
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍 58%
@payam6661, @MohamadAsp, Gavin, Nikhil, Ramesh, Jayden, @AryanLeekha
C: Nb1 – 4
👍👍👍👍 33%
Kavian, @Shadowoffhollow, @Afshin3333, Vincent
A: Ba4 – 1
👍 8%
Saghana
👥 12 people voted so far.
public poll
B: Nf1 – 7
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍 58%
@payam6661, @MohamadAsp, Gavin, Nikhil, Ramesh, Jayden, @AryanLeekha
C: Nb1 – 4
👍👍👍👍 33%
Kavian, @Shadowoffhollow, @Afshin3333, Vincent
A: Ba4 – 1
👍 8%
Saghana
👥 12 people voted so far.
Unity Chess Multiple Choice 486
public poll
B: Nd4 – 8
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍 50%
@payam6661, @MohamadAsp, @Afshin3333, Ramesh, @fkmnchess, 💯ĞŘÃÑĐ💯, @AryanLeekha, Kiran
A: g4 – 6
👍👍👍👍👍 38%
Kavian, @Shadowoffhollow, Gavin, Nikhil, Jayden, Saghana
C: Kh2 – 2
👍👍 13%
@sen1995, Vincent
👥 16 people voted so far.
public poll
B: Nd4 – 8
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍 50%
@payam6661, @MohamadAsp, @Afshin3333, Ramesh, @fkmnchess, 💯ĞŘÃÑĐ💯, @AryanLeekha, Kiran
A: g4 – 6
👍👍👍👍👍 38%
Kavian, @Shadowoffhollow, Gavin, Nikhil, Jayden, Saghana
C: Kh2 – 2
👍👍 13%
@sen1995, Vincent
👥 16 people voted so far.
✴️✴️✴️✴️
✅ June's Titled Tuesday | 5 Jun 2018
CHESS.COM site
🔸June's Titled Tuesday was a fantastic success for Iranian players.
🔸As evidenced by their success in the 2016 Olympiad and the emergence of prodigies like GM Alireza Firouzja, Iran is becoming quite a strong chess country.
🔸 With two trips (top male and top female) to the Chess.com Isle of Man International up for grabs, Iranians took home both. GM Pouria Darini and WGM Mitra Hejazipour were the victors.
♦️ Read more and details 👇🏼👇🏼
👉 http://bit.ly/2xSzNh0
@unitychess
✅ June's Titled Tuesday | 5 Jun 2018
CHESS.COM site
🔸June's Titled Tuesday was a fantastic success for Iranian players.
🔸As evidenced by their success in the 2016 Olympiad and the emergence of prodigies like GM Alireza Firouzja, Iran is becoming quite a strong chess country.
🔸 With two trips (top male and top female) to the Chess.com Isle of Man International up for grabs, Iranians took home both. GM Pouria Darini and WGM Mitra Hejazipour were the victors.
♦️ Read more and details 👇🏼👇🏼
👉 http://bit.ly/2xSzNh0
@unitychess
Chess.com
Iranians Darini, Hejazipour Win IoM Trips In Titled Tuesday
June's Titled Tuesday was a fantastic success for Iranian players. As evidenced by their success in the 2016 Olympiad and the emergence of prodigies like GM Alireza Firouzja, Iran is becoming quite a strong chess country. With two trips (top male and top…
🔵 #about_Nakamura
🔹 Hikaru Nakamura
🔹 Japanese-American Chess Grandmaster
♦️ Hikaru Nakamura is a Japanese-American chess grandmaster. He is a four-time United States Chess Champion, who won the 2011 edition of Tata Steel Group A and represented the United States at five Chess Olympiads, winning a team gold medal and two team bronze medals. He has also written a book about bullet chess called Bullet Chess: One Minute to Mate.
🔘 Full name: Hikaru Nakamura
🔘 Country: United States
🔘 Born: December 9, 1987
Hirakata, Osaka, Japan
🔘 Title: Grandmaster
🔘 FIDE rating: 2769 (June 2018)
🔘 Peak rating: 2816 (October 2015)
🔘 Ranking: No. 6 (April 2018)
🔘 Peak ranking: No. 2 (October 2015)
♦️Nakamura was born in Hirakata, Osaka Prefecture, Japan, to a Japanese father, Shuichi Nakamura, and an American mother, Carolyn Merrow Nakamura, a classically trained musician and former public school teacher. When he was two years of age his family moved to the United States. Nakamura's parents divorced in 1990, when he was 3 years old. He began playing chess prior to the age of five and was coached by his Sri Lankan stepfather, FIDE Master and chess author Sunil Weeramantry.
♦️Nakamura's peak USCF rating was 2900 in August 2015.[3] In October 2015, he reached his peak FIDE rating of 2816, which ranked him second in the world. In May 2014, when FIDE began publishing official rapid and blitz chess ratings, Nakamura ranked number one in the world on both lists.
♦️ A memorable , tactical and dynamic game by Nakamura against Gelfand which known "I Am the One Who Naks" in chessgames.com site!!👇🏼👇🏼
🔸 Boris Gelfand vs Hikaru Nakamura
🔸 World Team Championship (2010), Bursa TUR, rd 5, Jan-09
🔸 King's Indian Defense: Orthodox Variation. Modern System (E97)
♦️ Review and download PGN file👇🏼👇🏼
@unitychess
🔹 Hikaru Nakamura
🔹 Japanese-American Chess Grandmaster
♦️ Hikaru Nakamura is a Japanese-American chess grandmaster. He is a four-time United States Chess Champion, who won the 2011 edition of Tata Steel Group A and represented the United States at five Chess Olympiads, winning a team gold medal and two team bronze medals. He has also written a book about bullet chess called Bullet Chess: One Minute to Mate.
🔘 Full name: Hikaru Nakamura
🔘 Country: United States
🔘 Born: December 9, 1987
Hirakata, Osaka, Japan
🔘 Title: Grandmaster
🔘 FIDE rating: 2769 (June 2018)
🔘 Peak rating: 2816 (October 2015)
🔘 Ranking: No. 6 (April 2018)
🔘 Peak ranking: No. 2 (October 2015)
♦️Nakamura was born in Hirakata, Osaka Prefecture, Japan, to a Japanese father, Shuichi Nakamura, and an American mother, Carolyn Merrow Nakamura, a classically trained musician and former public school teacher. When he was two years of age his family moved to the United States. Nakamura's parents divorced in 1990, when he was 3 years old. He began playing chess prior to the age of five and was coached by his Sri Lankan stepfather, FIDE Master and chess author Sunil Weeramantry.
♦️Nakamura's peak USCF rating was 2900 in August 2015.[3] In October 2015, he reached his peak FIDE rating of 2816, which ranked him second in the world. In May 2014, when FIDE began publishing official rapid and blitz chess ratings, Nakamura ranked number one in the world on both lists.
♦️ A memorable , tactical and dynamic game by Nakamura against Gelfand which known "I Am the One Who Naks" in chessgames.com site!!👇🏼👇🏼
🔸 Boris Gelfand vs Hikaru Nakamura
🔸 World Team Championship (2010), Bursa TUR, rd 5, Jan-09
🔸 King's Indian Defense: Orthodox Variation. Modern System (E97)
♦️ Review and download PGN file👇🏼👇🏼
@unitychess
9...e×f3
Almost three decades have passed since Kasparov surprised Karpov by introducing the English Opening as a main weapon in the 1987 Seville match, but the theoretical discussion still seems far from reaching an end. In the first match of the game the surprise turned out to be a boomerang when Karpov reacted here with 9...e3!? , a novelty he had prepared for his earlier matches with Korchnoi but which he had never got the chance to use. Taken away from his analysed lines, Kasparov thought a lot before playing 10.d3 , eventually got into severe time trouble and lost. Based on the fact that Karpov did not repeat 9...e3 in later games, many commentators including Kasparov and some of his seconds claimed that 10.d3 was some sort of refutation of Karpov's idea. But then I wonder why in a much later game Kasparov,G (2827)-Sadvakasov,D (2585) Astana 2001 (½-½, 43) Kasparov deviated with 10.dxe3.
Be it as it may, the game Svidler,P (2757)-Karjakin,S (2760) Moscow 2016 (½-½, 50) played two rounds earlier than Caruana-Anand went 10.d3 and Black eventually came under serious positional pressure.
10.N×f3 d5 11.d4 d×x4 12.Bg5
Almost three decades have passed since Kasparov surprised Karpov by introducing the English Opening as a main weapon in the 1987 Seville match, but the theoretical discussion still seems far from reaching an end. In the first match of the game the surprise turned out to be a boomerang when Karpov reacted here with 9...e3!? , a novelty he had prepared for his earlier matches with Korchnoi but which he had never got the chance to use. Taken away from his analysed lines, Kasparov thought a lot before playing 10.d3 , eventually got into severe time trouble and lost. Based on the fact that Karpov did not repeat 9...e3 in later games, many commentators including Kasparov and some of his seconds claimed that 10.d3 was some sort of refutation of Karpov's idea. But then I wonder why in a much later game Kasparov,G (2827)-Sadvakasov,D (2585) Astana 2001 (½-½, 43) Kasparov deviated with 10.dxe3.
Be it as it may, the game Svidler,P (2757)-Karjakin,S (2760) Moscow 2016 (½-½, 50) played two rounds earlier than Caruana-Anand went 10.d3 and Black eventually came under serious positional pressure.
10.N×f3 d5 11.d4 d×x4 12.Bg5