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@Galliamova-Ovod 2012.pgn
660 B
🔸 Alisa Mikhailovna Galliamova - Evgenija Ovod, Moscow 2012
🔸 PGN format

@unitychess
🔸Blitz Your Next Move Leuven 2018
🔸Round 17
⚪️Karjakin,Sergey (2782)
⚫️Caruana,Fabiano (2816)
🔸1-0
19.Qc4?
19.N×b7!
A combination along the long diagonal due to the coordination of the white pieces.
19...Q×b7 20.Nc5 B×c5 21.B×d5 +/-
19...Rd8 20.Rfe1 =
🔸Blitz Your Next Move Leuven 2018
🔸Round 17
⚪️Grischuk,Alexander (2766)
⚫️Nakamura,Hikaru (2769)
🔸½-½
37.f3?
A careless move that allows Nakamura to generate serious counterplay.
37.Ne6!
A)37...N×e4 38.c5 +-
B)37....Q×e4 38.Ng5+ +-
37...N×e4! 38.f×e4 Qb6+ 39.c5 Q×c7 40.Qf5+ Kh8 41.Kh2 Qc6 =
🔸Blitz Your Next Move Leuven 2018
🔸Round 17
⚪️Aronian,Levon (2764)
⚫️Vachier-Lagrave,Maxime (2789)
🔸0-1
34.K×e2??
A blunder. White should have tried to keep the queens on the board with 34.b3! Nb2 35.K×e2 Qh6 36.Qe5=
34...Qh6 35.Q×h6 K×h6 36.b3 Nd6 37.Kd3 Kg5 -+
🔸Blitz Your Next Move Leuven 2018
🔸Round 18
⚪️Vachier-Lagrave,Maxime (2789)
⚫️Anand,Viswanathan (2759)
🔸0-1
40...Nd4?
Anand only had to play 40...e3! and Vachier would have had to throw in the towel.
40...e3+
A) 41.Ke2 Nc1+ 42.Rd×c1 d×c1=Q 43.R×c1 Rd2+ 44.K×e3 R×a2 -+
B) 41.Kf1 Re6 -+
41.Rc8+ Kh7 42.Re8
White has some drawing chances.
⚫️#529 (Strategy-Black to Move)
🔸Harrwitz,D
🔸Morphy,P
🔸3rd matchgame, Paris, 1858
25...Rb6!
White is given a frightful choice: either he must concede control of the b-file or else exchange on b6, when Black is given a lever with which to prise open the white center pawn structure.
26.Rxb6 axb6 27.Qb3
The exchange of queens doesn't help much, but if Harrwitz had just waited he could be assailed with ...Ra8 and ...b6-b5, when the a3-pawn would be a target for the black queen.
27...Qxb3 28.Nxb3 b5 29.cxb5 Bxb5-/+
⚫️#530 (Strategy-Black to Move)
🔸Reshevsky,S
🔸Bronstein,D
🔸Candidates Tournament, Zürich, 1953
15...Qa5!
This activity is all very well, but has the d6-pawn been abandoned to its fate?
No, because 16.Rxd6 is met by a 'global' combination that harasses the white pieces on the queenside, center, and kingside: 16...Ne5! 17.b3 (to defend c4) 17...axb3 18.axb3 Bxh3! 19.Bxh3 Nf3+ 20.Kf1 Nxe1 21.Kxe1 Nxe4 22.Rd3 Nxc3! 23.Nxc3 Qa1+ 24.Nd1 Ra2 with a huge initiative to Black.
16.Bf1
A poor square for the bishop. Actually, having gone this far, Reshevsky should probably have tried 16.Rxd6 anyway but, after 16...Ne5 , returned the pawn with 17.Rdd1! Nxc4 18.Bd4!, as played by Smyslov. White can't rejoice at having exchanged his c-pawn for the d6-pawn, but at least he gets rid of Black's strong dark-squared bishop.
16...Ne5 17.Nd4
The fact that the knight returns to d4 shows that the plan to attack d6 has ended in fiasco.
17...a3
Here it paralyses Reshevsky's queenside, making b4 an excellent outpost for a black knight, and casts a blight over his endgame chances.
18.f4 Ned7 19.b3 Na6!
The black knights take the b4- and c5-squares.
⚪️#531 (Strategy-White to Move)
🔸Morphy,P
🔸Bird,H
🔸London, 1858
Unity Chess Multiple Choice 531
public poll

C: Kh1 – 10
👍👍👍👍👍👍👍 83%
@MohamadAsp, Jonas, Gavin, Ramesh, Jahanbakhsh, Vincent, @Sophia_Peng, @RichardPeng, @AryanLeekha, @haoyuw

A: Re2 – 1
👍 8%
@MerissaWongso

B: Qe7 – 1
👍 8%
Michael

👥 12 people voted so far.
⚪️#532 (Strategy-White to Move)
🔸Geller,E
🔸Korchnoi,V
🔸Havana, 1963