β΄οΈ #about_Shirov
πΈ Alexei Shirov
πΈ Latvian and Spanish chess grandmaster
π° Alexei Shirov is a Latvian and Spanish chess grandmaster. He was ranked number two in the world in 1994.
π Full name: Alexei Dmitrievich Shirov
π Country: Soviet Union (until 1991)
Latvia (1991β95, 2011β18)
Spain (1995β2011, since 2018)
π Born: 4 July 1972 (age 45)
Riga, Latvian SSR, Soviet Union
π Title: Grandmaster (1990)
π FIDE rating: 2637 (July 2018)
π Peak rating: 2755 (January 2008)
π Peak ranking: No. 2 (January 1994)
π° Shirov is the winner of numerous international tournaments: Biel 1991, Madrid 1997 (shared first place with Veselin Topalov), Ter Apel 1997, Monte Carlo 1998, MΓ©rida 2000, Paul Keres Memorial Rapid Tournament in Tallinn (2004, 2005, 2011, 2012, 2013), Canadian Open Chess Championship 2005.
π° In 1998 Shirov's ranking rose to number four in the world. On the basis of his rating, he was invited to play a ten-game match against Vladimir Kramnik to select a challenger for World Champion Garry Kasparov. Shirov won the match with two wins, no losses and seven draws. However, the plans for the Kasparov match fell through when sufficient financial backing could not be found. When Kasparov instead played Kramnik for the world title in 2000, Shirov maintained that the match was invalid and he was the rightful challenger.
π° In 2000, Shirov reached the final of the FIDE World Chess Championship, losing 3Β½βΒ½ to Viswanathan Anand.
π° In MayβJune 2007 he played in the Candidates Tournament of the FIDE World Chess Championship 2007. He won his first round match against Michael Adams (+1β1=4, won in rapid playoff), but was eliminated when he lost his second round match to Levon Aronian (+0β1=5).
π° In NovemberβDecember 2007 Shirov played in the Chess World Cup 2007. He made the final, but lost the final 2Β½β1Β½ to Gata Kamsky.
π° In May 2009, Alexei Shirov won the category 21 M-Tel Masters 2009 tournament, held in Sofia, Bulgaria ....
β¦οΈ A memorable game by Shirov which known "Grunfeld of Dreams" in chessgames.com site!! π
πΉ Boris Gelfand vs Alexey Shirov
πΉ Pivdenny Bank Chess Cup (2007) (rapid), Odessa UKR, rd 7, Jul-06
πΉ Gruenfeld Defense: Exchange. Modern Exchange Variation (D85)
β¦οΈ Review and download PGN fileπ
@unitychess
πΈ Alexei Shirov
πΈ Latvian and Spanish chess grandmaster
π° Alexei Shirov is a Latvian and Spanish chess grandmaster. He was ranked number two in the world in 1994.
π Full name: Alexei Dmitrievich Shirov
π Country: Soviet Union (until 1991)
Latvia (1991β95, 2011β18)
Spain (1995β2011, since 2018)
π Born: 4 July 1972 (age 45)
Riga, Latvian SSR, Soviet Union
π Title: Grandmaster (1990)
π FIDE rating: 2637 (July 2018)
π Peak rating: 2755 (January 2008)
π Peak ranking: No. 2 (January 1994)
π° Shirov is the winner of numerous international tournaments: Biel 1991, Madrid 1997 (shared first place with Veselin Topalov), Ter Apel 1997, Monte Carlo 1998, MΓ©rida 2000, Paul Keres Memorial Rapid Tournament in Tallinn (2004, 2005, 2011, 2012, 2013), Canadian Open Chess Championship 2005.
π° In 1998 Shirov's ranking rose to number four in the world. On the basis of his rating, he was invited to play a ten-game match against Vladimir Kramnik to select a challenger for World Champion Garry Kasparov. Shirov won the match with two wins, no losses and seven draws. However, the plans for the Kasparov match fell through when sufficient financial backing could not be found. When Kasparov instead played Kramnik for the world title in 2000, Shirov maintained that the match was invalid and he was the rightful challenger.
π° In 2000, Shirov reached the final of the FIDE World Chess Championship, losing 3Β½βΒ½ to Viswanathan Anand.
π° In MayβJune 2007 he played in the Candidates Tournament of the FIDE World Chess Championship 2007. He won his first round match against Michael Adams (+1β1=4, won in rapid playoff), but was eliminated when he lost his second round match to Levon Aronian (+0β1=5).
π° In NovemberβDecember 2007 Shirov played in the Chess World Cup 2007. He made the final, but lost the final 2Β½β1Β½ to Gata Kamsky.
π° In May 2009, Alexei Shirov won the category 21 M-Tel Masters 2009 tournament, held in Sofia, Bulgaria ....
β¦οΈ A memorable game by Shirov which known "Grunfeld of Dreams" in chessgames.com site!! π
πΉ Boris Gelfand vs Alexey Shirov
πΉ Pivdenny Bank Chess Cup (2007) (rapid), Odessa UKR, rd 7, Jul-06
πΉ Gruenfeld Defense: Exchange. Modern Exchange Variation (D85)
β¦οΈ Review and download PGN fileπ
@unitychess
@Gelfand-Shirov 2007.pgn
934 B
[ File : @Gelfand-Shirov 2007.pgn ]
πΈ Boris Gelfand - Alexey Shirov, Odessa 2007
πΈ PGN format
@unitychess
πΈ Boris Gelfand - Alexey Shirov, Odessa 2007
πΈ PGN format
@unitychess
31...Be6??
The Italian grandmaster missed the only chance to achieve a draw.
31...a3 32.Bd5 Rd1+ 33.Kg2 Be4+! 34.BΓe4 a2 35.Ra7 a1=Q 36.RΓa1 RΓa1.
32.Bc8! Bb3 33.Ra7 +-
The Italian grandmaster missed the only chance to achieve a draw.
31...a3 32.Bd5 Rd1+ 33.Kg2 Be4+! 34.BΓe4 a2 35.Ra7 a1=Q 36.RΓa1 RΓa1.
32.Bc8! Bb3 33.Ra7 +-
36...Bd7??
Black should have played 36...f5! in order to prevent White from carrying out 37.e5 and then 38.Ne4+.
37.e5! dΓe5 38.Ne4+ KΓb5 39.NΓf6 eΓf4+ 40.KΓf4 Kc6 41.g5 h6 42.Ke5 +
Black should have played 36...f5! in order to prevent White from carrying out 37.e5 and then 38.Ne4+.
37.e5! dΓe5 38.Ne4+ KΓb5 39.NΓf6 eΓf4+ 40.KΓf4 Kc6 41.g5 h6 42.Ke5 +
37.Ra7 Kg7?
American Fide Master Dmitriy Volkov committed a meaningless move and put his king on a dangerous square.
He should have defended the e3 pawn with 37...Be3! and after 38.Bd5 Ng5, the f7-pawn would also be defended.
38.a4 b4 39.Bd5 Kg6? 40.a5 Rbb8 41.RΓa6 Be3 42.Rd6 Kg5 43.a6 Nf4 44.a7 +-
American Fide Master Dmitriy Volkov committed a meaningless move and put his king on a dangerous square.
He should have defended the e3 pawn with 37...Be3! and after 38.Bd5 Ng5, the f7-pawn would also be defended.
38.a4 b4 39.Bd5 Kg6? 40.a5 Rbb8 41.RΓa6 Be3 42.Rd6 Kg5 43.a6 Nf4 44.a7 +-
17... c6?
A wrong decision that activates opponent's pieces.
The correct is 17... Qf7+ 18. Kg1 Qf8! with the idea of ...Bh6, trading his bad bishop for White's good one.
18. dxc6 Bxc6 19. Kg1 Nc7 20. Be3 N7e6 21. b4 axb4 22. axb4 Na6 23. Nd5 Nac7 24. Nbxc7 Rxa1 25. Qxa1 Nxc7 26. Bxb6 Nxd5 27. exd5 Ba4 28. b5 1-0
A wrong decision that activates opponent's pieces.
The correct is 17... Qf7+ 18. Kg1 Qf8! with the idea of ...Bh6, trading his bad bishop for White's good one.
18. dxc6 Bxc6 19. Kg1 Nc7 20. Be3 N7e6 21. b4 axb4 22. axb4 Na6 23. Nd5 Nac7 24. Nbxc7 Rxa1 25. Qxa1 Nxc7 26. Bxb6 Nxd5 27. exd5 Ba4 28. b5 1-0
19.c5!
A slower move would have been answered by 19...Bc5 and 20... 0-0.
19...Nxc5
By sacrificing a pawn White frees his bishop and succeeds in disrupting his opponent's build-up, as 19...Bxc5? 20.Bb5+ Kf8 21.Nb3! would embarrass the black knight and bishop on c5.
20.Bb5+ Nd7 21.Qc3! Preventing 21...Bc5.
A slower move would have been answered by 19...Bc5 and 20... 0-0.
19...Nxc5
By sacrificing a pawn White frees his bishop and succeeds in disrupting his opponent's build-up, as 19...Bxc5? 20.Bb5+ Kf8 21.Nb3! would embarrass the black knight and bishop on c5.
20.Bb5+ Nd7 21.Qc3! Preventing 21...Bc5.
32...h5!
If the white queen were still sitting on e3, this pawn advance could be countered by an invasion with Qh6+. Instead, her self-inflicted exile means that the flimsy white pawn cover on the g-file collapses as soon as the first blow is struck.
33.gxh5 gxh5 34.Nf5
The knight jumps before it is pinned with 34...Rg8, when 35...h4 would be on the cards.
34...Bxf5 35.exf5 Rg8+ 36.Bg2 Qg7
The black queen takes advantage of her unchallenged dominance of the g-file to compel White to shut in his bishop and further weaken his dark squares.
If the white queen were still sitting on e3, this pawn advance could be countered by an invasion with Qh6+. Instead, her self-inflicted exile means that the flimsy white pawn cover on the g-file collapses as soon as the first blow is struck.
33.gxh5 gxh5 34.Nf5
The knight jumps before it is pinned with 34...Rg8, when 35...h4 would be on the cards.
34...Bxf5 35.exf5 Rg8+ 36.Bg2 Qg7
The black queen takes advantage of her unchallenged dominance of the g-file to compel White to shut in his bishop and further weaken his dark squares.
Unity Chess Multiple Choice 537
public poll
A: Bc8 β 5
πππππππ 45%
Jonas, Ramesh, Vincent, Mieke, @MerissaWongso
B: g5 β 4
ππππππ 36%
ΨΉΩΫ, Gavin, @Afshin3333, Michael
C: f5 β 2
πππ 18%
Jahanbakhsh, @RichardPeng
π₯ 11 people voted so far.
public poll
A: Bc8 β 5
πππππππ 45%
Jonas, Ramesh, Vincent, Mieke, @MerissaWongso
B: g5 β 4
ππππππ 36%
ΨΉΩΫ, Gavin, @Afshin3333, Michael
C: f5 β 2
πππ 18%
Jahanbakhsh, @RichardPeng
π₯ 11 people voted so far.