Unity Chess Strategy Multiple Choice 56
public poll
C)35...Qd2 β 8
πππππππ 89%
@PouyaMO1360, @SteveWongso, Alexander, @RichardPeng, @WataxPin, Michael, Hansika, Sanjana
B)35...Qxf3 β 1
π 11%
@Somebody_Sophia
A)35...Qg4
β«οΈ 0%
π₯ 9 people voted so far.
public poll
C)35...Qd2 β 8
πππππππ 89%
@PouyaMO1360, @SteveWongso, Alexander, @RichardPeng, @WataxPin, Michael, Hansika, Sanjana
B)35...Qxf3 β 1
π 11%
@Somebody_Sophia
A)35...Qg4
β«οΈ 0%
π₯ 9 people voted so far.
Unity Chess Endgame Multiple Choice 56
public poll
C)49.Rhh6 β 5
πππππππ 45%
@PouyaMO1360, @Kheradirad, @SteveWongso, @Somebody_Sophia, Hansika
A)49.Rgg7 β 4
ππππππ 36%
Alexander, @RichardPeng, Michael, Sanjana
B)49.Rg5 β 2
πππ 18%
@K_mosaddegh83, @WataxPin
π₯ 11 people voted so far.
public poll
C)49.Rhh6 β 5
πππππππ 45%
@PouyaMO1360, @Kheradirad, @SteveWongso, @Somebody_Sophia, Hansika
A)49.Rgg7 β 4
ππππππ 36%
Alexander, @RichardPeng, Michael, Sanjana
B)49.Rg5 β 2
πππ 18%
@K_mosaddegh83, @WataxPin
π₯ 11 people voted so far.
Left to right: Timoschenko, Nikitin, Kasparov (World Championship Match against Karpov), Vladimirov.
@UnityChess
@UnityChess
At the 'Tournament of Peace', played in Rovinj & Zagreb, Yugoslavia, April-May 1970 - Bobby Fischer faces Dragoljub MiniΔ and Mijo UdovΔiΔ, in the 4th & 12th rounds respectively.
@UnityChess
@UnityChess
"It is not possible to become a great player without having learned how to analyse deeply and accurately."
πΈ Mark Dvoretsky
@UnityChess
πΈ Mark Dvoretsky
@UnityChess
β¦οΈ Today is birthday of Aron Nimzowitsch !!
Danish-Russian writer chess master
Born: 7 November 1886
βͺοΈ Riga, Russian Empire
Died: 16 March 1935 (aged 48)
βͺοΈ Copenhagen, Denmark
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess
Danish-Russian writer chess master
Born: 7 November 1886
βͺοΈ Riga, Russian Empire
Died: 16 March 1935 (aged 48)
βͺοΈ Copenhagen, Denmark
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess
Women's World Championship 2018 (π΄LIVE ) πΊ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=my_ortX835c
YouTube
FIDE Women's World Championship 2018. Round 2. Game 2.
Commentator GM Pavel Tregubov and GM Alexander Morozevich
Unity Chess Club pinned Β«Women's World Championship 2018 (π΄LIVE ) πΊ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=my_ortX835cΒ»
#Tal
π΅ Mikhail Tal
Soviet chess Grandmaster
Eighth World Chess Champion
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess
π΅ Mikhail Tal
Soviet chess Grandmaster
Eighth World Chess Champion
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess
π΅ About Mikhail Tal
πΉ Mikhail Tal
πΉ Soviet chess Grandmaster
πΉ Eighth World Chess Champion
πΈ Born: 9 November 1936
πΊ Riga, Republic of Latvia
πΈ Died: 28 June 1992[1] (aged 55)
πΊ Moscow, Russia
π° Mikhail Nekhemyevich Tal was a Soviet chess Grandmaster and the eighth World Chess Champion. Widely regarded as a creative genius and one of the best attacking players of all time, Tal played in a daring, combinatorial style. His play was known above all for improvisation and unpredictability.
βͺοΈ Wikipedia
MIKHAIL TAL, the Latvian who held the world chess championship from 1960 to 1961, was the most brilliant player of his era. In an age dominated by the scientific precision of Mikhail Botvinnik (who held the title on and off from 1948 to 1963), and the deep strategic play of Vassily Smyslov (champion 1957-58), good chess had acquired a ponderous quality. Tal brought back a spirit of adventure, with high-risk sacrificial attacks giving his games that swashbuckling flavour presumed lost with the great masters of the last century.
Tal's speed of calculation and imaginative vision were phenomenal. I saw him once presented with a highly unusual and, at any rate to mere mortals, very difficult position which could be won with a surprising series of moves. As soon as the final piece was placed on the board, Tal smiled, looked up and said: 'Yes, that's very beautiful.'
Yet it was not so such Tal's calculating power as his willingness to enter unfathomable complications and his ability to create turmoil that brought him success. With a single imaginative move, he could introduce wild possibilities, but the higher skill was in intensifying the difficulties until his opponents could no longer cope.
βͺοΈ WILLIAM HARTSTON
Independnt, Friday 3 July 1992
β¦οΈ A memorable game by Mikhail Tal against Smyslov in Bled-Zagreb-Belgrade Candidates 1959 which named "Tal Tales" in chessgames.com site!!π
β«οΈ Mikhail Tal vs Vasily Smyslov
β«οΈ Bled-Zagreb-Belgrade Candidates (1959), Bled, Zagreb & Belgrade YUG, rd 8, Sep-18
β«οΈ Caro-Kann Defense: Breyer Variation (B10)
β¦οΈ Review and download PGN fileπ
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess
πΉ Mikhail Tal
πΉ Soviet chess Grandmaster
πΉ Eighth World Chess Champion
πΈ Born: 9 November 1936
πΊ Riga, Republic of Latvia
πΈ Died: 28 June 1992[1] (aged 55)
πΊ Moscow, Russia
π° Mikhail Nekhemyevich Tal was a Soviet chess Grandmaster and the eighth World Chess Champion. Widely regarded as a creative genius and one of the best attacking players of all time, Tal played in a daring, combinatorial style. His play was known above all for improvisation and unpredictability.
βͺοΈ Wikipedia
MIKHAIL TAL, the Latvian who held the world chess championship from 1960 to 1961, was the most brilliant player of his era. In an age dominated by the scientific precision of Mikhail Botvinnik (who held the title on and off from 1948 to 1963), and the deep strategic play of Vassily Smyslov (champion 1957-58), good chess had acquired a ponderous quality. Tal brought back a spirit of adventure, with high-risk sacrificial attacks giving his games that swashbuckling flavour presumed lost with the great masters of the last century.
Tal's speed of calculation and imaginative vision were phenomenal. I saw him once presented with a highly unusual and, at any rate to mere mortals, very difficult position which could be won with a surprising series of moves. As soon as the final piece was placed on the board, Tal smiled, looked up and said: 'Yes, that's very beautiful.'
Yet it was not so such Tal's calculating power as his willingness to enter unfathomable complications and his ability to create turmoil that brought him success. With a single imaginative move, he could introduce wild possibilities, but the higher skill was in intensifying the difficulties until his opponents could no longer cope.
βͺοΈ WILLIAM HARTSTON
Independnt, Friday 3 July 1992
β¦οΈ A memorable game by Mikhail Tal against Smyslov in Bled-Zagreb-Belgrade Candidates 1959 which named "Tal Tales" in chessgames.com site!!π
β«οΈ Mikhail Tal vs Vasily Smyslov
β«οΈ Bled-Zagreb-Belgrade Candidates (1959), Bled, Zagreb & Belgrade YUG, rd 8, Sep-18
β«οΈ Caro-Kann Defense: Breyer Variation (B10)
β¦οΈ Review and download PGN fileπ
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess
Wikipedia
Mikhail Tal