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βšͺ️#73 (Strategy-White to Move)
πŸ”ΈBaburin,Alexander (2452)
πŸ”ΈPaiva,Donaldo (2206)
πŸ”ΈOlympiad 2018 Batumi
Unity Chess Strategy Multiple Choice 73
public poll

B)h5 – 8
πŸ‘πŸ‘πŸ‘πŸ‘πŸ‘πŸ‘πŸ‘ 100%
@Sh39r, @mahyarebrahimi1983, @Abolfazl_8383, Nikhil, @h_a_d_I_1169, @K_mosaddegh83, @RichardPeng, @WataxPin

A)Rfc1
▫️ 0%

C)Rac1
▫️ 0%

πŸ‘₯ 8 people voted so far.
βšͺ️#73 (Endgame-β€ŒWhite to Move)
πŸ”ΈMeshkovs,Nikita (2535)
πŸ”ΈFawzy,Adham (2431)
πŸ”ΈWorld Chess Olympiad 2018 Batumi
Unity Chess Endgame Multiple Choice 73
public poll

B)Rce2 – 7
πŸ‘πŸ‘πŸ‘πŸ‘πŸ‘πŸ‘πŸ‘ 70%
@ata1123581321, @M_L_110213, @mahyarebrahimi1983, @shahrokh1386, @Abolfazl_8383, Nikhil, @WataxPin

A)g4 – 3
πŸ‘πŸ‘πŸ‘ 30%
@Sh39r, @FrozenBlade, @h_a_d_I_1169

C)h4
▫️ 0%

πŸ‘₯ 10 people voted so far.
Congrats to Baskaran Adhiban on winning the Tournament of Peace with 7.5/11 points, and also becomes the fifth Indian to cross 2700 Elo.
Results: http://bit.ly/2KrGlpH

@UnityChess
He joins the list of greats who have won the tournament in past - Ivkov, Fischer, Sax and Timman.

@UnityChess
zagrebpeace18.pgn
46.3 KB
πŸ”Ή Tournament of Peace 2018-R11
πŸ”Ή PGN format

@UnityChess
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βœ…πŸ 50 days to go until the Tata Steel Chess Tournament 2019. Are you ready? Be part of it!
#tatasteelchess

@UnityChess
β€œBobby Fischer, left, playing a speed match against Andrew Soltis in 1971 at the Manhattan Chess Club.

@UnityChess
πŸ”΄ Today is birthday of Kacper Piorun!!
Polish chess grandmaster

πŸŒΊπŸŒΉπŸ’β˜˜οΈπŸŒΈπŸŒ· Happy birthday πŸ‘πŸ‘πŸ‘πŸ‘πŸ‘
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess
✴️ #Reti

πŸ”Έ Richard RΓ©ti
πŸ”Έ Chess composer
πŸ”Έ Austro-Hungarian chess grandmaster
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@unitychess
✴️ About Richard Reti

πŸ”Έ Richard RΓ©ti
πŸ”Έ Chess composer
πŸ”Έ Austro-Hungarian chess grandmaster

πŸ”° Richard Selig RΓ©ti was an Austro-Hungarian, later Czechoslovak chess grandmaster, chess author, and composer of endgame studies. He was one of the principal proponents of hypermodernism in chess.

πŸ”° Richard Reti was one of the top players in the world during the 1910s and 1920s, he began his career as a combinative classical player, favoring openings such as the King's Gambit (1.e4 e5 2.f4). After the end of the First World War, however, his playing style changed, and he became one of the principal proponents of hypermodernism, along with Aron Nimzowitsch and others.

πŸ”° At the age of 12, he had already submitted a chess problem to the chess column in Über Land und Meer run by Hermann von Gottschall. Von Gottschall advised him to continue working on his chess. In 1903, the then 13-year old RΓ©ti was introduced to Carl Schlechter who remarked "for his age, this is certainly exceptional". He went on to fare well at the 2nd Hungarian National tournament in SzΓ©kesfehΓ©rvΓ‘r, 1907.

♦️ A memorable famous and short game by Reti which named "Sucker Punch" in chessgames.com site!
In this game Reti has won Savielly Tartakower in only 11 moves!!πŸ‘‡
β–ͺ️Richard Reti vs Savielly Tartakower
β–ͺ️ Vienna (1910), Vienna AUH
β–ͺ️ Caro-Kann Defense: Main Line (B15)
♦️Review and download PGN fileπŸ‘‡
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@unitychess
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πŸ”ΈRichard Reti - Savielly Tartakower, Vienna 1910
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@unitychess
@Reti-Tartakower 1910.pgn
390 B
β–ͺ️Richard Reti - Savielly Tartakower, Vienna 1910
β–ͺ️ PGN format
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@unitychess
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βœ…πŸ Game of the Day!
Garry Kasparov vs Mephisto (Computer)
Hamburg blindsim 1985

@UnityChess
πŸ”Έchess.com IoM Masters Douglas ENG 2018
πŸ”ΈRound 7
βšͺ️Antipov,Mikhail Al (2593)
⚫️Giri,Anish (2780)
πŸ”Έ0-1
21...exf4?! [Even though after this move Black is still better, he has a stronger option:]

[21...d5! This strong move is neglected by dutch super GM Anish Giri. 22.exd5 Nxd5 β–³NΓ—f4 23.Nxd5 (23.Red3 Nxf4 24.Nxf4 exf4 25.b4 Nf8 26.Bb3 Rxd3 27.Rxd3 Qe7–+) 23...Qxc2 24.Ba1 exf4! 25.Rxe8+ Rxe8 26.Nexf4 Bxa1 27.Rxa1 Qxb3–+]

22.Qxf4 Ne5 23.Ng3? [White places the knight in a passive position. He should have tried to play for equality with the following continuation:]

[ΒΉ23.Nd4! Nh5 24.Qh4 Bf6 25.Qh3 Qc5 26.Nd5! Bxd5 27.exd5 Qxd5 28.Ree1Β³]

23...Nfg4 24.Re2 Bh6 25.Qf1 Ne3 26.Rxe3 Bxe3-/+ 0–1