20...Rg5! [20...Kg7 21.Qb5 Rgd8 22.Rb4 Qf3 23.Qa5 h5 24.Rf4 Rd1+ 25.Nxd1 Qxd1+ 26.Kg2 Rxb7 27.Qa4 Qd5+ 28.Qe4 Qxe4+ 29.Rxe4Β΅; 20...f5 21.Nc2 Qc6 22.Nd4 Qd5 23.Ne2 f6 24.a4 Qe4 25.a5 h5 26.Nc3 Qf3 27.Qb3 h4 28.Nd5 Qxb3 29.Rxb3 hxg3 30.fxg3 Kf7 31.a6 Rgd8]
21.Qc1 Rc5 [21...Rc5! 22.Qb2 (22.Qxc5 Qxb1+ 23.Nf1 Rxb7β+) 22...Rc7β+] 0β1
21.Qc1 Rc5 [21...Rc5! 22.Qb2 (22.Qxc5 Qxb1+ 23.Nf1 Rxb7β+) 22...Rc7β+] 0β1
Unity Chess Strategy Multiple Choice 87
public poll
A) Rcd1 β 7
πππππππ 64%
@Empyriumm, Jonas, Nikhil, @hoseini139562, @RichardPeng, Michael, Zhenrui
B) QΓe5 β 3
πππ 27%
@M_L_110213, @Sophia_Peng, @WataxPin
Red1 β 1
π 9%
@Zamani9899
π₯ 11 people voted so far.
public poll
A) Rcd1 β 7
πππππππ 64%
@Empyriumm, Jonas, Nikhil, @hoseini139562, @RichardPeng, Michael, Zhenrui
B) QΓe5 β 3
πππ 27%
@M_L_110213, @Sophia_Peng, @WataxPin
Red1 β 1
π 9%
@Zamani9899
π₯ 11 people voted so far.
Unity Chess Endgame Multiple Choice 87
public poll
C) Ke3 β 13
πππππππ 81%
@Empyriumm, @M_L_110213, Jonas, @Zamani9899, Nikhil, @AlirezaRahmani_1396, @hoseini139562, @Mahernoz, @RichardPeng, @WataxPin, Adith, Michael, Zhenrui
B) Ke2 β 2
π 13%
milad, @Sophia_Peng
A) Kg2 β 1
π 6%
@alimahdavieh
π₯ 16 people voted so far.
public poll
C) Ke3 β 13
πππππππ 81%
@Empyriumm, @M_L_110213, Jonas, @Zamani9899, Nikhil, @AlirezaRahmani_1396, @hoseini139562, @Mahernoz, @RichardPeng, @WataxPin, Adith, Michael, Zhenrui
B) Ke2 β 2
π 13%
milad, @Sophia_Peng
A) Kg2 β 1
π 6%
@alimahdavieh
π₯ 16 people voted so far.
Jean-Henri Marlet's depiction of the 19th game in a chess match between Howard Staunton and Pierre Charles Fournier de Saint-Amant which took place on 16 December 1843.
@UnityChess
@UnityChess
Future grandmaster Vladimir Akopian (born 7th December, 1971) with his then-trainer, Soviet Master Oleg Dementiev. Akopian was born in Baku, but moved to Yerevan with his family in 1985, when he began studying with Dementiev.
@UnityChess
@UnityChess
Soviet grandmaster Viktor Korchnoi; in the background is ex-World Champion Tigran Petrosian. USSR, early 1970s.
@UnityChess
@UnityChess
π΄ Today is birthday of Robert Andrew Hungaski!!
β¦οΈ American chess grandmaster
πππππ Happy birhday πΊπΈβοΈππ·ππ
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@unitychess
β¦οΈ American chess grandmaster
πππππ Happy birhday πΊπΈβοΈππ·ππ
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@unitychess
β΄οΈ About Portisch
πΈ Lajos Portisch
πΈ Hungarian chess grandmaster
πΈ Chess writer
π° Lajos Portisch is a Hungarian chess Grandmaster, whose positional style earned him the nickname, the "Hungarian Botvinnik".
πΉ Born: April 4, 1937 (age 81 years), Zalaegerszeg, Hungary
πΉ Title: Grandmaster (1961)
πΉ FIDE rating: 2467
πΉ Peak rating: 2655 (January 1980)
πΉ Books: My Secrets in the Ruy Lopez, Six Hundred Endings
π° Lajos Portisch was born in Zalaegerszeg. He won the Hungarian Championship for the first time in 1958, and in 1961 he became a grandmaster. In 1960, he qualified from the Madrid Zonal for the Stockholm Interzonal (1962), where he came equal 9th. In 1963, he won the Halle Zonal ahead of Borislav Ivkov and Bent Larsen and advanced to the Amsterdam Interzonal (1964) where he came 8th. Over the course of his career he qualified for the Candidates eight times and played for his country in nineteen consecutive Olympiads (1956-1996). He had another fine tournament finish with an equal 2nd with Tigran Vartanovich Petrosian after Anatoly Karpov at Milan (1975). At the Biel Interzonal (1976), he qualified again with an equal 2nd after Bent Larsen, and went on to win the Portisch - Larsen Candidates Quarterfinal (1977) match, but then lost the Spassky - Portisch Candidates Semifinal (1977) match. He led the Hungarian team to an unprecedented 1st place finish ahead of the Soviets at the Buenos Aires Olympiad 1978.
He still lives in Hungary, and is still active in local tournaments.
β¦οΈ A memorable and excellent tactical game by Portischπ
πΈ Lajos Portisch vs Nick de Firmian
πΈ Reggio Emilia (1989/90), Reggio Emilia ITA, rd 8, Jan-05
πΈ Queen's Indian Defense: Spassky System (E14)
β¦οΈ Review and download PGN fileπ
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@unitychess
πΈ Lajos Portisch
πΈ Hungarian chess grandmaster
πΈ Chess writer
π° Lajos Portisch is a Hungarian chess Grandmaster, whose positional style earned him the nickname, the "Hungarian Botvinnik".
πΉ Born: April 4, 1937 (age 81 years), Zalaegerszeg, Hungary
πΉ Title: Grandmaster (1961)
πΉ FIDE rating: 2467
πΉ Peak rating: 2655 (January 1980)
πΉ Books: My Secrets in the Ruy Lopez, Six Hundred Endings
π° Lajos Portisch was born in Zalaegerszeg. He won the Hungarian Championship for the first time in 1958, and in 1961 he became a grandmaster. In 1960, he qualified from the Madrid Zonal for the Stockholm Interzonal (1962), where he came equal 9th. In 1963, he won the Halle Zonal ahead of Borislav Ivkov and Bent Larsen and advanced to the Amsterdam Interzonal (1964) where he came 8th. Over the course of his career he qualified for the Candidates eight times and played for his country in nineteen consecutive Olympiads (1956-1996). He had another fine tournament finish with an equal 2nd with Tigran Vartanovich Petrosian after Anatoly Karpov at Milan (1975). At the Biel Interzonal (1976), he qualified again with an equal 2nd after Bent Larsen, and went on to win the Portisch - Larsen Candidates Quarterfinal (1977) match, but then lost the Spassky - Portisch Candidates Semifinal (1977) match. He led the Hungarian team to an unprecedented 1st place finish ahead of the Soviets at the Buenos Aires Olympiad 1978.
He still lives in Hungary, and is still active in local tournaments.
β¦οΈ A memorable and excellent tactical game by Portischπ
πΈ Lajos Portisch vs Nick de Firmian
πΈ Reggio Emilia (1989/90), Reggio Emilia ITA, rd 8, Jan-05
πΈ Queen's Indian Defense: Spassky System (E14)
β¦οΈ Review and download PGN fileπ
. . . . . . . . . . . . .
@unitychess
@Portisch-deFirmian 1990.pgn
609 B
πΈ Lajos Portisch - Nick de Firmian, Reggio Emilia (1989/90)
πΈ PGN format
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@unitychess
πΈ PGN format
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@unitychess
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I didnβt realize a chess match could be THIS HYPE π