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Magnus Carlsen πŸ†š Sipke Ernst
Corus C, 2004
Wijk aan Zee NED, rd 12, Jan-24
Caro-Kann Defense:

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πŸ”΄ Today is birthday of Valery Loginov!!
♦️ Russian chess grandmaster

πŸ‘πŸ‘πŸ‘πŸ‘πŸ‘ Happy birhday πŸŒΊπŸŒΈβ˜˜οΈπŸ’πŸŒ·πŸ’πŸ’

◼️ Today also died-day of Olga Rubtsova, Soviet Woman Grandmaster who became the fourth Women’s World Chess Champion. She got also the title of Woman Correspondence Grandmaster.
She won the Soviet Women's Championship four times, and was second in the Women's World Chess Championship 1949–50, a point behind Lyudmila Rudenko.
Born: August 20, 1909, Moscow, Russia
Died: December 13, 1994, Moscow, Russia
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UNITY CHESS INFOGRAPHIC

πŸ”΅ Chess History - Tournaments
πŸ”Ή 16th USSR Chess Championship
πŸ”Ή Moscow 1948

#chess_history_tornaments
#Moscow_1948
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β˜‘οΈ Chess History - Tournaments
πŸ’’ 16th USSR Chess Championship
πŸ’’ Moscow 1948
πŸ’’ November 10 – December 13

πŸ”° USSR Chess Championship (1948 ) - Moscow
CHAMPION: David Bronstein, 12/18 (+7 -1 =10)
SHARED WITH: Alexander Kotov 12/18 (+10 -4 =4)

βœ… The 16th Chess Championship of the USSR was held in Moscow from November 10th to December 13th, 1948. Nineteen of the Soviet Union's top grandmasters were assembled to participate. Among them were the participants of the SaltsjΓΆbaden Interzonal (1948), including the winner David Bronstein, as well as Alexander Kotov, Andor Lilienthal, Igor Bondarevsky, Salomon Flohr, Viacheslav Ragozin, and the previous year's champion, Paul Keres. Bronstein and Kotov shared first place, each with 12/18.
🌐 SOURCE: CHESSGAMES.COM

πŸ”Ή The final standings and crosstable was as aboveπŸ‘†
πŸ”Ή Download "Moscow 1948 Games Database" by PGN formatπŸ‘‡
πŸ”Ή Review our selected game from Moscow 1948 tournamentπŸ‘‡

#chess_history_tornaments
#Moscow_1948
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♦️ Review our selected game from "Moscow 1948" chess tournamentπŸ‘‡
β–ͺ️David Bronstein vs Georgy Ilivitsky
β–ͺ️USSR Championship (1948), Moscow URS, rd 4, Nov-15
β–ͺ️ Queen's Gambit Declined: Semi-Tarrasch Defense. Pillsbury Variation (D41)
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@Moscow 1948.pgn
114.8 KB
πŸ”Ή "Moscow 1948 Games Database"
πŸ”Ή PGN format
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Two of the players will qualify to the finals tomorrow after two rapid and four blitz games. What are your predictions?

#LondonChessClassic
Congratulations to the two finalists Hikaru Nakamura and Vachier-Lagrave!! #GrandChessTour #LondonChessClassic
Nakamura wins a 2nd blitz game in a row and will play the #GrandChessTour final for $200,000 against MVL from Saturday!
http://bit.ly/2LgvsHI
Caruana will play Aronian for $100,000 in the 3rd place playoff
10th LCC GCT Finals 2018, London.pgn
37.4 KB
πŸ”Ή 10th London Classic 2018
πŸ”Ή PGN format

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πŸ”Έchess.com IoM Masters Douglas ENG 2018
πŸ”ΈRound 1
βšͺ️Eggleston,David J (2406)
⚫️Vidit,Santosh Gujrathi (2711)
πŸ”Έ0-1
21.Kf1? [White who is afraid of the opponent's attack on the h-file decides to transfer his king to the center. However, This plan is incorrect and he hasn't enough time to exchange major pieces and consolidate his position.]

[21.Ra3 β–³Rb3 21...Bxa3 22.bxa3 Rfh8 23.Re1 Nd8 24.Kf1–+]

21...f5! [β–³fΓ—e4]

22.Ke1 fxe4 23.Qxe4 d5 [23...Rh2!? 24.Ng4 Bxg4 25.Qxg4+ Kh8–+ β–³BΓ—f2]

24.Qg2 Bh3 25.Qg1 Bxe3 26.fxe3 Rhf6 27.Ke2 Bg4+ 28.Ke1 e4 [28...Nf5!? 29.e4 Nxg3 30.Qxg3 Rf1+ 31.Kd2 R8f2+ 32.Qxf2 Rxf2+]

29.d4 Rf3 30.c4 Nb4 31.Kd2 Rf2+ 32.Kc3 R8f3–+ 0–1
βšͺ️#92 (Strategy-White to Move)
πŸ”ΈMakoto,Rodwell (2338)
πŸ”ΈDervishi,Erald (2567)
πŸ”ΈOlympiad 2018 Batumi
26.Qh6 [26.Bh3! This attacking maneuver is neglected by White. 26...Bxf4 27.gxf4 Kh8 28.Kh1 f5 29.Bxf5 f6 30.Rg1 Bc6 31.Qh6 Qd6 32.e4 Rf7 (32...dxe4 33.Rxc6 Qxc6 (33...Nxc6 34.d5+–) 34.Bxe4 Nd5 35.Bxd5 Qxd5 (35...Rxd5 36.Qf8#) 36.Qxf6+) 33.e5 Qf8 34.Qh5 Re7 (34...fxe5 35.Be6 Rf6 36.Rg8+ Qxg8 37.Bxg8 Rxg8 38.dxe5+–) 35.e6 Bb5 36.Ba3 Rg7 37.Qh4 Be2 38.Rxg7 Qxg7 39.Qf2 Bb5 40.Rg1+–; 26.Qh4 Bxf4 27.gxf4 Rxe3 28.Kh1Β±]

26...Bxf4 27.gxf4 Rd6 28.f5 Qf8 29.Qf4 Rd8 30.e4 Ba6 31.Ba3 Qg7 32.Kf2 Kh8 33.Bxb4 axb4 34.Rg1 dxe4 35.fxe4 Rxd4 36.Qb8+ Qg8 37.Qxg8+ Kxg8 38.Bf1+ Kf8 39.Bxa6 Rexe4 40.Rgd1 Rf4+ 41.Kg2 Rxd1 42.Rxd1 Rxf5 43.Rd6 Rg5+ 44.Kf3 Rc5 45.Bc4 Rf5+ 46.Ke4 Re5+ 47.Kd4 Ke7 48.Rxb6 Rh5 49.Rxb4 Rxh2 50.Rb7+ Kd6 51.Rxf7 Rh4+ 52.Kc3 Ke5 53.b4 f5 54.b5 Rh6 55.Bd3 f4 56.Rf5+ Kd6 57.Rxf4 Rh1 58.b6 Rc1+ 59.Kd2 Rc8 60.b7 1–0
βšͺ️#92 (Endgame-β€ŒWhite to Move)
πŸ”ΈPavlidis,Antonios (2552)
πŸ”ΈNedev,Trajko (2496)
πŸ”ΈWorld Chess Olympiad 2018 Batumi
32.Ne6 [32.c4! Kf7 33.Nb5 Bf8 34.a4 Ke8 35.a5 Kd7 36.a6 e6 37.Nf3 e5 38.g4 Bb4 39.Ne1 Be4 40.a7 Kc8 41.Nd3 Bf8 42.c5 Ba8 43.g5 fxg5 44.Nd6+ Bxd6 45.cxd6 Kd7 46.Nxe5+ Kxd6 47.Nf7+ Kc7 48.Nxg5 h6 49.Nf7 Kb6 50.Nxh6 Kxa7 51.Nf7 Kb6 52.Kg3+–; 32.Nb3 e5 33.Na5 Be4 34.Nc4 Kf8 (34...Bf8 35.a4 Bc5 36.Ne8 Be7 37.a5 Kf8 38.Nc7 Bc6 39.a6 Bd8 40.Ne6+ Ke7 41.Nc5! Bc7 42.a7 h5 43.g3 g5 44.Ke2+–) 35.Nb6 f5 36.Ncd5 Bxd5 37.Nxd5 Bg5 38.a4 Bd8 39.e4 Kf7 40.Ke3 Ke6 41.Kd3 Ba5 42.Ne3 fxe4+ 43.Kxe4 Bxc3 44.Nc4 Kd7 45.Kd5+–]

32...Bd5 33.Nc7 Bc6 34.c4 e5 35.Ne6? [35.Nb5Β±]

35...Bd7 36.Nc5 Bc6 37.Ne6 Bd7 38.Nc5 Bc6 39.a4 Bf8 40.Ndb3 Kf7 41.a5 Bd6 42.a6 Ke7 43.Na5 Ba8 44.Ncb7 [44.Na4! Bc7 45.Nb3 Kd7 46.g4 f5 47.Nbc5+ Kd6 48.gxf5 gxf5 49.Nd3 Ba5 50.Kg3 Bd2 51.c5+ Kc7 52.Nb6 Be4 53.a7 Bxe3 54.a8Q Bxa8 55.Nxa8+ Kc6 56.Nxe5+ Kxc5 57.Kf3 Bg1 58.Kg2Β±]

44...Bc7 45.Nc6+ Kd7 46.Nb4 f5 47.c5 Bb8 48.e4 fxe4 49.Ke3 Ba7 50.Nd5 Kc6 51.Nf6 Kb5 52.Nxe4 Kxa6 53.Nbd6 Ka5 54.Nc8 Bb8 55.g3 Kb4 56.Ncd6 Ba7 57.Nf7 Bxc5+ 58.Nxc5 Kxc5 59.Nxe5 Kd6 60.Nf7+ Ke7 61.Ng5 h6 62.Nh3 Kf6 63.Nf2 Kf5 64.Kd3 Bg2 65.Kd4 Bf3 ½–½