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News

World's best chess players born in 1973-1964

User Rating: / 0
Written by Administrator   
Wednesday, 16 June 2010

We have been talking about kids, juniors, young players. Now it is the time for middle-aged (36-46 years old) top players to get featured:

1973

Peter Heine Nielsen.jpg
Peter Heine Nielsen, 2698, Denmark

Nielsen, Peter Heine g  DEN 2698

Lautier, Joel g  FST FRA 2658

Tkachiev, Vladislav g  FRA 2636

Tiviakov, Sergei g  NED 2634

Kazhgaleyev, Murtas g  KAZ 2609

Aleksandrov, Aleksej g  BLR 2604

Borovikov, Vladislav g  UKR 2599

Peng, Xiaomin g  CHN 2591

Becerra Rivero, Julio g  USA 2547

Cao, Sang g  VIE 2545

1972

Alexei Shirov, 2742, Spain

 Shirov, Alexei g  ESP 2742

Van Wely, Loek g  NED 2653

Milov, Vadim g  SUI 2644

Fedorov, Alexei g  BLR 2618

Mikhalevski, Victor g  ISR 2614

Hamdouchi, Hicham g  FRA 2609

Reinderman, Dimitri g  NED 2608

Landa, Konstantin g  RUS 2603

Radulski, Julian g  BUL 2593

Stefansson, Hannes g  ISL 2588

1971


Michael Adams, 2697, England

 Adams, Michael g  ENG 2697

Akopian, Vladimir g  ARM 2694

Bologan, Viktor g  MDA 2668

Delchev, Aleksander g  BUL 2625

 Tregubov, Pavel V. g  RUS 2622

Spasov, Vasil g  BUL 2605

Hansen, Sune Berg g  DEN 2595

Golod, Vitali g  ISR 2585

Rogic, Davor g  CRO 2582

Lutz, Christopher g  GER 2574

1970
Zbyněk Hráček, 2007
Hracek Zbynek, 2632, Czech Republic

Hracek, Zbynek g  CZE 2632

David, Alberto g  LUX 2631

Najdoski, Toni g  MKD 2598

Alterman, Boris g  ISR 2580

Xie, Jun g wm IA FST CHN 2574

Stripunsky, Alexander g  USA 2570

Gdanski, Jacek g  POL 2542

Hillarp Persson, Tiger g  SWE 2542

Hernandez Guerrero, Gilberto g  MEX 2540

Khachiyan, Melikset g  USA 2539

1969
AnandWM2008.Presse.Konf.jpg
Viswanathan Anand, 2789, India

 Anand, Viswanathan g  IND 2789

Ivanchuk, Vassily g  UKR 2741

Dreev, Alexey g  RUS 2655

Piket, Jeroen g  NED 2624

Hellers, Ferdinand g  SWE 2598

Polgar, Zsuzsa g wm FST USA 2577

Chuchelov, Vladimir g  FST BEL 2565

Nevednichy, Vladislav g  ROU 2560

Cicak, Slavko g  SWE 2560

Korneev, Oleg g  RUS 2543

1968
Boris Gelfand.jpg
Boris Gelfand, 2741, Israel

 Gelfand, Boris g  ISR 2741

Sokolov, Ivan g  BIH 2654

Smirin, Ilia g  ISR 2634

Khenkin, Igor g  GER 2627

Zakhartsov, Viacheslav V. g  RUS 2586

Hansen, Lars Bo g  DEN 2580

Schlosser, Philipp g  GER 2579

Wolff, Patrick G g  USA 2564

Gonzalez Zamora, Juan Carlos g  MEX 2555

Stanec, Nikolaus g  AUT 2548

1967
Julio Granda, 2008
Julio Granda Zuniga, 2639, Peru

Granda Zuniga, Julio E g  PER 2639

Burmakin, Vladimir g  RUS 2612

Magem Badals, Jordi g  ESP 2585

Shabalov, Alexander g  USA 2585

Kolev, Atanas g  BUL 2580

Chernyshov, Konstantin g  RUS 2575

Agdestein, Simen g  NOR 2570

Berelowitsch, Alexander g  GER 2566

Minasian, Artashes g  ARM 2563

Ibragimov, Ildar g  USA 2557

1966

Evgeny Bareev, 2663, Russia

 Bareev, Evgeny g  RUS 2663

Khalifman, Alexander g  RUS 2625

Agrest, Evgenij g  SWE 2585

Kozul, Zdenko g  FT CRO 2579

Ikonnikov, Vyacheslav g  RUS 2562

Timoshenko, Georgy g  UKR 2562

Milov, Leonid m  GER 2561

Shipov, Sergei g  RUS 2557

Matamoros Franco, Carlos S. g  ECU 2542

Dlugy, Maxim g  USA 2518

1965
Nigel Short 2005 without glasses.jpg
Nigel Short, 2685, England

 Short, Nigel D g  ENG 2685

Georgiev, Kiril g  BUL 2662

Epishin, Vladimir g  RUS 2611

Dautov, Rustem g  GER 2603

Marin, Mihail g  ROU 2600

Illescas Cordoba, Miguel g  FST ESP 2592

Hickl, Joerg g  GER 2573

Nijboer, Friso g  NED 2567

Goldin, Alexander g  USA 2557

Adianto, Utut g  FST INA 2548

1964

Salov2.jpg
Valery Salov, 2644, Russia

Salov, Valery g  RUS 2644

Hansen, Curt g  DEN 2619

Hector, Jonny g  SWE 2609

Atalik, Suat g  TUR 2607

Kotronias, Vasilios g  GRE 2586

Giorgadze, Giorgi g  GEO 2584

Dokhoian, Yury g  FST RUS 2580

Anastasian, Ashot g  ARM 2578

Benjamin, Joel g  USA 2565

Greenfeld, Alon g  ISR 2561


Compiled by Pogonina.com using official FIDE ratings


Related materials:
World's best chess players born in 2005-1994
World's best chess players born in 1993-1984
World's best chess players born in 1983-1974

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Last Updated ( Wednesday, 16 June 2010 )
 

Chess Tactics

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Written by Administrator   
Tuesday, 15 June 2010
Image
Alekhine-Colle, 1925
White to move


Chess classics: can you see how Alekhine won the game?

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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 15 June 2010 )
 

Create a caption

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Written by Administrator   
Tuesday, 15 June 2010
Image

Can you guess create a witty caption for this pic?

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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 15 June 2010 )
 

Openings: theory and practice

User Rating: / 0
Written by Administrator   
Tuesday, 15 June 2010


by Natalia Pogonina for her
Chess.com Tuesday column

The opening is a very important stage of the game. It often determines the course of events for the whole encounter. Underestimating (as well as overestimating) the openings role often leads to poor performances. To be successful, a strong chess player should have a few well-studied openings at his disposal for each side. Generally, there are two main types of openings: solid (when playing for a draw) and aimed at a fight (when you want the whole point pretty badly). Its essential to know the main ideas of the opening and the key plans. Some modern and fashionable openings (e.g. the Dragon or Gruenfeld Defense) require extensive knowledge of move-by-move variations, while in others you may get away with improvising. It is sensible to review the positions that occur in this or that opening (following masters games) and make sure you like and understand them.

A few recommendations on how to study openings:
1. Read good chess books. They have the main ideas, nuances, variations and illustrative games included.
2. Review masters games. What plans they have been trying to implement, how they responded to their opponents activity. Once one has reached master level, one should update his/her chess database regularly to stay up-to-date with the latest trends and novelties.
3. Research the position yourself. It is a critical step towards understanding its essence. Many interesting continuations remain behind the scene. Lets say you want to sacrifice a piece, win an exchange or trade a knight, but no one ever played that way. Build your own tree of variations and see whether you have found a useful idea (write it down). If not, you will learn from your mistakes without losing rating and game points at a real event. A chess engine, a strong chess friend or a coach will be of assistance here.
4. To get a feeling for what the opening is about, play training games (rapid or even blitz). Analyze them thoroughly and pinpoint all the critical moments to avoid making the same mistakes in tournament games.

When a chess player has a broad chess repertoire, its harder to prepare for a game with him. Lets say you play 1.e4, and he may opt for 1c5, 1e5, 1d5, 1Nf6 depending on his mood. Pretty tough to foresee what to prepare against, right? However, one shouldnt get obsessed with studying lots of openings simultaneously. This will lead to superficial knowledge of all of them. As my coach likes to say, a person who employs a few openings for each side is either a grandmaster, or a patzer. It is also vital to stay updated on the state of affairs in your openings and refresh your openings trees.

A few days before the tournament it makes sense to review your main openings, refresh them in your memory. If you are playing in a round robin or a chess match, it is possible to study the repertoire of your opponent(s) and prepare in advance.

One's opening choice before a game may be influenced by lots of factors:
1.    Tournament situation. Are you ok with a draw or do you need a win only? For example, it hardly makes sense to play a very drawish system if you need to win to get prize money, a title norm, etc.
2.    Your opponent. Choose the opening he doesnt like, or where he is currently experiencing problems.
3.    Your shape. If you are in high spirits and ready to fight, you may choose the most demanding schemes. Otherwise, settle for something quiet and positional to save energy on calculation of variations.
4.    Opening problems. If someone finds a flaw in your opening preparation during the tournament, it is often useful to abstain from playing it since chances are high you wont be able to fix it on the go. Otherwise, your partners will be exploiting this and aiming for your Achilles heel over and over again. Especially in round-robins, where all the games are available to the participants.

Smart opening choice is the first step towards overall success.

In the following game against WGM Olga Ilyushina (actually, a friend of mine, we live in the same city) at the Russian Club Cup in Dagomys, opening choice played an important role. Olga likes the Catalan, while I always tried to deviate from its main lines. Nonetheless, before this tournament I had studied the variations in detail. Having faced the Catalan for the first time, I managed to surprise my opponent by the sole fact of choosing it. A tricky move order caught her off-guard. Having won the opening duel, I went on to outplay my opponent and earn an important win.




P.S. This article offers insight on how pros work on chess openings. I am not as naïve as to try to persuade you into analyzing for hours with chess engines, downloading the latest TWICs, playing lots of trainings games, gaining sound knowledge and understanding of 20-30 move-long variations, etc. However, the less tips you ignore, the higher the chance of becoming a better player. Depending on how much time you have, your chess goals and other factors, you may come up with a way of studying openings that suits you best.

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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 15 June 2010 )
 

World's best chess players born in 1983-1974

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Written by Administrator   
Monday, 14 June 2010

This time we will be reviewing top-10 players of the world born in 1983-1974. By the way, 1983 features the strongest top ten (as compared to all the other years), seven 2700+ players! Is 27-28 the golden age of the modern chess player?

1983 strongest world top-10 year (by average rating)

Aleksandr Grichtchouk (2009)
Alexander Grischuk, 2760, Russia

Grischuk, Alexander g  RUS 2760

Eljanov, Pavel g  UKR 2751

Ponomariov, Ruslan g  UKR 2733

Jakovenko, Dmitry g  RUS 2725

Jobava, Baadur g  GEO 2715

Dominguez Perez, Leinier g  CUB 2713

Bacrot, Etienne g  FRA 2710

Sargissian, Gabriel g  ARM 2677

Ganguly, Surya Shekhar g  IND 2672

Ni, Hua g  CHN 2667

1982

Levon Aronian en 2005

Levon Aronian, 2783, Armenia

 Aronian, Levon g  ARM 2783

Vallejo Pons, Francisco g  ESP 2703

Bruzon Batista, Lazaro g  CUB 2668

Potkin, Vladimir g  RUS 2634

Kokarev, Dmitry g  RUS 2612

Bocharov, Dmitry g  RUS 2592

Flores, Diego g  ARG 2584

Ghaem Maghami, Ehsan g  IRI 2574

Saric, Ibro g  BIH 2558

Gabrielian, Artur g  RUS 2557

1981

Krishnan-Sasikiran.jpg
Krishnan Sasikiran, 2690, India

Sasikiran, Krishnan g  IND 2690

Fressinet, Laurent g  FRA 2689

Fedorchuk, Sergey A. g  UKR 2646

Berg, Emanuel g  SWE 2616

Postny, Evgeny g  ISR 2611

Delgado Ramirez, Neuris g  COL 2595

Felgaer, Ruben g  ARG 2585

Buhmann, Rainer g  GER 2573

Acs, Peter g  HUN 2569

Shomoev, Anton g  RUS 2560

1980

Vladimir Malakhov.jpg
Vladimir Malakhov, 2722, Russia

 Malakhov, Vladimir g  RUS 2722

Moiseenko, Alexander g  UKR 2669

Vuckovic, Bojan g  SRB 2640

Sumets, Andrey g  UKR 2614

Antoniewski, Rafal g  POL 2607

Zhang, Pengxiang g  CHN 2603

Halkias, Stelios g  GRE 2601

Stevic, Hrvoje g  CRO 2599

Shengelia, David g  AUT 2591

Deviatkin, Andrei g  RUS 2574

1979
Péter Lékó, 2006
Peter Leko, 2735, Hungary

 Leko, Peter g  HUN 2735

Motylev, Alexander g  RUS 2704

Kasimdzhanov, Rustam g  UZB 2699

Gustafsson, Jan g  GER 2640

Mchedlishvili, Mikheil g  GEO 2630

Leitao, Rafael g  BRA 2628

Sadvakasov, Darmen g  KAZ 2627

Turov, Maxim g  RUS 2624

Van Den Doel, Erik g  NED 2597

Galkin, Alexander g  RUS 2597

1978

Sergei Movsesian, 2717, Slovakia

 Movsesian, Sergei g  SVK 2717

Miroshnichenko, Evgenij g  UKR 2684

Avrukh, Boris g  ISR 2656

Kobalia, Mikhail g  RUS 2648

Socko, Bartosz g  POL 2644

Baklan, Vladimir g  UKR 2633

Vescovi, Giovanni g  BRA 2629

Amonatov, Farrukh g  TJK 2626

Gelashvili, Tamaz g  GEO 2614

Zhang, Zhong g  SIN 2596

1977


Alexander Morozevich, 2715, Russia

 Morozevich, Alexander g  RUS 2715 0

Najer, Evgeniy g  RUS 2663 7

Sutovsky, Emil g  ISR 2661 3

Ivanisevic, Ivan g  SRB 2630

Iordachescu, Viorel g  MDA 2619

Macieja, Bartlomiej g  POL 2618

Kempinski, Robert g  POL 2612

Bauer, Christian g  FRA 2607 5

Gyimesi, Zoltan g  HUN 2600

Korotylev, Alexey g  RUS 2594

1976
Peter Svidler grandmaster.jpg
Peter Svidler, 2735, Russia

 Svidler, Peter g  RUS 2735

Almasi, Zoltan g  HUN 2725

Polgar, Judit g  HUN 2682

Nisipeanu, Liviu-Dieter g  ROU 2672

Zvjaginsev, Vadim g  RUS 2656

Fridman, Daniel g  GER 2654

Lastin, Alexander g  RUS 2643

Papaioannou, Ioannis g  GRE 2621

Vorobiov, Evgeny E. g  RUS 2612

Pelletier, Yannick g  SUI 2596

1975

Veselin Topalov, 2812, Bulgaria

Topalov, Veselin g  BUL 2812

Kramnik, Vladimir g  RUS 2790

Onischuk, Alexander g  USA 2699

Markowski, Tomasz g  POL 2628

Istratescu, Andrei g  ROU 2614

Shulman, Yuri g  USA 2613

Georgiev, Vladimir g  MKD 2567

Filippov, Valerij g  RUS 2566

Slobodjan, Roman g  GER 2559

Vysochin, Spartak g  UKR 2555

1974

Sergei Rublevsky, 2704, Russia

 Rublevsky, Sergei g  RUS 2704

Kamsky, Gata g  USA 2702

Volkov, Sergey g  RUS 2619

Sadler, Matthew D g  ENG 2617

Pilavov, G. g  UKR 2614

Sakaev, Konstantin g  RUS 2607

Ovsejevitsch, Sergei g  UKR 2600

Chatalbashev, Boris g  BUL 2593

Popov, Valerij g  RUS 2592

Votava, Jan g  CZE 2587

Compiled by Pogonina.com using official FIDE ratings

Related materials:

World's best chess players born in 2005-1994
World's best chess players born in 1993-1984

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Last Updated ( Monday, 14 June 2010 )
 

Chess Tactics

User Rating: / 0
Written by Administrator   
Monday, 14 June 2010
Image
Lanka-Fedorov, 1998
Black to move


Black found a dazzling move in this position. It's a master-level continuation, let's see if you will be able to work it out!

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Last Updated ( Monday, 14 June 2010 )
 

FIDE country stats: Uzbekistan

User Rating: / 0
Written by Administrator   
Monday, 14 June 2010
File:Flag of Uzbekistan.svg

Average rating of top-10 players: 2538

Total (inactive inclusive): 239
Active : 158

Titled - total (active):
  • Grand Master : 11 (10)
  • Woman Grand Master : (0)
  • International Master : 9 (6)
  • Woman International Master : (3)
  • FIDE Master : (5)
  • Woman FIDE Master number : (3)

More countries to follow.

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Last Updated ( Monday, 14 June 2010 )
 

World's best chess players born in 1993-1984

User Rating: / 13
Written by Administrator   
Sunday, 13 June 2010
Today we will be reviewing a list of world's best chess players born in 1993-1984. Aged 16-26, many of them have already established themselves as leading players. Others are known as aspiring prodigies, potential WC candidates.

Let's take a closer look:

1993

Wes-dec2007.jpg
Wesley So, 2665, Philippines

 So, Wesley g  PHI 2665

Negi, Parimarjan g  IND 2636

Sjugirov, Sanan g  RUS 2610

Zherebukh, Yaroslav g  UKR 2567

Ter-Sahakyan, Samvel g  ARM 2523

Ipatov, Alexander m  ESP 2518

Salem, A.R. Saleh g  UAE 2494

Sethuraman, S.P. m  IND 2493

Lalith, Babu M.R. m  IND 2493

Grandelius, Nils m  SWE 2476

1992
Fabiano Caruana08.jpg
Fabiano Caruana, 2675, Italy

 Caruana, Fabiano g  ITA 2675

Kovalyov, Anton g  ARG 2615

Safarli, Eltaj g  AZE 2610

Shimanov, Aleksandr g  RUS 2544

Cruz, Cristhian m  PER 2533

Prohaszka, Peter g  HUN 2510

Adhiban, B. m  IND 2510

Alonso Rosell, Alvar m  ESP 2507

Durarbeyli, Vasif m  AZE 2487

Yilmaz, Mustafa m  TUR 2476

1991
Liem Le Quang 2008 (01).jpg
Le Quang Liem, 2687, Vietnam

 Le, Quang Liem g  VIE 2687

Salgado Lopez, Ivan g  ESP 2606

Matlakov, Maxim g  RUS 2604

Feller, Sebastien g  FRA 2593

Hess, Robert L g  USA 2590

Cordova, Emilio g  PER 2552

Bogner, Sebastian g  GER 2537

Hovhannisyan, Robert g  ARM 2529

Vovk, Andrey g  UKR 2522

Simonian, Hrair g  ARM 2521

1990

Magnus Carlsen, 2813, Norway

 Carlsen, Magnus g  NOR 2813

Karjakin, Sergey g  RUS 2739

Vachier-Lagrave, Maxime g  FRA 2710

Nepomniachtchi, Ian g  RUS 2695

Andreikin, Dmitry g  RUS 2643

Nguyen, Ngoc Truong Son g  VIE 2642

Kuzubov, Yuriy g  UKR 2628

Howell, David W L g  ENG 2620

Khairullin, Ildar g  RUS 2617

Edouard, Romain g  FRA 2611

1989
Wang Hao (chess).JPG
Wang Hao, 2722, China

Wang, Hao g  CHN 2722

Zhigalko, Sergei g  BLR 2647

Rodshtein, Maxim g  ISR 2626

Li, Chao b g  CHN 2619

Gopal G.N. g  IND 2604

Iturrizaga, Eduardo g  VEN 2599

Lenderman, Aleksandr g  USA 2598

Melkumyan, Hrant g  ARM 2596

Andriasian, Zaven g  ARM 2588

Grigoryan, Avetik g  ARM 2576

1988
Rauf Mamedov.jpg
Rauf Mamedov, 2653, Azerbaijan

Mamedov, Rauf g  AZE 2653

Zhou, Jianchao g  CHN 2652

Laznicka, Viktor g  CZE 2636

Ragger, Markus g  AUT 2614

Ponkratov, Pavel g  RUS 2603

Gareev, Timur g  UZB 2599

Romanov, Evgeny g  RUS 2594

Lenic, Luka g  SLO 2592

Bluvshtein, Mark g  CAN 2583

Fier, Alexandr g  BRA 2581

1987
Wang Yue (chess).jpg
Wang Yue, China, 2752

 Wang, Yue g  CHN 2752

Radjabov, Teimour g  AZE 2740

Nakamura, Hikaru g  USA 2733

Tomashevsky, Evgeny g  RUS 2708

Vitiugov, Nikita g  RUS 2707

Wojtaszek, Radoslaw g  POL 2663

Meier, Georg g  GER 2638

Stellwagen, Daniel g  NED 2635

Pashikian, Arman g  ARM 2634

Lysyj, Igor g  RUS 2631

1986
VGashimov09.jpg
Vugar Gashimov, 2734, Azerbaijan

Gashimov, Vugar g  AZE 2734

Grachev, Boris g  RUS 2667

Volokitin, Andrei g  UKR 2664

Areshchenko, Alexander g  UKR 2663

Harikrishna, P. g  IND 2660

Savchenko, Boris g  RUS 2642

Cheparinov, Ivan g  BUL 2640

Kryvoruchko, Yuriy g  UKR 2609

Filippov, Anton g  UZB 2609

Guseinov, Gadir g  AZE 2602

1985

Shakhriyar Mamedyarov, 2763, Azerbaijan

 Mamedyarov, Shakhriyar g  AZE 2763

Navara, David g  CZE 2718

Alekseev, Evgeny g  RUS 2700

Naiditsch, Arkadij g  GER 2686

Bu, Xiangzhi g  CHN 2681

Kurnosov, Igor g  RUS 2680

Timofeev, Artyom g  RUS 2677

Efimenko, Zahar g  UKR 2677

Berkes, Ferenc g  HUN 2676

Riazantsev, Alexander g  RUS 2674

1984

Denis Khismatullin, 2657, Russia

Khismatullin, Denis g  RUS 2657

Gharamian, Tigran g  FRA 2632

Belov, Vladimir g  RUS 2625

Drozdovskij, Yuri g  UKR 2625

McShane, Luke J g  ENG 2623

Kritz, Leonid g  GER 2618

Petrosian, Tigran L. g  ARM 2614

Miton, Kamil g  POL 2608

Lupulescu, Constantin g  ROU 2593

 Izoria, Zviad g  GEO 2592

Compiled by Pogonina.com using official FIDE ratings

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Last Updated ( Sunday, 13 June 2010 )
 

Bologan and Karyakin win Poikovsky

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Sunday, 13 June 2010

Photo: Evgeny Surov (ChessPro)

The Poikovsky tournament, a very strong event in Russia held from June 1 to 13th, ended the following way:

1-2. Bologan, Karyakin - 7/11
3-4. Jakovenko, Vitiugov - 6.5
5. Riazantsev - 6
6. Onischuk - 5.5
7-9. Sutovsky, Jobava, Sokolov I. - 5
10. Naditsch - 4.5
11-12. Rublevsky, Motylev - 4

ChessPro.ru has a few excellent reports on the tournament (by Evgeny Surov) including lots of pictures, information about the informal part of the event, annotated games, etc. The articles are in Russian, but still worth taking a look at.

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Last Updated ( Sunday, 13 June 2010 )
 

Chess Tactics

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Sunday, 13 June 2010
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Anand-Kamsky, 1990
White to move


Can you see how Anand wrapped up the game?

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