chess.com links
Dear reader. Page 18 of this blogspot has 100 links. Link can be seen at bottom of home page screen
Dear reader. Page 18 of this blogspot has 100 links. Link can be seen at bottom of home page screen
Page 2
01. Halloween Gambit
https://www.chess.com/article/view/how-to-win-with-the-halloween-gambi
World's number four player played it in a blitz game.
Two chess engines rated over 3000 played against each other; one as black and one as white. Both defeated their opponents using this gambit where white sacrifices a knight for a pawn on move 4 and wins.
STOCKFISH calmly takes out the white's knight and finishes off the 3000 rated chess engine in a cavalier manner.
02. Big secret of opposite colored bishops
https://www.chess.com/article/view/opposite-colored-bishops-1
03. The Rook Lift: Paul Morphy's Last Gift To Chess
https://www.chess.com/article/view/the-application-of-morphys-rook-lift
04. Analyzing a Great Miniature: Bronstein vs Geller
05. King Side Attacks
king side attack w queen sacrifice that succeeded
position of surrender
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06. Max Euwe (former world champion)
empty square sacrifice,disrupting spearhead formation … lot of games and old photos
batgirl always a supergirl at chess.com. had put too many articles and photos at chess.com. see comments section of her rare informations. whether she will get any currency benefit is out of question. Internet is good for those who read not to those who post.
06. Anand vs Ivanchuk : Comedies Tragedies and Masterpieces
https://www.chess.com/article/view/anand-vs-ivanchuk-comedies-tragedies-and-masterpieces
07. The Great Siegbert Tarrasch: Puzzles And Gamesbatgirl always a supergirl at chess.com. had put too many articles and photos at chess.com. see comments section of her rare informations. whether she will get any currency benefit is out of question. Internet is good for those who read not to those who post.
06. Anand vs Ivanchuk : Comedies Tragedies and Masterpieces
https://www.chess.com/article/view/anand-vs-ivanchuk-comedies-tragedies-and-masterpieces
https://www.chess.com/article/view/the-great-siegbert-tarrasch
08. The Origin of an Idea- Vidmar or Kasparov? (Perhaps Someone Else!)
https://www.chess.com/blog/kamalakanta/the-origin-of-an-idea-vidmar-or-kasparov-perhaps-someone-else
10. Milan Vidmar. Some of the Greatest Game Annotations That You Will Ever See.
11. 4 Ways to Waylay the Dutch
12. The Ultimate London System
13. London System Marathon Games
14. 3 Reasons Why Everyone Should Play London System Pawn Structures
15. London System Q & A
16. Poisoning the Grunfeld with The London Part one
17. Poisoning the Grunfeld with The London Part Two
18. Poisoning the Grunfeld with The London Part Three
19. How to Learn from 5 Egregious Blunders from Elite Players
Anand's loss under 10 moves
20. Busting 3 Black Sidelines
21. Positional Elements in Action #3 (Important Queen moves)
22. How A Grandmaster Analyzes His Games (Black vs. 4.Bf4 Grunfeld)
23. The (Political) Story Of 'Extraordinary Genius' Sultan Khan
The story of Sultan Khan, a remarkable chess talent from India who was brought to Europe by his master, won the British Championship three times, and defeated Jose Capablanca in a tournament game, is also a political tale.
Malik Mir Sultan Khan was born in 1905 in Mittha Tawana, Punjab, British India. At the age of nine, he learned to play Indian chess, a version which had different rules for e.g. pawn moves, castling, and stalemate.
Showing a considerable talent for this game, he was considered to be the best player in Punjab when he was taken into the household of Colonel Nawab Malik Sir Umar Hayat Khan Tiwana in 1926.It was then and there that Sultan Khan learned the rules of western chess and got to play against some of the strongest Indian players. His talent for chess as we know it quickly became apparent as well when Khan won the All-India Championship, organized by Sir Umar, in 1928.
A year later, Sultan Khan joined Sir Umar on a trip to Europe, and in a period of just four years, before returning to India, he scored a number of great successes on the chessboard:
won the British Championships in 1929, 1932 and 1933
scored 6/9 in the Hastings 1930-1931 tournament where he beat Capablanca
defeated Savielly Tartakower 6.5-5.5 in a match in January 1931
lost a match 2.5-3.5 to Salo Flohr in February 1932
represented the British Empire in two Olympiads, scoring 11.5/17 on top board in Prague 1931.
24. Incredible Bishop Endgame Played In Computer Chess Championship
25. What is Zugzwang? | Chess Terms
26. Tips And Tricks Of The London System
https://www.chess.com/article/view/tips-and-tricks-of-the-london-system
27. Tips And Tricks Of The London System: Bxh7 …. video
https://www.chess.com/video/player/tips-and-tricks-of-the-london-system-bxh7
27. Tips And Tricks Of The London System: Bxh7 …. video
https://www.chess.com/video/player/tips-and-tricks-of-the-london-system-bxh7
28. Leela Chess Zero Beats Stockfish 106-94 In 13th Chess.com Computer Chess Championship
https://www.chess.com/news/view/13th-computer-chess-championship-leela-chess-zero-stockfish
https://www.chess.com/news/view/13th-computer-chess-championship-leela-chess-zero-stockfish
29. Backward Pawn: 5 Things to Remember
https://thechessworld.com/articles/endgame/backward-pawn-5-things-to-remember/
30. When Backward is Good – the Strength of Backward Moves
30. When Backward is Good – the Strength of Backward Moves
https://thechessworld.com/articles/middle-game/when-backward-is-good-the-strength-of-backward-moves/
31. 10 Reasons to Study Pawn Structures
32. 5 Things to Know: The Queenside Pawn Majority
33. The Wandering King
34. Turn Your King into a Super-Weapon
This page contains the famous king stroll by Nigel Short which according to an author in Indian monthly magazine "Chess Mate" magazine was "not the original". Somebody had already made the king stroll. Possibly many players did in history. I don't know in which issue of chess mate. I forgot.
35. Exchange Sacrifice for Defensive Purposes
36. 2 Lesser-Known Patterns In The Sicilian Defense
THIS PAGE CONTAINS A WEIRD g7-g5 MOVE BY GARRY KASPAROV, the g pawn being the main shield pawn in front of kasparov's king. He had castled king side.
chess.com links
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