Tag: video

The Lewis Chessmen Come to New York!

The Cloisters Museum in New York City has recently opened an exhibition of chess artifacts, starring the The Lewis Chessmen. The New York Times has run two articles on the exhibtion, One articleby the Art critic Ken Johnson, and another article by their regular chess columnist, Dylan Loeb McClain.

It’s thought that the pieces were likely made by “Trondheim” craftsmen in 12th century Norway, though they were discovered in Scotland and there is some controversy concerning their rightful ownership.

The pieces themselves are as aesthetically interesting as they are historically significant.
I was planning to ride my bike uptown this week and visit the museum in person in order to bring you all a bunch of iphone photos of them, but unfortunately last week I broke my leg in a bike accident and will be stuck in either bed or the hospital for the next 6 weeks. So, until I recover, I have to settle for this video tour by the NYTimes, which I found on Jim West’s blog.


A Gorgeous Queen’s Indian Game

As many of the readers of this blog know, i spend an awful lot of time at the Marshall Chess Club, and so I was thrilled to see this video on the USCF’s website in which some of our regular players talk about the club. In the video, the manager of the club says that the Marshall Chess Club is one of the most famous chess clubs in the country. However, this is a bit of an understatement, as it is actually one of the most famous chess clubs in the world!

To wit, a tourist from Sweden who was in New York on business recently stopped by the club to check out the hallowed halls where Fischer did battle as a teenager. His name was Jan Lundin, and he has recently achieved his first GM norm and was nice enough to share the game with me which proved decisive for his norm result. I thought I would share this gem with you.

In the game, the Grandmaster playing white against Lundin was angling for a win, and played a sharp gambit to try and create complications. However, black found a way to give up his queen for a decisive amount of material and handled the technical ending that resulted with aplomb. In particular, the King march which begins with 53…Kc5 is an impressive and bold plan.

Ian Nepomniachtchi wins Russian title by drawing an Armageddon game, in bishop vs rook endgame

Today Ian Nepomniachtchi (2722), a 20 year old GM from Bryansk Russia, won the Russian Championship in a high pressure Sicilian Najdorf against Sergei Karjakin (2760) with Amageddon rules (6 minutes for White vs 5 for Black who had draw odds).  Karjakin missed the game winning move 18. Rg1 and ended up going into a drawing endgame up the exchange.  As soon as the pawns were off the board, Nepomniachtchi displaying perfect endgame technique constructed a fortress by marching his king to h1 (light square) and used his dark square bishop to defend against mate.  With only 25 seconds left on the clock, the gentleman shook hands and Russia’s next champion was crowned.  Video and pgn after the jump.

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Ideas in the Sicilian Rossolimo: Part I 4.Bxc6

For anyone who plays the Sveshnikov Sicilian, or other Sicilians with 2…Nc6, a knowledge of the Rossolimo variation is crucial. The 3.Bb5(+) anti-Sicilians are extremely popular, and it’s impossible to play 1…c5 without encountering them. In this 3 part series, I’m going to look at some games and try to find some themes and ideas for both sides in this variation. The three posts will revolve around positions where white plays (1) Bxc6 (2) c3 and/or (3) 0-0. Naturally, many of these lines transpose, and so I will look for games that reflect ideas unique to these positions.

The great thing about the Rossolimo from white’s perspective is that the variations tend not to be as forcing as some other lines of the Sicilian, and so white can play a maneuvering game and decide upon piece placement and long term positional plans. The following game illustrates an idea for white that I rather like. It’s a stylish knight maneuver that clamps down on the center, played by our hometown hero Yudasin. I’m not sure whether he was the first to play this idea or not, but this was the first game I found with this knight maneuver when searching for ideas for white. While Kramnik is able to draw here, I think that Yudasin’s idea of Nd2-c4-e3 is worth its weight in gold, particularly in a blitz game where black might not have the time to reckon with the activity of this wonderfully placed knight.

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Ruy Lopez, Breyer

In his last few encounters with the black pieces against Anand, Carlsen has employed the Ruy Lopez Breyer variation three times and drawn all three games. As a fan, it’s odd to see these two battling in an open game so deeply in the same variation, almost matchlike, because both of them tend to be 1.d4 players. While the world anticipates the real match to come between these two (though that may not happen) I can’t help but wonder if this “battle in the breyer” is serving merely as a proxy for their behind the scene preparations in the catalan, or would they attempt to surprise one another with 1.e4 in a match setting? More on the Breyer, after the jump…

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