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Game of the Day
Monday, December 7
Player of the Day
Opening of the Day
1. e4 e5 2. ♘f3 ♘c6 3. ♗c4 ♗c5 4. ♗xf7+
New Events
Skilling Open
chess24.com INT
Nov 22-30 2020
The Skilling Open started with a 16-player round robin from which the eight best players qualified for an elimination phase and an invitation for the next Tour event. Wesley So won the event by beating Magnus Carlsen 2-1 in the final.
Tournament Page - Official Site
Speed Chess 2020
chess.com INT
Nov 1-Dec 13 2020
The field of 16 GMs includes 8 qualifiers to go alongside 8 invitees: Nakamura, Carlsen, Caruana, MVL, So, Nepomniachtchi, Artemiev, Firouzja, Fedoseev, Giri, Aronian, Abdusattorov, Sarin, Maghsoodloo, Martirosyan, and Duda. Each head-to-head knockout match consists of 90 minutes of 5/1 blitz, 60 minutes of 3/1 blitz, and 30 minutes of 1/1 bullet chess. The championship match will be held on December 13th.
Tournament Page - Official Site
US Chess Championship
lichess.org INT
Oct 26-29 2020
Grandmaster Wesley So won the 2020 U.S. Chess Championship and its $40,000 1st place prize, with up-and-coming 19-year-old GM Jeffery Xiong garnering $25,000 for 2nd place. In other events, GM John Burke, 19, won the U.S. Junior Championship and GM Joel Benjamin, 56, coasted to victory in the U.S. Senior Championship.
Tournament Page - Official Site
US Championship (Women)
lichess.org INT
Oct 21-24 2020
Prohibitive favorite GM Irina Krush won her 8th U.S. Women's title and its $25,000 1st place prize, with promising young 17-year-old WGM Carissa Yip—already having won the Girls' Junior Championship—took home $18,000 for 2nd place.
Tournament Page - Official Site
Norway Chess
Stavanger NOR
Oct 5-16 2020
With World Champion Magnus Carlsen having easily secured the overall victory, GM Alireza Firouzja provided the drama, defeating GM Jan-Krzysztof Duda to win 2nd place. In doing so, Firouzja—playing the best chess of his life—has clearly made a career breakthrough.
Tournament Page - Official Site
St. Louis Rapid & Blitz
lichess.org INT
Sep 15-19 2020
This 10-player online version of the annual event concluded with a tie for 1st Place between World Champion GM Magnus Carlsen and GM Wesley So, each of whom received $45,000.
Tournament Page - Official Site
Champions Showdown Chess 9LX
lichess.org INT
Sep 11-13 2020
This online 10-player rapid Chess960 single round-robin featured the strongest lineup: Carlsen, Kasparov, Caruana, Nakamura, So, Dominguez, Aronian, Vachier-Lagrave, Svidler, and Firouzja, and concluded with Carlsen and Nakamura as co-winners.
Tournament Page - Official Site
MC Tour: Finals
chess24.com INT
Aug 9-20 2020
The lineup for the grand finale of the Magnus Carlsen Chess Tour consisted of Carlsen, Dubov, Nakamura, and Ding.Carlsen won the event, and the Tour, by defeating Nakamura in the final Armageddon tiebreak game.
Tournament Page - Official Site
FIDE Online Olympiad
chess.com INT
July 25 - Aug 30 2020
This large Online Rapid knockout event, held on the chess.com server, started off with 163 teams playing in the first stage. Teams India and Russia have been declared joint winners, after two Indian players lost their internet connection during the final round.
Tournament Page - Official Site
MC Tour: Legends of Chess
chess24.com INT
July 21 - Aug 3 2020
The 4th Rapid event of the Magnus Carlsen Chess Tour concluded with Carlsen defeating Nepomniachtchi in the final. The star-studded lineup also featured former World Champions Anand and Kramnik, as well as younger generation Ding and Giri, and veterans Svidler, Ivanchuk, Gelfand and Leko.
Tournament Page - Official Site
Biel Grandmasters Triathlon
Biel SUI
July 19-29 2020
Radoslaw Wojtaszek won the main event of the traditional Biel International Chess Festival. This OTB triathlon featured 8 GMs competing in all 3 time formats.
Tournament Page - Official Site
Leon Masters
chess24.com INT
July 10-12 2020
Leinier Dominguez Perez won this 4-player knockout, the online rapid version of the 33rd "Ciudad de Leon" Masters tournament, eliminating Maghsoodloo in the semifinal, then Santos, who eliminated Shirov, in the final.
Tournament Page - Official Site
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- · The Chessgames Challenge Simon Williams vs The World is now over after GM Williams resigned after the winning shot 33...Be3!! Congratulations to all who participated in this game and many thanks to GM Williams for being such a lively and creative adversary.
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- · The World vs GM Akobian is over; Akobian resigned on move 35. Congratulations to the 1400+ people on the Chessgames World Team for defeating one of the USA's strongest grandmasters!
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- · Our New Tournaments Page now displays the latest chess events added by our staff, plus historical tournaments being organized by members. This allows us to have kibiziting on famous historical events such as Hastings (1895) and AVRO (1938).
- · By popular vote of Chessgames members, the Thematic Challenge was the Albin Countergambit (1.d4 d5 2.c4 e5). After 40 moves, the game was drawn. You can see the game here: Team White vs Team Black (2012).
- · Thanks to everybody for joining us during the Anand-Gelfand World Chess Championship, and special thanks to our very special guests, WGM Natalia Pogonina and WGM Jennifer Shahade.
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- · Be sure to check out the new Chessgames Store, a veritable chess supermarket complete with sets, boards, clocks, books, DVDs--anything your chess-loving heart can imagine!
- · Chessgames Challenge VII is over!The Chessgames Challenge pits world-class grandmasters against teams of thousands of chess fans. The gauntlet was laid down, and GM Varuzhan Akobian was brave enough to accept the challenge. After 32 moves the Chessgames team managed to draw this world-class grandmaster. Congratulations!
- · USCF members, be sure to check out the article about Chessgames and the Chessgames Challenge, Brave New World: Human Intuition and Computer-assisted Chess, in the August 2011 issue of Chess Life.
- · Have a question about chess history? Spot an error on a player biography? Want to exchange stories with other chess history buffs? Check out the new Biographer Bistro.
- · The World vs Natalia Pogonina game is over; after 62 moves it was drawn. Congratulations to both GM Pogonina and the World Team for their fine performances.
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- · Each day, you can sample the powerful Repertoire Explorer for free! Just click on the Player of the Day, and follow the links by the magnifying glass to fully explore his or her openings. For more information on premium membership, please see our Premium Membership Page.
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Go to our registration page and get a free account today: you'll be able to make posts ("kibitzing"), start game collections, participate in our regular contests, and so much more!
Hot Games
- H Bastian vs G Walter, 1997 1-0
- Capablanca vs L Requena, 1916 0-1
- L White vs NN, 2003 1-0
- Botvinnik vs Tal, 1961 1-0
- Fischer vs Petrosian, 1971 1-0
- W So vs Carlsen, 2020 1-0
- Hamppe vs Meitner, 1872 1/2-1/2
- Botvinnik vs F Demanuele, 1977 0-1
- W So vs Carlsen, 2020 1-0
- Ivanchuk vs Wolff, 1993 1/2-1/2
Example Searches
Recent Kibitzing
Gligoric vs Minic, 1960 |
Capablanca vs Lupe Requena, 1916 |
Kibitzer's Café |
Le Thao Nguyen Pham vs B Yildiz, 2008 |
Hamppe vs Meitner, 1872 |
T Knorr vs M L Hanauer, 1939 |
Carlsen vs W So, 2020 |
Botvinnik vs F Demanuele, 1977 |
H Bastian vs G Walter, 1997 |
Bertil Westin |
Le Thao Nguyen Pham vs B Yildiz, 2008 |
Le Thao Nguyen Pham vs V Gunina, 2008 |
G Minchev vs B Ganchev, 1986 |
Botvinnik - Levenfish (1937) |
Marshall vs Duras, 1913 |
Alekhine vs Capablanca, 1927 |
C Chaplin vs Reshevsky, 1923 |
Levenfish vs Ilyin-Zhenevsky, 1937 |
Mikhail Golubev |
Lasker vs W R Lowrie, 1903 |
Anton Cuntala vs E Basta, 1960 |
P Luks vs M D Blumenthal, 1957 |
David G Bourgin vs G H Perrine, 1932 |
Korchnoi vs Gipslis, 1967 |
A Sokolov vs Karpov, 1987 |
E Ubiennykh vs V Kulakova, 2001 |
Kasparov vs Balashov, 1981 |
Alekhine vs Teichmann, 1921 |
Makarytsiev vs Chasin, 1967 |
A Ringsborg vs O Davila, 1999 |
Lepge vs Saalbad, 1906 |
Fischer vs Petrosian, 1971 |
Botvinnik vs Tal, 1961 |
Carta vs Scarpata, 1980 |
Samuel Warren Bampton |
K Rosenkrantz vs S Levitsky, 1906 |
Skilling Open (2020) |
H Steiner vs Kevitz, 1936 |
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Quote of the Day
If your opponent cannot do anything active, then don't rush the position; instead you should let him sit there, suffer, and beg you for a draw. | ||
--- Silman |
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