Archive for the ‘Chess’ Category

The Paramount Sale Vulcan Chess Theory – Puck

The National Amusements nightmare continued apace this week with more bad news for Shari Redstone. Earlier this month, we learned that Shari had decided to all but ignore Apollos $26 billion bid for all of Paramount Global in favor of David Ellison, KKR, and RedBird Capitals cockamamie bid to buy National Amusements Inc., the Redstone family holding company that controls Paramount, for more than $2 billiona premium of at least 160 percent above the $760 million that her economic stake is valued at these daysand then to have Paramount buy Ellisons Hollywood company, Skydance, for $5 billion. Thats crazy.

To evaluate the Ellison madness, the Paramount board, which Shari controls, first appointed a special committee, which then hired Cravath, the law firm, and Centerview Partners, the excellent boutique advisory firm run by my longtime friend Blair Effron. The special committee then handed Ellison and his partners a 30-day exclusive period to see if a definitive agreement could be worked out, while appearing to let the Apollo offer fade to black. But this decision seemed motivated purely by Sharis self-interestas if she didnt give a shit about her aggrieved shareholders and simply wanted a clean break from all of her business woes not only Paramounts decline but also her N.A.I. burden.

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The Paramount Sale Vulcan Chess Theory - Puck

TIPSY Chess | WINNING after blundering 2 pieces in the opening! – Chess.com

#indiangame #maddigangambit #doubleblunder #recovery

For the best performance, chess and wine don't mix... This game is a cautionary tale!

However, if one's goal is to have fun while meeting a friend, it's perfectly fine. As usual, it depends on context!

Last week I posted a video of a game of casual chess over-the-board at one of the local bars in Newtown, Sydney Australia. I only included the first game in that video as I'd accidentally knocked my micro-tripod off alignment between games so the recording wasn't useable. However, my mate (dr_magneto) and I played two games of 15+10 rapid on the Chessnut Air board, and this is the second game. I had the Black pieces, and this is the story of how alcohol can muddle your calculations in chess!

My mate is a man of culture, so led with the Queen's Pawn Opening (1. d4). I'd recently been doing some research on my book on the Budapest Gambit, so rather than my usual Englund Gambit, I responded with (1... Nf6), the Indian Game, which potentially leads to the Budapest Gambit. However, White responded with (2. Nc3) rather than (2. c4). Undeterred, I decided to play a (2... e5) anyway! Apparently, this is known as the "Maddigan Gambit, and I was hoping for a Budapest-like line with dxe5 and then Ng4. However, this isn't a promising line according to the Lichess community database with White having a clear win advantage (53%) vs Black (44%).

White declined the gambit by advancing their d-pawn (3. d5) and I immediately provoked again with (3... c6). Again, they declined the capture, playing (5. e4) to consolidate the centre, and so I developed (5... Bc5) and White then decided to pin my knight to the queen (5. Bg5).

By this point, I'd had a couple of glasses of very nice pinot noir and made a very silly blunder. Being tipsy, I had it in my mind that I had an unpinning tactic available, and simply launched it without a sanity check! First, the bishop sacrifice-capture the f2-pawn with check, drawing White's king onto the f-file (5... Bxf2+?? 6. Kxf2). And then, unpin the knight with check (6... Ng4+)... and I realised my mistake too late! The diagonal was open so the g4 square was defended by White's queen (7. Qxg4)! Rather than a brilliancy, I had a double-blunder! Whoops!

Now, a sensible person might resign from the position. On analysis, Stockfish gives the evaluation at better than [+6] for White! However, I decided to play on and treat this simply as a handicap and a challenge! I've written this before, but there is a certain intellectual pleasure trying to come back from a completely losing position! When there are still a lot of pieces on the board, it's often possible to equalise in beginner-intermediate games. When there are few pieces, it is sometimes still possible to draw.

I must admit that the realisation of my double-blunder did sober me up! I noted the tactical resources that I had - which wasn't very much! Firstly, White's king cannot castle and is exposed on the f-file and the dark squares. Secondly, I had a potential discovered attack on White's queen by my light square bishop. As for some immediate threats, White's bishop and queen on the kingside felt very threatening, especially with the lack of defensive pieces on that side.

And with that threat, I found a rather lovely and flamboyant manoeuvre, (8... Qb6+ 9. Ke1 Qe3+ 10. Nge2 Qh6), rotating the queen flying across the board, making use of two checks, to provide the extra defence needed on the kingside. After castling short, I felt that my king was safe for now.

I noticed in the game that my mate wasn't sure how to progress, which gave me an advantage. Strategically, White has a simple approach. As they have a massive piece advantage (7 vs 5 pieces) a good plan is to force piece trades, especially the queens, and simplify the game towards a winning endgame. However, they seemed to have an aversion to losing material, and common bias, and were looking for winning attacks rather than forcing confrontations.

White advanced their knight to attack the queenside and (13. Nc7?!) directly attacked my a8-rook. However, I uncorked (13... d5), revealing the attack on White's queen. White opted to rotate their knight (14. Ne6?!), which pinned it to the queen. However, this set up a second attacker on g7, which gives White an opportunity to force a queen trade.

I found my own counterattack with (14... Nb4), which looks increasingly threatening the more you calculate. There was the obvious Nxc2+, an absolute fork of White's king and rook. However, if White moved their king to the wrong square, a second knight move might result in a royal fork! White responded to the threat with a passive rook move (15. Rc1?!). However, I found a way to increase the pressure with by pushing the d-pawn to d4, with the threat of d3!

White cracked under pressure and moved their rook a second time to cover the d-file (16. Rd1??), but this was a blunder! Remember the weak dark squares around White's king? My queen on h6 still covered the dark squares and White NEEDED to trade off my queen the turn before as there was now a checkmate-in-two. After (16... Nxc2+), Black's king had only one legal move (17. Kf2), and then (17. Qe3#) mate! GG!

The big takeaway from this game is to play on after a mistake in the opening! It is often possible to not only equalise but gain the advantage!

Game: https://www.chess.com/analysis/library/3a5B3dbrFQ

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TIPSY Chess | WINNING after blundering 2 pieces in the opening! - Chess.com

Titled Tuesday – Chess.com

Titled Tuesday is Chess.com's weekly 11-round Swiss tournament for titled players, occurring twice each Tuesday since February 1, 2022 at 8 a.m. PT/17:00 CET and 2 p.m. PT/23:00 CET.

GM Hikaru Nakamura has won the most Titled Tuesday events since October 20, 2020, with 68 total victories. GM Dmitry Andreikin has the second-most with 16.

Since February 1, 2022, Titled Tuesday occurs every Tuesday at 8 a.m. Pacific and then again at 2 p.m.

The format is as follows:

Note For Titled Players

Titled Tuesday requires all players to have their full legal name in their Chess.com profile. Anonymous titled player accounts or accounts found to be using a fake name will not be eligible to win prizes during the event and may be removed from the tournament without notice.

All players must also abide by all rules and site policies found at Chess.com/legal/user-agreement and cooperate fully with Chess.com's fair play detection team. Participants should be prepared to join a Zoom call for proctoring at the arbiter's discretion, and this request may be made between rounds via direct chat in live chess by a Chess.com staff member.

Titled Tuesday debuted on December 30, 2014 as a monthly nine-round event. It became a weekly tournament on April 7, 2020 and permanently expanded to its current length of 11 rounds on October 20, 2020. On and after February 1, 2022, two tournaments are offered each week.

From June 2 through October 13, 2020, Titled Tuesday was part of the Speed Chess Championship qualification cycle and included a knockout section.

Starting January 2, 2024, there will also be cumulative annual standings and prizes as part of the Titled Cup. Titled Tuesday will also return to the Speed Chess Championship qualification cycle in 2024.

11-Round Single-Tournament Era (Oct. 20, 2020Jan. 25, 2022)

Double-Tournament Era (Feb. 1, 2022present)

11-Round Era (Both Single- and Double-Tournament) (since Oct. 20, 2020)

Note: GM Oleksandr Bortnyk scored a perfect 9/9 on October 4, 2016.

While Titled Tuesdays are exclusive for titled players, untitled players from the Chess.com community can play in the Untitled Tuesday community event every week. You can participate by joining our official Community Club. Starting April 2, tournaments will start at the following times:

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Titled Tuesday - Chess.com

Bullet Brawl April 14, 2024: Bortnyk Clutches Bullet Brawl With 28-Game Win Streak – Chess.com

GM Oleksandr Bortnyk won the latest iteration of Bullet Brawl after posting a 28-game winning streak and overtaking GM Jose Martinez in the dying minutes of the two-hour arena. Finishing on 247 points with 68 wins, five draws, and 11 losses, Bortnyk won $400 for his efforts while Martinez andGM Daniel Naroditsky rounded out the podium.

WGM Aleksandra Maltsevskaya won the $100 best women's prize with a score of 103 ahead of FM Anastasia Avramidou and IM Karina Ambartsumova, while "Macmasterr" topped the community event for the second week running.

The next edition of Bullet Brawl will take place on Saturday, April 20, 2024, at noon ET/18:00 CEST.

Standings

Bortnyk was "finally" rewarded for his tenacity during April's second Bullet Brawl after breaking a dry spell that stretches back to the beginning of January. Following a difficult start, which included losses to Peruvian blitzers Martinez and IM Renato Terry, Bortnyk managed to find his feet and establish himself as one of four serious contenders at the top of Saturday's Brawl standings.

Flanked by the likes of Naroditsky, as well as GMs Hans Niemann, Vladimir Fedoseev, and Salem Saleh, Bortnyk battled his way through the 150-strong titled field, missing no opportunity to convert in puzzle-like fashion against any opponent who erred.

For aspiring 3000+ rated bullet and blitz chess players, the next puzzle is an example of why all checks and captures should be considered and calculated.

For most of the event, though, Martinez possessed a healthy lead over Bortnyk. Not until the final 30 minutes did the Ukrainian streamer turn things around, winning a mammoth 28 games in a row to wrest the title from his Peruvian rival.

Two wins against the former European champion GM Matthias Bluebaum and one win against the FIDE World Rapid Championship runner-up Fedoseev were the highlights of the streak which Bortnyk joyfully commentated on his Twitch channel.

For the third week in a row Maltsevskaya, who goes by the handle "Sanyura" on Chess.com, won the best women's prize after scoring 35 wins during the two-hour arena. The Polish WGM's performance was a clinical exhibition of piece harmony, and this was on full display in her game against Hungarian FM Bendeguz Bodrogi.

With this latest victory, Bortnyk has solidified his bronze medal position on the all-time Bullet Brawl leaderboard and has won just over 10 percent of all editions since its inception at the start of 2023.

How to review games? The games from this week's Bullet Brawl can be found here.

Bullet Brawl is an exciting new titled arena that features Chess.com's top bullet specialists and takes place weekly on Saturdays. The format is a two-hour arena with a 1+0 time control; the prize fund is $1,000.

Much like Titled Tuesday and Arena Kings, Bullet Brawl often features top GMs, including Hikaru Nakamura, Daniel Naroditsky, Andrew Tang, Tuan Minh Le, and many more!

Previous coverage:

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Bullet Brawl April 14, 2024: Bortnyk Clutches Bullet Brawl With 28-Game Win Streak - Chess.com

FIDE100 torch relay celebrated in Canada – Chess News | ChessBase

FIDE press release

Despite the cold weather, a sizeable crowd of chess enthusiasts gathered in the center of the city for the unique chess event.

Against the urban backdrop, FIDE Deputy President and former World Champion, Vishy Anand, assumed the role of torchbearer, passing the flame to Vlad Drkulec, President of the Chess Federation of Canada. This symbolic exchange continued as the torch made its way to Jose Carillo Pujol, Continental President for the Americas, and FIDE Vice President Mario Ramirez Barajas, heralding the relay's next leg in Colombia.

Vishy Anand, who is doing the live chess commentary for the Candidates in Toronto, shared his views on the event in Toronto and what it means for him and chess that FIDE is celebrating its first centenary.

"We have had a warm welcome here in Toronto," Anand remarked. "A lot of coincidences 100 years of FIDE, first Candidates in North America and, we managed to do the torch relay which started in India. The experience has been amazing with the fans and the excitement at the venue".

Anand also shared thoughts on the future of the game. "Chess is in a very exciting phase. For the next five to ten years, I would like to see chess becoming more established everywhere. I'd mostly like to see more people from every continent participate, especially more women. "Chess is growing everywhere and that's why I think it's particularly relevant to have these ceremonies, as the torch represents that chess is spreading to every continent," Anand noted.

Accompanying Anand at the ceremony were luminaries of the chess world, including former Women's World Champion Alexandra Kosteniuk, Dana Reizniece-Ozola, Deputy Chair of FIDE Management Board (who arrived directly from the United States following the opening of the World Chess Hall of Fame exhibition in St. Louis), Patrick Van Hoolandt, Deputy Chairman of the FIDE Advisory Board and FIDE Vice-Presiden Michael Khodorkovsky.

The festivities in Toronto extended beyond ceremonial gestures, featuring blitz games with fans and an exhibition dedicated to the history of the Candidates.

FIDE100 Chess Torch Relay aims to celebrate the rich history of the game and to bring together the entire chess community as part of marking the centenary of the founding of FIDE.

FIDE...

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FIDE100 torch relay celebrated in Canada - Chess News | ChessBase