Play chess online, chess league, board games, chess games database, online games, free chess online, chess teams, free online chess games, chess clubs, chess puzzles, chess games and more...

Tags: play chess, chess, play chess online, online chess, play chess online, online chess, backgammon online

Chess Forum
uskidscompute.com   << online chess - < chess - chess > - chess online >>
FromMessage
Posted by kingofpawns
uskidscompute.com

2/24/2003
08:15:29

Play online chess
Subject: History Question

Message:
Who played this game?
What is its historical significance?

1. e4 e5
2. Qf3 Nc6
3. Bc4 Nf6
4. Ne2 Bc5
5. a3 d6
6. O-O Bg4
7. Qd3 Nh5
8. h3 Bxe2
9. Qxe2 Nf4
10. Qe1 Nd4
11. Bb3 Nxh3+
12. Kh2 Qh4
13. g3 Nf3+
14. Kg2 Nxe1+
15. Rxe1 Qg4
16. d3 Bxf2
17. Rh1 Qxg3+
18. Kf1 Bd4
19. Ke2 Qg2+
20. Kd1 Qxh1+
21. Kd2 Qg2+
22. Ke1 Ng1
23. Nc3 Bxc3+
24. bxc3 Qe2+ 0-1


Posted by gramario
uskidscompute.com

2/24/2003
08:25:28

Play online chess
How about,

Message:
Napoleon and the Automaton - The Turk?

Posted by philaretus
uskidscompute.com

2/24/2003
08:35:13

Play online chess
Right!

Message:

Played in Schoenbrunn in 1809.
———
The Catalan chess opening: what would Topalov do? — The Bulgarian is an aggressive chess player. But the Catalan doesn't bring about a quick victory. RB When you see that the chess player with the move is Topalov you immediately start thinking tactics – quiet, careful improvement is not the Bulgarian's style. So, using the player's identity as a clue, and with an additional hint provided by the absence of a knight on f6, my eye is immediately drawn to 1 Ng5, with the twin threats of 2 Qxh7 mate and 2 Bxb7. Let's have a look at how Black might counter: 1...g6 might not be as bad as it first appears. After 2 Bxb7 Rb8 both the bishop and knight are en prise. Here I would be tempted to ...
Posted by kingofpawns
uskidscompute.com

2/24/2003
08:42:29

Play online chess
I guess

Message:
We have people here who know their history! I thought
this would be harder? How did you figure it out so fast?
———
Chess Hustling, a Look Back — Part of the fabric of night life in New York City, particularly during the summer, are the street chess games. Dozens of chess players in places like Washington Square Park, Union Square and St. Nicholas Avenue and 141st Street are up all night, taking on all comers, for a few dollars a game. The games are fast and gritty and often peppered with non-stop and colorful banter. Chess hustling has been around for many years, but how and when did it begin? In 2007, a hustler named Kenny, who went by the name Little Daddy, and who had been hustling on the street for decades, said that the guy who started it all was a man named Bobby Haywood. He said that Haywood appeared one day in ...
Posted by gramario
uskidscompute.com

2/24/2003
08:45:58

Play online chess
Couldn't

Message:
be anyone really expert (note some of the early moves). You spoke of history and historical significance. I probably read about it a long time ago, or at least aout the Turk. There is an interesting book about The Turk - can't remember the title, but it is easy to find it. Just do a search on The Turk on Amazon or someplace.
———
Carlsen Express Rolls on — The King’s Chess Tournament in Romania is turning into an exhibition. Magnus Carlsen, the Norwegian chess grandmaster who is the world’s No. 1 player, beat Teimour Radjabov of Azerbaijan on Monday, to run his winning streak in the chess event to four games. He leads the tournament with 5.5 points after seven rounds. Boris Gelfand of Israel, the only player not to lose to Carlsen so far, is in second place with 4.5 points, after beating Liviu-Dieter Nisipeanu of Romania on Monday. Carlsen and Gelfand play Tuesday. Though Carlsen has won the last three chess tournaments he has played (Amber, Corus and the London Classic), the last time he was on a roll like he is now was ...
Posted by kingofpawns
uskidscompute.com

2/24/2003
08:51:35

Play online chess
And...

Message:
www.who2.com/turk.html
———
Carlsen Sprints Ahead at King's Tournament — With a little good fortune, Magnus Carlsen is on a tear. Carlsen, the top seed, won his third game in a row at the King’s Chess Tournament in Romania on Sunday. This time, his victim was Ruslan Ponomariov of Ukraine, who was winning for most of the game. But then he blundered (23 Rf2? instead of 23 Kh1) allowing Carlsen to turn the tables. He was also a bit fortunate in Round 5, on Saturday, when he beat Liviu-Dieter Nisipeanu of Romania. In that game, Nisipeanu had a small advantage, but Carlsen employed a nice feint and Nisipeanu took the bait (17 Qd5, he should have played 17 Nd5), after which his position was very difficult. Carlsen, a Norwegian, now has 4.5 points and ...
Posted by brobishkin
uskidscompute.com

2/25/2003
08:28:42

Play online chess
Thanks...

Message:
A very interesting story on the history of the game... It is true "you learn something every day"... Thanks again...

Bro...
———
A Player Steps Up His Game and Wins the National Open — Chess players often talk of the creative aspect of chess — the role of imagination in conceiving strategies. Sometimes the desire to execute an original plan can overwhelm even the desire to win. Mikhail Tal, a former world chess champion, wrote in his autobiography that he had lost more than a few games because he had chosen a “beautiful” combination, only to discover that he had miscalculated. To borrow a baseball metaphor, a grand slam for a chess player would be to play brilliantly, win the game and defeat a strong opponent when there is a lot riding on the outcome. That is what Timur Gareev of Uzbekistan did in the final round of the National Open in Las Vegas last Sunday. He trailed ...