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FromMessage
Posted by krystyna
goclub.org

4/30/2008
04:11:20

Play online chess
Subject: 45th tour

Message:
it appear that I cannot play in the 45th because I am
still in the 44th tour but 44th is finished, Please advise
krystyna


Posted by heinzkat
goclub.org

4/30/2008
04:16:09

Play online chess
You have won your group

Message:
And will advance to the second round of the 44th GK tournament, advanced section.




Chess news:

Ivanchuk Holds Lead at Amber -- Vassily Ivanchuk of Ukraine, is proving to be the most intrepid player at the annual Amber chess tournament. He has yet to lose a game and, heading into the second rest day, he has a one point lead over Magnus Carlsen of Norway, the world’s top-ranked chess player. Boris Gelfand of Israel and Vladimir Kramnik of Russia are tied for third, a half point behind Carlsen. Carlsen took the lead in Round 6 by beating Gelfand 2-0. (The participants play a rapid game and a blindfold game against each of the other competitors.) It was the fourth time in the tournament that Carlsen had won both games in a match. But, in Round 7, Carlsen lost 1.5-0.5 to Vugar Gashimov of Azerbaijan, while ...

A saving grace -- The 19th Amber Blindfold and Rapid Chess Tournament at Nice is proving to be one of the most entertaining in recent memory with the traditionally high standard of play complimented by fighting chess and a high proportion of decisive games. After seven of eleven rounds it is ‘Mr Amber’, Vasily Ivanchuk, the only chess player to have competed in all 19 Amber tournaments, in the lead. Ivanchuk was neck and neck with world number one Magnus Carlsen until the latter surprisingly lost to Vugar Gashimov in the blindfold and then was fortunate to avoid defeat in the Rapid game after throwing away a big advantage. See main image for Carlsen’s save in the endgame. ...

The f-pawn, part 6: how would you take on Kasparov? -- In this world-championship game, Black has a very big decision to make. Kasparov-Anand, World Chess Championship 1995. Black to play. RB What better way to finish our survey of the f-pawn push than with a world chess championship game? A Scandinavian defence too, which we also took a look at in a recent series of columns, though I don't remember this variation. White's knight looks to have found a powerful and well-supported post, and an exchange of knights on e5 – 1…Nxe5 2 fxe5 – would leave White with a very menacing pawn wedge and the semi-open f-file for his rooks. So we won't be trying that. What else have we got? Say Black castles, which ...