Ding defeats Carlsen with a BEAUTIFUL final move
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- Опубликовано: 2 июн 2023
- Featured is the final game (blitz) between Magnus Carlsen and Ding Liren from the 2019 Sinquefield Cup. In a must-win situation in the tie-break, Carlsen selects the Ruy Lopez, grabs space on the queenside with d5, and then drifts his pieces towards Ding’s king for an attack. Ding’s play on the queenside is enough to divert Carlsen’s attention from the king’s wing to the queenside where a struggle would ensue along the opened c-file. Shortly after Ding exchanges his queen for Carlsen’s 2 rooks, Carlsen’s position becomes critical and he must find an only move to stay in the game. The power of Ding’s unopposed light-squared bishop paved the way for a beautiful final move that ultimately decided the winner of the 2019 Sinquefield Cup.
Image of Ding Liren courtesy of Lennart Ootes
lennartootes.com
I'm a self-taught National Master in chess out of Pennsylvania, USA who was introduced to the game by my father in 1988 at the age of 8. The purpose of this channel is to share my knowledge of chess to help others improve their game. I enjoy continuing to improve my understanding of this great game, albeit slowly. Consider subscribing here on RUclips for frequent content, and/or connecting via any or all of the below social medias. Your support is greatly appreciated. Take care, bye. :)
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I like how you can battle a Queen with enough pieces.
Well, if nothing else, Jerry’s analysis style has stuck with me in my own thoughts. When saying why it was a bad idea to see a6 and b5 and think “ooh, fianchetto” and said there were two reasons, I managed to say out loud in unison with him “one, you’re biting on a rock.” It’s a really small thing, but it’s something I needed on otherwise a very rough day. Thanks for being such a clear and thorough instructor, Jerry
Continue to develop that internal dialogue. 👍😎
Ding has been my favorite player for years because he has the widest variety of opening choices among the super GMs. He plays the English way more than the others, for example. I'm happy for him become WCC, he deserves all the plaudits.
I don't think that's true, Magnus probably has the most variety
Me too. King Ding🎉
Also this was a blitz game and Ding found all these risky moves so fast!
Two main takeaways:
1. Knights mobility is hard to limit, but for strong players it is apparently something they constantly aware of.
2. Apparently playing for a draw allows player to pick moves that give a significant advantage which otherwise they wouldn't consider.
Overall this game demonstrates how some of GMs games may include "games within game" that can spice up the action on the board and result in something special.
As I’m reaching higher ratings, now in the mid 1600s, I realize what Fischer said in an interview that all it takes is one wrong move and that’s the game. In this game it was white’s move 39, Ne2 that wasn’t played and gave win to black. I appreciate you mentioning of these moves that could’ve been played that teaches correct calculation given there’s enough time, of course. Thanks much for your posts. I learn a lot from your videos.
Thank you for watching. 👍
Amazing move. Not only is it a backwards knight move, but it blocks the opposing checkmate, uncovers a checkmate threat, and defends the light squared bishop all at the same time.
Your the best. That was great analysis. Perhaps the proper conclusion one can come to is not come easily to conclusions. - Master Kan
that's a pretty sick ending
GREAT video. Thank you!
Beautiful game. Strategy leads to tactics.
Thanks, Jerry!
The mate idea was nice, but that line where white plays pawn b4 was BEAUTIFUL
8:15 Never heard that pun b4.
Nice! Thanks Jerry!
What a star move at the end! Threatening and defending mate in one at the same time!
Don't forget defending main piece(bishop) also
beatiful thanks!
Hey, nice vid. So I noticed your channel is 10 yo now, and you never showed Emanuel Lasker win a game- only losses. Every other official World Champ has had a win. I was looking over chess events from 1923 (100 yo this year) and noticed Lasker’s last undefeated tournament win was Maehrisch Ostrau, and he had a really cool game against Reti, who he needed to beat to win 1st. Could that game, or any by him, be something you do? We’ve only seen Lasker not only lose, but lose to players he had positive scores against.
Thanks
Chess historian?
Nah, just an amateur. U?
@@amosdraak3536 . Just a chess history lover but not quite a chess historian. Cheers!
It is beautiful! I couldn't agree more.
Found all pop quizzes 🥳...when do I get my GM title 😂😂
No GM title for that. You earned this though: 🏆.
@@ChessNetwork I'll take that 😂. Your videos have made my game way better....thanks a lot for the great videos man. I'd like to play a game against you one day
Yeah, very good move and game too!
A true masterpiece from my favorite chess player King Liren 😀
All hail King 👑 Ding Liren 😀👏🏾
I support your decision (and it seems like a conscious decision) to name your videos the way you do. Knowing who won isn't a spoiler for me. It makes me curious about *how* they won and how you will explain it. Kind of like how we know who the murderer is at the beginning of every Columbo episode.
P.S. That was a great last move by Ding.
Great final move - actually found that one ;)
Very beautiful indeed.
I wonder how the next championship will turn out between these two.
You mean Liren is going to play 9LX for once?
@@nicbentulan seek help
@@Qhsjahajw what did I do? Did I miss a recent tournament where Liren actually played 9LX ?
@@nicbentulan spam toxic bs on every video...
I was eyeing up the rook sacrifice on h1 for the final move; if white declines and plays g2 there’s a lovely double-check mate that x-rays the rook to protect it, but unfortunately there aren’t any such tricks if white just takes the rook.
Nice
I found Ne7 :) great vid
Ding Ding!
Would it be possible to programn an engine for armageddon? To make it see a draw as a loss? Or would that just lead to the engine playing bad moves in a drawn position just to have "chance" of winning
An engine assumes best play by the other player, so if it plays a losing move, it expects the opponent to then maintain the winning advantage. It'd never be able to play "hope chess" and outperform other engines, since it tries to find the objectively best move.
If an engine says you have an advantage in a position (such as having white in the starting position), the other side will not be able to force a draw (otherwise the engine would just say 0.00). Therefore, this new type of engine would only be useful if the side with draw odds has an advantage. I think it would be pretty simple for an engine to find repetitions, perpetual checks or stalemates, and avoid lines that lead to those.
I enjoy watching top top class chess with commentary. It’s such a beautiful game, just wish I started playing earlier. There are 5 year olds that can beat me unfortunately
Who won the cup?
Great game analysis...😂
Hello, my fellow Jerronians!
Hi, jerry!❤👋😊
Hi 👋
I love you Jerry ❤
Hello Grodalo :)
Oh oh. I haven't watched the video yet but let me guess. It's that game where Ding saced an exchange by allowing his rooks to be disconnected and in return got lasting initiative. Ended with him playing a backwards knight move that threatens mate in one while also blocking Carlsen's mate in one. It's that one correct? I watched that game live and remember it very fondly.
@13:38 "h4"?
Normally, he is off by just one rank or file, like saying h3 instead of h4. But this one was a new record :)
😊
Jerry, I have appreciated your content for a few years now. But I do like the suspense of not knowing who's going to win before I watch a game. Just my two cents: please don't put spoilers in the video name. The games are way better not knowing the outcome ahead of time. I'll watch either way though...
13:36 I think you meant to say “Considered better is h4”
Yepper 👍😎
I saved the moves of this game. It really is what one has to do to beat Magnus Carlson. It's that difficult.
like
I don't know why, but seeing how ding Liren plays in this game, reminds me of Jose Mourinho with his football style.😅
First for the third time.
Where is Biscuit?
Magnificent Magnus crushed by the future world champion Ding, a masterpiece.
Carlus Magsen is no longer a world champ so this makes sense.
This game was played in 2019.
@@je9625 Oranges are orange.
@@PushyPawn and pushy pawns are pushy pawns, i understand.
If Magnus wasn't such a drunk.
lol
Magsen lost in white, the question is did he cry out loud and post football coach video again ?
No big deal losing in rapid and blitz games. Even for carlsen. he would have won this game if it was classical.
…you do realize this was tiebreaks for the classical?
Yeah, cause, well, Carlsen's rapid time format track record is terrible and meaningless
average Magnus fan boy
No he wont, Ding absolutely destroys Magnus every time.. Magnus has no clue when Ding plays aggresively sacing all his pieces and mating him.. Magnus only wins dead boring endgames which nobody is interested of ...
How do you not understand that putting the outcome in the title destroys not only this vid, but any other on this game?
It doesn't take anything away from the video for me
@@colemanhoyt5437 Same, in fact it made me want to watch it even more. Chess is about the journey not the destination. It doesn't matter who defeats who, but how they did.
game is from 2019
Even furthermore the title doesn't even say what game exactly this is and Ding and Magnus have played dozens of not many more games especially if you consider all time controls
That makes absolutely no sense. The beauty in chess is in solving problems move by move - not in the outcome. Calm down.
Earlier in the year, I placed my bet on Ding winning the world championship. This game is the main reason why. When I watched it (a few hours after it was played in 2019), I knew Ding was a special one.
Qxd6 loses on the spot, Carlsen should have seen it.
@12:50 I'm surprised Ding didn't find the Bc6 self pin move. I guess he learned how strong self-pins are from this game and applied it in the 2023 world championship🤣
Magnus is boring, ding is genious
Genius? Genuous?