I'm not an expert by any means but from my point of view there's 2 reasons 1. Wanted to keep his rooks connected 2. Wanted to trade queens because he was losing (aiming for draw) Might be wrong tho haha
d5 ? is a mistake, as it leads to 1.Nd6 ! Qxc5 2.Nxf5 and now no matter what you play, the white have a doubled rook pair on a open e file, which is a very powerful thing.
I think it s a win :you put the rook on the c file to cut the king, you bring your own king to d3 and then you sac the rook for the bishop and pawn and you queen your pawn. I'm not sure if the white king is in time to hold the draw
White doesn't actually want to take the bishop. If he does, black takes rook with e pawn and gets connected c-d pawns, one of those will be an unstoppable passer. White can simply play Kg1 and black has no threat. If black captures the rook on e5 white recaptures with the f pawn, making the position a draw. Checking on e1 simply hangs the rook. The best move after Kg1 is just to take on a2, which was what was played in the first place.
@@danellbaptiste3084 ok mr engine user, it's very rare to take a pawn with check and force queen trade and also being a bad move, but unfortunately for the white player this is one of those rare cases
For once, it's nice to see Hikaru facing the board and not looking up to the sky for answers.
Probably due to the vast differnece between the two ratings
I see a virtual chessboard - I hit "upvote".
It’s been confirmed awhile ago. He’s one of the best players in the world.
Digital board again...ohhhhhh yeahh
Wow nice, what a game.! Insane game by nakamura..
Confirmed - there's a water in the ocean!
Vamos naka!! Aquí siempre apoyándote.👍
Bishop to D5 was awesome!
At 6:35 why not bishop takes knight instead of queen check???. Bishop protects pawn on F file and puts pressure on blacks C pawn.
I'm not an expert by any means but from my point of view there's 2 reasons
1. Wanted to keep his rooks connected
2. Wanted to trade queens because he was losing (aiming for draw)
Might be wrong tho haha
Yeah he wanted a queen trade as soon as the opportunity came
Its called zwischenzug
Wrong timing if he wanted a queen trade!!!!
@@danellbaptiste3084 how so?
2:19 i thought that guy was manus lol
Antonio Maurer thats nepo
7:45 Re3?
Maybe this was his downfall
Why doesn’t white take the pawn at 5:51
Just asking..
At 5:06 why not d5 instead of dxc5
And once the knight moves.. Qxc5
d5 ? is a mistake, as it leads to 1.Nd6 ! Qxc5 2.Nxf5 and now no matter what you play, the white have a doubled rook pair on a open e file, which is a very powerful thing.
e6 is hanging after. the knight is blocking the white rook from taking otherwise
@@reallynobody9748 and @Doug Potter thanks
@@vedangjoshi723 also black wants to put his bishop in the long diagonal, if you play d5 your bishop is not playing
Black was better at first but then white after dxc5, however e6 wasn't captured and things went back to Hikaru again. Clickbait title?
Hikaru had to fight, to win this game...it was not easy...
Nice game, with digital board ufff 👌
So beautiful to see both of them passing moved, virtually saying "come up with a plan"
If he takes the pawn and gives up the exchange , isn’t that a draw? Or could black still win since he’s up the exchange, referencing the end.
I think it s a win :you put the rook on the c file to cut the king, you bring your own king to d3 and then you sac the rook for the bishop and pawn and you queen your pawn.
I'm not sure if the white king is in time to hold the draw
7:18 why didn't hikaru go rook to E2? He wins the rook for bishop exchange
White doesn't actually want to take the bishop. If he does, black takes rook with e pawn and gets connected c-d pawns, one of those will be an unstoppable passer. White can simply play Kg1 and black has no threat. If black captures the rook on e5 white recaptures with the f pawn, making the position a draw. Checking on e1 simply hangs the rook. The best move after Kg1 is just to take on a2, which was what was played in the first place.
The rook is defended, Re2 is nothing
Честитка Перуновићу.
Orang indo fans nakamura mana nih?
Why not e6 captured?
Virtual board is amazing dont stop
7:17 why he don't move rook on E2?
Why would naka exchange rooks?
@@princeoreo7652 Is not at exchange, because the bishop did a check
@@Gordon3773 and then....??
wow Ne3 looked better than it was :D
Young Kasparov
Naka didn't get the most out of his career, the impatience
Nakas e6 wasn't to great and required
This pretty much highlights how good Carlsen is.
Yg dari indo mana suaranya??!!
Yes
Ha tenido mejores partidas !!
His position wasn't very good tho
Im from Serbia :)
Who cares?
@@Oguztogrul u care obviously
sto maltretiras ljude
@@dimitrijezivotije3045 koji je tvoj problem?
@@fakereality5204 zezam se bre
Qxg6 just a terrible mistake.
agree see my comment above
@@danellbaptiste3084 ok mr engine user, it's very rare to take a pawn with check and force queen trade and also being a bad move, but unfortunately for the white player this is one of those rare cases
Qxg6 is actually stockfish's top choice. The position evaluates as +0.8, the real mistake was giving black Rxg2 couple moves later.
@@ivyr7070 You are right. He lost much later - 47.Rh4??
Woah Naka played sicilian
he almost always plays e4 e5
Why Naka always looking at the sky to proceed the processor in his brain? Is he a cheater? or there is a virtual computer installed in his eyes?
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