Nimzowitsch Explains The Game HE Considers His Best - Nimzowitsch vs. Rubinstein, 1926

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  • Опубликовано: 14 янв 2025

Комментарии • 21

  • @Zidaneman
    @Zidaneman 3 года назад +6

    Your video style is simply marvelous. I think you may have found your calling in life because these are just too damn impeccable!
    Keep banging these out man, every video is simply fantastic! 👏👏👏

  • @Vinayak_Maurya
    @Vinayak_Maurya 3 года назад +8

    You always found an instructive and aggressive games which I like much thanks for your videos.

  • @sameeracharya4822
    @sameeracharya4822 3 года назад +2

    Why is this gem(the channel) so underrated??

  • @amosdraak3536
    @amosdraak3536 3 года назад +4

    🤤🤤 Such a good game. Attacking and attacking games are cool and all, but it’s nice seeing games like these, too. “Nh1!!!!!” On a rook square even a king can catch a knight!! Yet it was his pivot square, and the pressure was awesome. 😄 Keep up the fine display. 💯💯 These games are just as great as the others. 😋

    • @amosdraak3536
      @amosdraak3536 3 года назад

      @Davi Moreira Of course, but it’s not like the resistance was poor, like a lot of other games chess channels like to show. BTW, I typo’d and meant “attacking and tactical games” in the second sentence. It’s nice seeing that a lot of strong play was needed to win in addition to the final attack, as opposed to something (at this point) mundane, like missing a queen sacrifice and losing in 20 moves or whatever. So I think this game is considered more positional than anything else.

  • @Silvermist78
    @Silvermist78 11 месяцев назад

    Excellent presentation! Thank you! Nimzowitsch, my favorite player behind Fischer and Lasker!

  • @Javidfarali1980
    @Javidfarali1980 3 года назад

    14:05 If the knight went to h7 what happens if the rook simply moves back 1 square to Rg7?

  • @andersonarmstrong2650
    @andersonarmstrong2650 3 года назад

    Beautiful positional masterpiece.

  • @JonathanPhillips2k
    @JonathanPhillips2k 3 года назад +2

    the last time I came so early I was mated in 4

  • @dragorn3212
    @dragorn3212 7 месяцев назад

    The 1600's i've played against in tourny's would have gone qe1 on move 27

  • @GNU_Linux_for_good
    @GNU_Linux_for_good 7 месяцев назад

    15:20 I'll take Kf7+

  • @petersiegfriedkrug
    @petersiegfriedkrug 6 месяцев назад

    Instead of Nimzowitsch Nh1, Stockfish suggest Rfb1!!, or a2-a3!! or h2-h3!! Great moves by Stockfish

  • @tejasprakash7783
    @tejasprakash7783 3 года назад

    Nice

  • @userhome3601
    @userhome3601 3 года назад

    Notice that wrong moves are correct if that player wins.

  • @GNU_Linux_for_good
    @GNU_Linux_for_good 7 месяцев назад

    07:49 Well, that, of course, is a no-brainer: the man who postulates it by himself, enters the 7th rank with his rook!! 07:57 WHAT? Traitor of his own cause..

  • @ДенисЮденков-ь5ж
    @ДенисЮденков-ь5ж 3 года назад

    🙏

  • @JHarder1000
    @JHarder1000 3 года назад

    A superb choice! I hope that Alekhine and Capablanca are coming up. The Alekhine game is obvious(At least to my way of thinking.) There are at least four possibilities for the Capablanca game. There are some other great games by Tartakover, Vidmar, and Bogolubov, among others. The last two named rarely get the respect they deserve. Of course, there is also the game that so enraged Alekhine that he went home and broke every stick of furniture in his hotel room.

    • @shreyashshreekant148
      @shreyashshreekant148 3 года назад

      Which alekhine game

    • @JHarder1000
      @JHarder1000 3 года назад

      @@shreyashshreekant148 His defeat of Bogolubov at Hastings 1922.

    • @JHarder1000
      @JHarder1000 3 года назад

      @@shreyashshreekant148 If you are asking which game enraged him, it was when he lost to Yates with white at Carlsbad, 1923. Yates won the brilliancy prize.

    • @JHarder1000
      @JHarder1000 3 года назад

      The Tartakover game was his defeat of Maroczy at Toeplitz-Schoenau, 1922. I can think of four Vidmar games, only one of which is well-known. The well-known one is "the Houdini game" against Euwe at Carlsbad 1929. The Less well-known ones are his wins against Alekhine and Nimzowitsch at Semmering 1926 and his win against Yates at Hastings 1925 -1926. I have seen NONE of those on RUclips. As for Bogo, There are his wins against Mieses at Baden-Baden, 1925, and against Wolff at Bad Pistyan,1922.