I am a programmer and watched this video during work hours. I assumed the right move and the follow up like in 10 seconds without pausing the video, and when after grand announcement Antonio showed this move I was so excited that I jumped up in my chair, clapped my hands and shouted "YES!!!". This got my boss's attention, and instead of using my bragging right and telling my colleagues how great a chess player I am, I had to pretend that my reaction was caused by finding a solution to a work problem. I hope my boss doesn't come to ask what solution I found, because instead of writing some code, I'm writing this comment.
Bro, you literally said exactly what I was about to say. I'm also a programmer and I'm currently working right now, I also spent less than 10 seconds to found the move and the following sequence. But I work from home so my boss didn't catch my reaction :D
The reason I and so many others found Bc2 is because when there's a "pause the video" moment, we start looking for moves like these. But in the middle of a real game, it is different... So here, it was easier finding Bc2 than the sequence after that move, for sure.
Exactly. I don't know how but i instantly saw Bc2 first but then i said naah! This can't be. And then i jumped out of my chair when he said it's Bc2. Lol
I actually found it lol, but for the exact reason you said. Only when he said pause the video, it was sort of random move that I guessed and after I tried it, I understood you threaten checkmate, but didn't know how to continue if he captures with the second rook. But totally found it.
"When you have eliminated all which is impossible then whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth." This is the original quote by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, spoken by his character, Sherlock Holmes.
Recently ivanchuk is playing classical chess just for fun....even in the world cup against magnus you could see that he was not spending any time and resigned the second game in a position which could be drawn.
Yes it is a pity. A player such as Korchnoi was till playing strong grandmaster chess at fifty four and would have given his utmost concentration and effort to any classical game he played at that age.
@@jameshogan6142 Yes that's true....even Anand whenever he plays any classical tornament he plays it with full focus and he is 53! I feel if ivanchuk also plays with more interest he could do much better...
When you peaked in strength in your 20s and 30s, ranked in the top five in the world and won games against Kasparov, Karpov, and Kramnik at their peaks, you have nothing left to prove in your 50s. You just enjoy the game. The energy reserve is simply not the same anymore.
Great video! It really emphasizes the need to "play the middle game like a magician" as Spielmann said. Only mad genius would be able to see this continuation in that position.
There was a comment a few months ago asking if a game had ever ended when there was something more to be done. To that person, here it is. It has finally happened in a game covered on this channel.
Fascinating game. I did manage Bc2 but I agree that the real killer to find would be d4. Bc2 just seemed the only move not to lose almost instantly. 'Deflecting' moves like this, especially when you have material to 'give away' should always be considered. But the follow-up pawn move would be almost impossible when several moves down the line. Good video as always, thank you.
Maybe it's just me, but I think another great aspect of this game is when you look up at home with the engine and realize that the piece sacrifice could have been possible (even with engine precisely moves) if you played g4 before actually sacrificing the piece. Great video anyway, but it would have been even better if you showed what difference the move g4 makes : like whereever the bishop goes there is no backrank mate possible (later with the idea Bishop c2) and you could have instead of Ba6 sacrificed the bishop on d5, because after the re-capture the bishop isn't controlling c8 in this variation. In any case it was a well played game.
I was so happy to find this bishop to c2 idea, it was the only move I could see that ends with the white queen unable to give checks and the black queen threatening checkmate on d2 and if the white rook goes to the only available square a1 then the insane rook captures on a2. Any other move would either prolong the move queen to d2 or just give initiative for blacks attack. I don't usually try to hard in finding the winning move but if it's in a position where it seems nothing can be played I always take my time also I found it pretty quickly I just had to calculate everything else but I failed to see how important that bishop was on e4 though. Love these videos agad you're the best!!❤️❤️
i found the move, but if i were given the perspective, ivanchuk had a few moves back and no info that there was something in the position, i wouldn't have found it. regardless, i was very happy and still celebrated when u revealed that it was the move i was thinking, i even got chills because of how difficult u described it
Found bc2 actually instantly, disconnecting the rooks, then the queen trade was kind of a no brainer but that d4 move was definitely way above my head. Still happy I found Bc2 or rather the idea behind it
Let me explain: you landed on that move by pure luck. Not by calculating it. You 'assumed' the move instead of 'seeing' it. That is the difference between you and a 2500+ player.
@@fritswester2833not by luck. It is the only move that doesn't lead straight to checkmate or severe material loss. For me it was also a no-brainer so I think almost everyone would play it. The continuation is not clear at all but Bc2 is obvious. 😊
@@fritswester2833I’m not sure I understand you correctly, of course I did calculate the move, it’s just that I have to read the situation first, understanding the key idea here, I didn’t just play the move blindly obviously
Strange as it is, I found bc2 in a few seconds because of course I have to disconnect the rooks and ease the tension of the attack, but I'm not able to continue since I'm lacking knowledge and vision... Great commentary as always, thank you Antonio!
Great pause the video moment! Yes I found bc2. I noticed soon that the white king is vulnerable on the back rank, so I stared at Qxa2 for a while, but when that did not work, i started to look specifically for interference moves.
#suggestion I just saw a game where stockfish lost with white against leela, when it got it's own rook voluntarily trapped and misscalculated the game. Incredible. I think it was 2023 ccc semifinals, saw it on reddit post, would be refreshing to see here.
Yeah but that was a mate in 11 not a mate in 1. Lol. But seriously new topic Wesley So, Bobby Fischer & Hans Niemann have never provably done anything evil in chess as adults. Magnus Carlsen, Garry Kasparov & Hikaru Nakamura have provably done evil things in chess as adults. Evil : Cheating, baseless accusations, discrimination, etc. Which part here is incorrect?
Pointless discussion as there is no enough fact. Hans was super sus cos how his performace fluctuates with a very big level gap in those fluctuations. Current top players like Carlsen, Naka, and Garry has been consistent with their games. Thats why no one suspects them of cheating. And with their massive experience in chess and facing many different people, Hans' case was the only one with such a big jump that is accompanied with such a massive fluctuation. Plus Hans had a record of cheating. So I think it'd be unfair for us to judge either side. Who are we to judge top players' accusations towards Hans when they clearly are more experienced and they faced Hans themselves? On the other hand how can we defend Hans and prove his innocence? This battle is for Hans alone to prove his strength by having more great games consistently and reestablishing his lost honor due to his past cheating.
@@bryantimothy8616 Wesley So, Bobby Fischer & Hans Niemann have never provably done anything evil in chess as adults. Magnus Carlsen, Garry Kasparov & Hikaru Nakamura have provably done evil things in chess as adults. Evil : Cheating, baseless accusations, discrimination, etc. Which part here is incorrect?
Saw everything up to d4. I think d4 is the real stellar move here as after bc2 every move from white is some what forced. But to be able to see this line on the move that Ivanchuk resigned would be nothing short of impossible. As always, great video.
The way ...d4 comes in and just holds everything together for Black is the truly amazing part of this. And that black D pawn can be captured too, yet it still doesn't help White! That had to be a very bitter loss for Chucky, considering he was up material and could've held out for a few more moves even without needing to find this brilliancy. I don't think the likes of Kasparov or Fisher would've found that winning combination had they been in the same shoes, so it'll go down as yet another engine sequence that coulda-shoulda-woulda made for an epic classic.
I can believe people found the pause-the-video move but not all the follow-ups. Often I can work out the pause-the-video move by seeing it's the only move that "does stuff", but I can't find all the follow-ups. I've seen the tactic of "disconnecting two pieces and there's no good way to re-connect them" before. I think a similar tactic was even the pause-the-video moment before.
Actually found the move but was sure I'm overlooking something. Seemed to be the only move that prevents the checkmating pattern you showed just before though. Never would have found it from the resigning position. And I don't even actively play chess :D Edit: ok finding the second one afterwards was harder.
At 3:53 was wondering why not Qxb7 as rook also defends b7. But after Qxb7 Rxb7 Rc8+ black loses bishop and rook - Bd8 Rxd8+ Ke7 Rxh8 Rxb2. But its still only black down an exchange and a pawn. Mightve been holdable..
Yeah , I found it but couldn’t figured out what do if room capture was thinking too hard. I didn’t understand or see that I was piece up. It was easy to spot, due to the queen being relieved checkmate if rook wasn’t there.
yeah me too. I just saw that taking the bishop with Rc1 was gonna lead to mate so I was like "I bet this is the move, im not gonna even calculate not taking the bishop" lol.
BLOODY HELL I've found it! severing the rook combo that Rc1-c2 cannot take due to mate, but didn't see the continuation where Qb8 and the slow castling for the black :)
The last 4 or so games featured on this channel with Chucky have been somewhat like this. He's lost it unfortunately. I just hope that he still continues to play the game because it brings him joy.
#suggestion You have to show the 4 games between Magnus and Nepo in the AI cup Semifinals today, from holding a losing position in game 1, missing a checkmate in game 2 and the crazy queen-rook endgame from game 4, there was so much to unpack
Knowing that there’s a solution makes it easier to find it. Over the board, not knowing that it’s possible, makes it harder to find and easier to dismiss some of the more outlandish options.
I did find Bc2, but I have to admit I didn't calculate it any further. It's just that it's the only move that interrupts the second Rook from coming in.
I saw that the black queen had checkmate in 1 and I briefly considered blocking the rook with the black bishop, but I dismissed the idea when I thought that the other rook could just take it. I didn't consider what could be after the white rook left c8. I also saw pushing the black pawn to d4 and bishop to e4, but I obviously had the moves out of order.
@@alisterzarkar7163 I don't know what planet you come from, but where I come from if you cite an historical quote and provide an attribution, you should attribute it to the FIRST person who used it.
Agadmator, the originator of your quote in this video is not Spock. It comes from a novel by Arthur Conan Doyle and said by his character Sherlock Holmes.
I'm happy I found Bc2 in 10 or so seconds after pausing. Hard to brag though since I didn't calculate R8xc2, but only saw the mate in 1 after R1xc2. It also helps that it was built up to be a ridiculous looking move.
YES!!! I FOUND IT! And no, i'm still a terrible chess player but it seemed the only move to win a tempo and disconnect the coordination of white pieces, of course i didn't remotely know why it works when i found it but my guts told me to try to give material back only to survie!!!
I think it's important to note that in order to win in Ivanchuk's shoes one doesn't need to spot the Bc2 move several moves in advance: it's enough just not to resign and then to spot it later when the time actually comes.
I found BC2 and I'm not a ranked chess player at all. But if you hadn't told me there was a great move there, I wouldn't have seen it. My thinking was that there was a real need to block the C column to disconnect the rooks. And I saw that the white rook couldn't leave the back rank to capture the bishop, for the reason that you made clear. So either White would be left trying to complete the attack with only the queen and one rook or he'd have to pull the rook back to take the bishop, in which case RB6 (you did QB6) would force at worst a queen trade, since the white queen would have no safe squares. (White could save the queen by trading the rook for the back-rank bishop, but is that better?) It was really just a combinatorial question. What looked like a queen and two rooks vs a queen and a rook had to be changed by bringing in the bishop that looked like it couldn't do anything.
As soon as I knew there was a move, I found it in 10 secs. Black has two extra pieces and can easily sacrifice one. One rook must guard the first rank, another one puns the bishop. Either one stops doing its job, it is a break for Black and they force queens exchange
Thank you Antonio. Great video every day. This time I found the right move in about 5 minutes. The key to the solution was timing. I just started my second beer😊
im almost 40 years old and always remembered ivanchuk as an unique chess player. he finds brilliancies with double exclamations against top masters of his time but never became a world champion challenger.
I found it without a pause, but only because of Antonios description. I mean, everyone knows breaking the connection of rooks is always uber move. I saw rc6 but immediately realized it fails to queen captures, so there was only one viable option. Though im pretty sure i would never ever play this in a real game.
Bc2 was the first move i considered in the position, in only a few seconds as well. Im only rated 1600 and i usually dont find the best moves in agad videos so im pretty proud of myself
Hi ! One question. The world classic champion Ding Liren where is he ? there has been a number of tournaments and I haven't seen him , nor Agadmator analyze a game by Ding after the World Chess Championship.
I do not find this move to be so difficult to find, since there are not so many candidate moves and since the continuations Agad suggested for white require the rook lift. One of the first moves i considered was Bc2 indeed.
I found Bc2 in about 20-30 seconds because I noted black was threatening backrank mate if the rook moved, and also we have two extra bishops so we could throw one away to break momentum ....I feel quite sure Ivanchuk would see this move just as quickly if he simply had the position on the board and didnt quick resign
I found it! I admit I did not continue to calculate, since I was sure that is the only move that can be played here. So, I admit I would still lose this horribly, but I did find the first move.
I am a programmer and watched this video during work hours. I assumed the right move and the follow up like in 10 seconds without pausing the video, and when after grand announcement Antonio showed this move I was so excited that I jumped up in my chair, clapped my hands and shouted "YES!!!".
This got my boss's attention, and instead of using my bragging right and telling my colleagues how great a chess player I am, I had to pretend that my reaction was caused by finding a solution to a work problem. I hope my boss doesn't come to ask what solution I found, because instead of writing some code, I'm writing this comment.
😂
Bro, you literally said exactly what I was about to say.
I'm also a programmer and I'm currently working right now, I also spent less than 10 seconds to found the move and the following sequence.
But I work from home so my boss didn't catch my reaction :D
I'm also here to brag coz i found the move in few seconds😂
Money well earned my man, keep up the great work.
me too so happy lol
I can be proud to play like Ivanchuk - I too can get to a lost position in _'basically no time at all.'_
I get to a lost position as soon as I agree to play a chess game😅
He wasn't lost though that's the videos point
@@PuyolsHonor That's another similarity
The reason I and so many others found Bc2 is because when there's a "pause the video" moment, we start looking for moves like these.
But in the middle of a real game, it is different...
So here, it was easier finding Bc2 than the sequence after that move, for sure.
Exactly. I don't know how but i instantly saw Bc2 first but then i said naah! This can't be. And then i jumped out of my chair when he said it's Bc2. Lol
Most people probably find the move without calculating all the lines. Basically means you didn't find the move, despite finding the move.
True. It's not about finding the move but the continuation till the end
Agree. Plus I saw Bc2, but not with the d4 follow up, etc.
I actually found it lol, but for the exact reason you said. Only when he said pause the video, it was sort of random move that I guessed and after I tried it, I understood you threaten checkmate, but didn't know how to continue if he captures with the second rook. But totally found it.
Love it! Even with such a a short game Antonio manages to make a highly entertaining and informative video 😎
"When you have eliminated all which is impossible then whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth." This is the original quote by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, spoken by his character, Sherlock Holmes.
Pin please.
Actually, the quote was,
"When you have eliminated the impossible,
whatever remains must be possible, no matter how IMPROBABLE."
@@jwrobin21I googled it and I couldn't find your version. His is the only one that shows up.
@@OneRichMofoBelieve it or believe it not but Google does not have all the answers.
I have read the Sherlock Holmes so I know what I am talking about.
Was about to comment the same thing, I remember reading this in a Holmes story!
Recently ivanchuk is playing classical chess just for fun....even in the world cup against magnus you could see that he was not spending any time and resigned the second game in a position which could be drawn.
Yes it is a pity. A player such as Korchnoi was till playing strong grandmaster chess at fifty four and would have given his utmost concentration and effort to any classical game he played at that age.
@@jameshogan6142 Yes that's true....even Anand whenever he plays any classical tornament he plays it with full focus and he is 53! I feel if ivanchuk also plays with more interest he could do much better...
When you peaked in strength in your 20s and 30s, ranked in the top five in the world and won games against Kasparov, Karpov, and Kramnik at their peaks, you have nothing left to prove in your 50s. You just enjoy the game. The energy reserve is simply not the same anymore.
Great video! It really emphasizes the need to "play the middle game like a magician" as Spielmann said. Only mad genius would be able to see this continuation in that position.
There was a comment a few months ago asking if a game had ever ended when there was something more to be done. To that person, here it is. It has finally happened in a game covered on this channel.
Fascinating game. I did manage Bc2 but I agree that the real killer to find would be d4. Bc2 just seemed the only move not to lose almost instantly. 'Deflecting' moves like this, especially when you have material to 'give away' should always be considered. But the follow-up pawn move would be almost impossible when several moves down the line. Good video as always, thank you.
This is our annual "THIS IS WHY WE LOVE CHESS" video. and this is why this channel is the best. thank you for being part of our lives.
Maybe it's just me, but I think another great aspect of this game is when you look up at home with the engine and realize that the piece sacrifice could have been possible (even with engine precisely moves) if you played g4 before actually sacrificing the piece.
Great video anyway, but it would have been even better if you showed what difference the move g4 makes : like whereever the bishop goes there is no backrank mate possible (later with the idea Bishop c2) and you could have instead of Ba6 sacrificed the bishop on d5, because after the re-capture the bishop isn't controlling c8 in this variation.
In any case it was a well played game.
Omgg, I found it! Never felt happier 😂❤ Thanks for that hype, Agad, it really made my day!
I was so happy to find this bishop to c2 idea, it was the only move I could see that ends with the white queen unable to give checks and the black queen threatening checkmate on d2 and if the white rook goes to the only available square a1 then the insane rook captures on a2. Any other move would either prolong the move queen to d2 or just give initiative for blacks attack. I don't usually try to hard in finding the winning move but if it's in a position where it seems nothing can be played I always take my time also I found it pretty quickly I just had to calculate everything else but I failed to see how important that bishop was on e4 though. Love these videos agad you're the best!!❤️❤️
HA HA HA. Riiiigggght.
i found the move, but if i were given the perspective, ivanchuk had a few moves back and no info that there was something in the position, i wouldn't have found it. regardless, i was very happy and still celebrated when u revealed that it was the move i was thinking, i even got chills because of how difficult u described it
Amazing game. Reminded me of your old immortal chess and sorcery series. It is very hard to find such mysterious positions nowadays
Found bc2 actually instantly, disconnecting the rooks, then the queen trade was kind of a no brainer but that d4 move was definitely way above my head. Still happy I found Bc2 or rather the idea behind it
Let me explain: you landed on that move by pure luck. Not by calculating it. You 'assumed' the move instead of 'seeing' it. That is the difference between you and a 2500+ player.
@@fritswester2833plot twist: commenter is actually a 2600 GM
@@fritswester2833not by luck. It is the only move that doesn't lead straight to checkmate or severe material loss. For me it was also a no-brainer so I think almost everyone would play it. The continuation is not clear at all but Bc2 is obvious. 😊
Same here. Bc2 was not so hard, but d4... o.O
@@fritswester2833I’m not sure I understand you correctly, of course I did calculate the move, it’s just that I have to read the situation first, understanding the key idea here, I didn’t just play the move blindly obviously
Strange as it is, I found bc2 in a few seconds because of course I have to disconnect the rooks and ease the tension of the attack, but I'm not able to continue since I'm lacking knowledge and vision...
Great commentary as always, thank you Antonio!
Great pause the video moment! Yes I found bc2. I noticed soon that the white king is vulnerable on the back rank, so I stared at Qxa2 for a while, but when that did not work, i started to look specifically for interference moves.
Mind blowing. Thank you for covering this.
#suggestion
I just saw a game where stockfish lost with white against leela, when it got it's own rook voluntarily trapped and misscalculated the game. Incredible. I think it was 2023 ccc semifinals, saw it on reddit post, would be refreshing to see here.
Hans niemann also resigned against kramnik in a winning position. In recent time🎉
Yeah but that was a mate in 11 not a mate in 1. Lol. But seriously new topic
Wesley So, Bobby Fischer & Hans Niemann have never provably done anything evil in chess as adults.
Magnus Carlsen, Garry Kasparov & Hikaru Nakamura have provably done evil things in chess as adults.
Evil : Cheating, baseless accusations, discrimination, etc.
Which part here is incorrect?
Pointless discussion as there is no enough fact. Hans was super sus cos how his performace fluctuates with a very big level gap in those fluctuations.
Current top players like Carlsen, Naka, and Garry has been consistent with their games. Thats why no one suspects them of cheating. And with their massive experience in chess and facing many different people, Hans' case was the only one with such a big jump that is accompanied with such a massive fluctuation. Plus Hans had a record of cheating.
So I think it'd be unfair for us to judge either side. Who are we to judge top players' accusations towards Hans when they clearly are more experienced and they faced Hans themselves?
On the other hand how can we defend Hans and prove his innocence?
This battle is for Hans alone to prove his strength by having more great games consistently and reestablishing his lost honor due to his past cheating.
His engine probably took too long to show the right move and he improvised 😂
@@bryantimothy8616
Wesley So, Bobby Fischer & Hans Niemann have never provably done anything evil in chess as adults.
Magnus Carlsen, Garry Kasparov & Hikaru Nakamura have provably done evil things in chess as adults.
Evil : Cheating, baseless accusations, discrimination, etc.
Which part here is incorrect?
@@nicbentulanare you a bot? You just copy pasted the whole thing, even keeping the typo 😂😂
That’s subtle and complicated. Much fun to follow this analysis.
You won’t find it. - We will see about that. - finds a move for white instead of black
Saw everything up to d4. I think d4 is the real stellar move here as after bc2 every move from white is some what forced. But to be able to see this line on the move that Ivanchuk resigned would be nothing short of impossible. As always, great video.
That was a great analysis. Thank You.
The way ...d4 comes in and just holds everything together for Black is the truly amazing part of this. And that black D pawn can be captured too, yet it still doesn't help White! That had to be a very bitter loss for Chucky, considering he was up material and could've held out for a few more moves even without needing to find this brilliancy. I don't think the likes of Kasparov or Fisher would've found that winning combination had they been in the same shoes, so it'll go down as yet another engine sequence that coulda-shoulda-woulda made for an epic classic.
I can believe people found the pause-the-video move but not all the follow-ups. Often I can work out the pause-the-video move by seeing it's the only move that "does stuff", but I can't find all the follow-ups. I've seen the tactic of "disconnecting two pieces and there's no good way to re-connect them" before. I think a similar tactic was even the pause-the-video moment before.
Actually found the move but was sure I'm overlooking something. Seemed to be the only move that prevents the checkmating pattern you showed just before though. Never would have found it from the resigning position. And I don't even actively play chess :D Edit: ok finding the second one afterwards was harder.
I swear I found this move!!! I let out the biggest YES while eating breakfast at work 😂
Thank you agad, because you just made my day! I found the move after around 30 secs and was proud as hell!
At 3:53 was wondering why not Qxb7 as rook also defends b7. But after Qxb7 Rxb7 Rc8+ black loses bishop and rook - Bd8 Rxd8+ Ke7 Rxh8 Rxb2. But its still only black down an exchange and a pawn. Mightve been holdable..
6:29 Bc2! Is it?
FOUND IT!!
Of course I wouldn't have gotten to that point ever in my life
really great video, fascinating thanks!
I can proudly tell now .I found bc2 that ivanchuk missed. I am so happy now ❤😊
Proud to say I found this but never would have found it over the board
Yeah , I found it but couldn’t figured out what do if room capture was thinking too hard. I didn’t understand or see that I was piece up. It was easy to spot, due to the queen being relieved checkmate if rook wasn’t there.
I actually considered the bishop move. But not the pawn d4.
yeah me too. I just saw that taking the bishop with Rc1 was gonna lead to mate so I was like "I bet this is the move, im not gonna even calculate not taking the bishop" lol.
BLOODY HELL I've found it! severing the rook combo that Rc1-c2 cannot take due to mate, but didn't see the continuation where Qb8 and the slow castling for the black :)
Wow, the game officially ends at 3:04, but the video goes on for over 10 more minutes! How often has that happened in agadmator's videos.
The last 4 or so games featured on this channel with Chucky have been somewhat like this. He's lost it unfortunately. I just hope that he still continues to play the game because it brings him joy.
Spock? It was Sherlock Holmes! It was the whole point of his method.
This is top tier content. Different in so many ways. Loved it!
#suggestion You have to show the 4 games between Magnus and Nepo in the AI cup Semifinals today, from holding a losing position in game 1, missing a checkmate in game 2 and the crazy queen-rook endgame from game 4, there was so much to unpack
Knowing that there’s a solution makes it easier to find it. Over the board, not knowing that it’s possible, makes it harder to find and easier to dismiss some of the more outlandish options.
I did find Bc2, but I have to admit I didn't calculate it any further. It's just that it's the only move that interrupts the second Rook from coming in.
This is just STAGGERING. The best chess video of all time. Agadmator's immortal.
I saw that the black queen had checkmate in 1 and I briefly considered blocking the rook with the black bishop, but I dismissed the idea when I thought that the other rook could just take it. I didn't consider what could be after the white rook left c8. I also saw pushing the black pawn to d4 and bishop to e4, but I obviously had the moves out of order.
The quote mentioned, I guess was spoken by some Sherlock Holmes novel written by conan doyle
Great analysis Daniel!!!!!!!!!!!!!
I really found it and so happy I did.
Didn't know all the variations but I was sure this is the move
Great quote by Spok. Well done. Here is one of my favorites. "It is illogical to assume that all conditions will remain unchanged".
That quote has a much earlier origin than Spock. It first appeared in a Sherlock Holmes novel written by Arthur Conan Doyle.
@@rossmurray6849Spok never claimed that the quote was his own original saying. Spok was well versed in earth history. Live long and prosper.
@@alisterzarkar7163 I don't know what planet you come from, but where I come from if you cite an historical quote and provide an attribution, you should attribute it to the FIRST person who used it.
So tell me, who did Doyle get the quote from?
@@alisterzarkar7163 From no one. He was the first person to write it.
Agadmator, the originator of your quote in this video is not Spock. It comes from a novel by Arthur Conan Doyle and said by his character Sherlock Holmes.
A great analysis by agadmator! Thank you Antonio!
Chess is deep and is getting deeper. I apologise for this as I am a theoretician, and I have been helping create this increased complexity.
@3:53 what the issue with capturing the white bishop with you queen?
I'm happy I found Bc2 in 10 or so seconds after pausing. Hard to brag though since I didn't calculate R8xc2, but only saw the mate in 1 after R1xc2. It also helps that it was built up to be a ridiculous looking move.
Chess never stop amaze us
YES!!! I FOUND IT! And no, i'm still a terrible chess player but it seemed the only move to win a tempo and disconnect the coordination of white pieces, of course i didn't remotely know why it works when i found it but my guts told me to try to give material back only to survie!!!
I think it's important to note that in order to win in Ivanchuk's shoes one doesn't need to spot the Bc2 move several moves in advance: it's enough just not to resign and then to spot it later when the time actually comes.
that is just a bad day vasily there.... everybody gets to face that even a legend like him...... still feeling bad for him man.
6:08
Rd8 Qd8 Qa6 black is still up a piece
Found it. Can't wait to go to the bar and library
He probably just wasn't well or needed to go. He is like that. Mad genius :)
The first move considered WAS Bc2 :D
But I couldn't figure out continuation after R8xc2, so I moved on to consider other moves lol
Congratulations to Mr. Harikishna for an excellent game. But I am still a big fan of Mr. Ivanchuk and look forward to seeing more of his games.
Wow! I can imagine this becoming a famous puzzle in a few decades
I found BC2 and I'm not a ranked chess player at all. But if you hadn't told me there was a great move there, I wouldn't have seen it. My thinking was that there was a real need to block the C column to disconnect the rooks. And I saw that the white rook couldn't leave the back rank to capture the bishop, for the reason that you made clear. So either White would be left trying to complete the attack with only the queen and one rook or he'd have to pull the rook back to take the bishop, in which case RB6 (you did QB6) would force at worst a queen trade, since the white queen would have no safe squares. (White could save the queen by trading the rook for the back-rank bishop, but is that better?)
It was really just a combinatorial question. What looked like a queen and two rooks vs a queen and a rook had to be changed by bringing in the bishop that looked like it couldn't do anything.
I found bishop to c2. But I did not see the line as agad said. Still I'm pleased.
As soon as I knew there was a move, I found it in 10 secs. Black has two extra pieces and can easily sacrifice one. One rook must guard the first rank, another one puns the bishop. Either one stops doing its job, it is a break for Black and they force queens exchange
Thank you Antonio. Great video every day. This time I found the right move in about 5 minutes. The key to the solution was timing. I just started my second beer😊
Cheers friend 🍺🍻😊
im almost 40 years old and always remembered ivanchuk as an unique chess player. he finds brilliancies with double exclamations against top masters of his time but never became a world champion challenger.
I agree you are getting older
Hey agadmator, is it possible, to use/show a sidebar with the adventage for black or white during the match?
I found the move!!! my continuation was a little wonky but it seemed like the only way to save the position. Let's gooo
Amazing!
I swear I thought about that bishop move but couldn't see the pawn move afterwards. This line is insane :]
I found the move! I noticed the back rank issues and black has 2 bishops to give up to protect the king. So that bishop move gives some tempo.
I found it without a pause, but only because of Antonios description. I mean, everyone knows breaking the connection of rooks is always uber move. I saw rc6 but immediately realized it fails to queen captures, so there was only one viable option. Though im pretty sure i would never ever play this in a real game.
Antonio at his best! Great video 🫡
Bc2 was the first move i considered in the position, in only a few seconds as well. Im only rated 1600 and i usually dont find the best moves in agad videos so im pretty proud of myself
Yeee.....found it! the qe1 threat is what gave me the idea....bragging rights mode = on!
😀
I did instinctively figured out that you had to move the bishop but definitely I couldn't see where or why.
Wow! Best game you've shown for a while.
This is one of your more excellent videos
Found it immediately just based on intuition and then I had to calculate.
Great video! The (original) quote is actually by Sherlock Holmes, not Spock.
Hi ! One question. The world classic champion Ding Liren where is he ? there has been a number of tournaments and I haven't seen him , nor Agadmator analyze a game by Ding after the World Chess Championship.
I did find Bc2. Not because of any great reason, but mainly because I saw that if R1xc2 it was mate. The idea of R8xc2 didn’t cross my mind.
I found instantly...although over the board I can't because it requires a hell lot of calculation after Qd8
I do not find this move to be so difficult to find, since there are not so many candidate moves and since the continuations Agad suggested for white require the rook lift.
One of the first moves i considered was Bc2 indeed.
I found Bc2 in about 20-30 seconds because I noted black was threatening backrank mate if the rook moved, and also we have two extra bishops so we could throw one away to break momentum ....I feel quite sure Ivanchuk would see this move just as quickly if he simply had the position on the board and didnt quick resign
Doubove did Doubove things yesterday. Could you please make a single video merging them all.
Incredible upset for Ivanchuk. The sight of having his Queen cornered and his King trapped is enough to train wreck most anyone's foresight.
Well his lose made me feel good even the best of the best can lose in such few moves thank you for always sharing the beautiful world of Chess 👊👊👊
Ah, I found the move! Finnaly I'll get to use my bragging rights!
I thought i was so clever when i thought king could still castle 😂 I thought Agad was trying to trick us.
I found it! I admit I did not continue to calculate, since I was sure that is the only move that can be played here. So, I admit I would still lose this horribly, but I did find the first move.
Spock may have said the quote above the board, but Sherlock Holmes said it first
Believe me i found that move!! 😂😂just not all the rest you mentioned.. only seeing he could not capture with rc1
For anyone who doesn’t know that quote at the top was Sherlock holmes not Spock
I found bc2 because it is the only thing that makes sense in the position, but I couldn't see the rest.
Crazy game!
I believe the quote is from Sherlock Homes, "The Hound of the Baskervilles".