I think he's rightly rated very highly by most people. The Polugaevsky variation of the Sicilian is one of many openings that at the highest levels hasn't survived the computer age, but as long as there's amateur chess, there's no reason it shouldn't thrive. For inventing and vigorously defending that line for decades alone, Polugaevsky deserves his high reputation, aside from his enormous strength as a player. If he's underrated, it's because he's one of the many players dominated by Spassky and Fischer in the 1960s, and by Karpov in the 1970s. Karpov's demolition of him in 1974 shocked everyone at the time -- including Karpov, who didn't rate his chances in the candidate's tournament very highly. The only player who did was Korchnoi, who at the start of the 1974 tournament famously predicted a Korchnoi v Karpov final. All the Soviet players made predictions for the final two, which were then sealed in an envelope only to be revealed once the tournament reached the finals; had Korchnoi's prediction been public, I think people would have wondered if he was joking. To bring it back to the original topic, Karpov and Tal are two players whose improvement during their respective climbs to the world championship astonished everyone. Every round they seemed to reach a new level, and by the end their play was so strong that they were unrecognizable from who they were at the beginning. The tragedy of it was that both of them never reached their potential -- Tal because of his lifelong health problems, and Karpov because of the lack of real competition for the next ten years. He was like the Carlsen of his time: so far ahead of his contemporaries that it was hard for him to find the proper motivation. I can't forgive Fischer for his withdrawal from competition in 1975, first, because we'll never know how it would have turned out and never see the games that would have been played, and second, because Karpov was denied exposure to the only player capable of truly testing his weaknesses while he was still young. Karpov himself played that role for Kasparov ten years later. Compared to Kasparov after the 1984 match with Karpov, Kasparov before the match was unrefined and often put himself in structurally dubious positions, which he was punished for again and again until he was forced to up his game. Anyway, sorry for the essay. Sometimes I just go off on a subject.
@@jessejordache1869 a bit too long for a comment but you said everything correct. I merely meant he is a bit underrated in the social nowadays, seldom his best games are presented.
@@giovannicorno1247 I appreciate the read, and I agree with you. [edit] I'm looking at it in the dropdown for comments and ugh, that's almost unreadable.
Games like this make me doubt whether I've actually been playing chess all these years. I must have been playing some other game. Tal on home soil was something else.
#suggestion Polugaevsky vs Tal 1969 : lot of people analyzed it including Kasparov, Polugaevsky himself, and Geller's comments make the game incredible: he had visited Polugaevsky the day before and on his chessboard was the position reached on move 25, meaning it was a Caruana level of preparation without computer, what a madlads.
Tal was my hero too. I started playing in the 60s and one of the things that I found impressive with Tal was how he reinvented himself in the 70s. He had a long unbeaten streak if I recall and won several strong tournaments. Characterised by quiet openings and the occasional positional win... but the tactics were never far away. Excellent video as always.
Exactly. His games from the 1970s are quieter but tactics always lie somewhere in those positions. He wouldnt sacrifice anything but at the first chance he got, he would latch onto it. He really reinvented himself. Also it must have been an absolute treat to follow chess in that era?the all time greats playing tournaments and getting to follow beautiful games(unlike today where its mostly engine based with few exceptions here and there).
#suggestion Vladimir Simagin vs Leonid Stein (USSR Championship 1961a Tournament) A Crazy Imaginative Game!!! Plz also say something about Wilhelm Steinitz saga.
#suggestion Leonid Stein vs Mikhail Tal 1961 - Stein was one of Tal's undefeated opponents and was an attacking genius like Tal. This game is a wild, attacking, dynamic game with beautiful sacrifices.
I left a comment recommending a Tal Vs Polugaesky. I'm not sure if you uploaded because of it, but it makes me happy. Polugaesky beat Tal with Black pieces in Riga (Tal's home) This should be mentioned. I thought that Lev beat him 6 times, not 8. That may be wrong
7:24 why wouldn't Tal move QxF1 at this point? The King is forced to take, then Nd1 check, and you'll get his Queen for your Knight. You lose a Knight and a Queen for a Rook and a Queen. Surely a good trade, right?
After Nd1+, white queen can go to f4, blocking the check. Then (black) Rxf4, Nxf4. You just traded a queen and a rook from each side, and there's no more attack from black. Besides, in this position, with all the pressure black has, you don't wanna trade queens unless it ensures going into a winning endgame
@@Beery1962 Actually no, because the knight on d1 is lost, can't go anywhere, . White would end with almost a knight up (almost 'cause of 6 pawns for black vs 5 pawns for white)
#Suggestion Gellert Karacsonyi vs Pranav V. 0-1 Reykjavik Open 2023 round 3 An interesting queen endgame nd a smash at the end by Pranav! Your analysis is awaited!
I’m Glad Tal prevailed he is one of my favorite players of all time this was an incredibly elaborate Checkmating idea going on by Tal Lev played as best as could but too much Tal 😂Thanks for the Game
At 9:40 why Lev didn't take the Knight with rook? Like Rxf2 Rxf2+ Qxf2 Rxf2+ Kxf2... Material would be like A Queen for Knight and Rook. Isn't it good??
Sometimes it's not just about understanding how the other player plays, chess goes beyond the board it's about their personalities how they feel next to each other and sometimes players have inexplicably bad scores against a particular player even if that player is lower rated. We are faced this ourselves even with online play.
Fun fact, In the USSR people always said this about Polugaevsky: When it comes to chess he has everything, he can do everything, but he lacks the character of a champion.
He’s saying “zwischenzug,” otherwise known as an in- between move in German. The more popular term for it is “intermezzo” which is the Italian version.
U haven't checked the variation, after the move ..Qxc4 white plays Nxa7+ ..Nxa7, then Qxa7 ..Qxe4 threatening the Nf3, but here, white can play Qa8+ and i think black has to exchange queens or else it's continuous check. I guess black will play ..Kd7 then Qa4+ and now ..Qc6 by Tal. Qxc6 ..Kxc6 and now may be a favourable ending for Tal or sth. But U should have definitively show that one !
Philippine women's chess #suggestion - WGM Janelle Frayna, the female Wesley So, upset Georgian GM (really GM not just WGM) Bela Khotenashvili at the 2022 world blitz. There's a 13-move UNDERPROMOTION puzzle here. [Variant "From Position"] [FEN "6k1/6b1/1p1P3p/6pP/3pPpP1/p2NqP2/6K1/5Q2"] 1. Qd1 a2 2. Qb3+ Kf8 3. d7 Qe2+ 4. Nf2 Ke7 5. Qd5 Kd8 6. Qe6 Bf6 7. Qe8+ Kc7 8. Qc8+ Kd6 9. e5+ Qxe5 10. d8=R+ Bxd8 11. Qxd8+ Kc6 12. Qa8+ Kb5 13. Qxa2 For some reason none of the Philippine channels except Kelvinllovejr even cover this game. LOL. But Janelle did cover the game where e drew against Nemo, so maybe Janelle will cover this game later on. P.S. Please help get Wesley So on Lex Fridman's podcast. See xcdhgq
Lev Polugajevsky is an undervalued super GM, he was in the top 10 for many years.
I think he's rightly rated very highly by most people. The Polugaevsky variation of the Sicilian is one of many openings that at the highest levels hasn't survived the computer age, but as long as there's amateur chess, there's no reason it shouldn't thrive. For inventing and vigorously defending that line for decades alone, Polugaevsky deserves his high reputation, aside from his enormous strength as a player.
If he's underrated, it's because he's one of the many players dominated by Spassky and Fischer in the 1960s, and by Karpov in the 1970s. Karpov's demolition of him in 1974 shocked everyone at the time -- including Karpov, who didn't rate his chances in the candidate's tournament very highly. The only player who did was Korchnoi, who at the start of the 1974 tournament famously predicted a Korchnoi v Karpov final. All the Soviet players made predictions for the final two, which were then sealed in an envelope only to be revealed once the tournament reached the finals; had Korchnoi's prediction been public, I think people would have wondered if he was joking.
To bring it back to the original topic, Karpov and Tal are two players whose improvement during their respective climbs to the world championship astonished everyone. Every round they seemed to reach a new level, and by the end their play was so strong that they were unrecognizable from who they were at the beginning. The tragedy of it was that both of them never reached their potential -- Tal because of his lifelong health problems, and Karpov because of the lack of real competition for the next ten years. He was like the Carlsen of his time: so far ahead of his contemporaries that it was hard for him to find the proper motivation. I can't forgive Fischer for his withdrawal from competition in 1975, first, because we'll never know how it would have turned out and never see the games that would have been played, and second, because Karpov was denied exposure to the only player capable of truly testing his weaknesses while he was still young. Karpov himself played that role for Kasparov ten years later. Compared to Kasparov after the 1984 match with Karpov, Kasparov before the match was unrefined and often put himself in structurally dubious positions, which he was punished for again and again until he was forced to up his game.
Anyway, sorry for the essay. Sometimes I just go off on a subject.
@@jessejordache1869 a bit too long for a comment but you said everything correct. I merely meant he is a bit underrated in the social nowadays, seldom his best games are presented.
@@giovannicorno1247 I appreciate the read, and I agree with you.
[edit] I'm looking at it in the dropdown for comments and ugh, that's almost unreadable.
@@jessejordache1869 Thank you for this! I love more extended insight so don't apologize - YT needs more of this and less of 'first!'
@@jessejordache1869 THANKS FOR THIS VERY INTERESTING AND INFORMATIVE COMMENT! I'VE ENJOYED READING IT A LOT!
What a complicated game!
Perfect example of the famous Tal saying "you must take your opponent to a deep dark forest........."
Games like this make me doubt whether I've actually been playing chess all these years. I must have been playing some other game. Tal on home soil was something else.
Agadmator is such a badass. Best YT channel
#suggestion Polugaevsky vs Tal 1969 : lot of people analyzed it including Kasparov, Polugaevsky himself, and Geller's comments make the game incredible: he had visited Polugaevsky the day before and on his chessboard was the position reached on move 25, meaning it was a Caruana level of preparation without computer, what a madlads.
Wow
You're absolutely my favourite chess commentator. I always learn something new from you
79 Tal feels like an calm storm coming for you
Also in 1979 Tal tied Karpov for first (12/18) in the Montreal super tournament. Check it out.
Tal was my hero too. I started playing in the 60s and one of the things that I found impressive with Tal was how he reinvented himself in the 70s. He had a long unbeaten streak if I recall and won several strong tournaments. Characterised by quiet openings and the occasional positional win... but the tactics were never far away. Excellent video as always.
Exactly. His games from the 1970s are quieter but tactics always lie somewhere in those positions. He wouldnt sacrifice anything but at the first chance he got, he would latch onto it. He really reinvented himself. Also it must have been an absolute treat to follow chess in that era?the all time greats playing tournaments and getting to follow beautiful games(unlike today where its mostly engine based with few exceptions here and there).
How does Antonio upload right when I sit down for my dinner! Bravo, thanks for the game friend! :)
great as always, my friend. Greetings from Argentina
I LOVE that u bringing Talj games back🎉🎉🎉
Great work from The Magician
At 7:28 I found Qxf1 followed by Nd1+ to win back the queen and be up the exchange. Not as crushing as Tal's move though.
🔥🔥🔥
#suggestion
Vladimir Simagin vs Leonid Stein
(USSR Championship 1961a Tournament) A Crazy Imaginative Game!!!
Plz also say something about Wilhelm Steinitz saga.
So Very interesting to learn Nezmetdinov Was a teacher for .Lev Pulgaevsky ! Thank you 🙏
Im here for the "Hello everyone"
More please and thank you
Speaking of Tal, DINA played a game today in ‘Tal like’ fashion‼️ You absolutely MUST take a look at her game today - Dina Belenkaya
#suggestion
My! Who dares to play such a chaos!?
Awesome. Geeze where did that bishop come from at the end. Nice Tal game
Great analysis
Love that Tal Quote.
#suggestion Leonid Stein vs Mikhail Tal 1961 - Stein was one of Tal's undefeated opponents and was an attacking genius like Tal. This game is a wild, attacking, dynamic game with beautiful sacrifices.
And this is why he's known as, "The Magician from Riga". Amazing game with the black pieces.
Tal was the man. One of if not THE most entertaining chess player of all time.
that GIANT g pawn MVP
I left a comment recommending a Tal Vs Polugaesky. I'm not sure if you uploaded because of it, but it makes me happy. Polugaesky beat Tal with Black pieces in Riga (Tal's home) This should be mentioned. I thought that Lev beat him 6 times, not 8. That may be wrong
7:24 why wouldn't Tal move QxF1 at this point? The King is forced to take, then Nd1 check, and you'll get his Queen for your Knight. You lose a Knight and a Queen for a Rook and a Queen. Surely a good trade, right?
that's what I've been wondering too
After Nd1+, white queen can go to f4, blocking the check. Then (black) Rxf4, Nxf4. You just traded a queen and a rook from each side, and there's no more attack from black.
Besides, in this position, with all the pressure black has, you don't wanna trade queens unless it ensures going into a winning endgame
@@Jonathan-ec9pp Yeah, but black is still ahead in material. I still think it's a good trade.
@@Beery1962 Actually no, because the knight on d1 is lost, can't go anywhere, . White would end with almost a knight up (almost 'cause of 6 pawns for black vs 5 pawns for white)
I really appreciate your good work. tal's game is like Christopher Nolan
movies. complicate mystery dark.
Tough choice, like trying to pick between 50s Elvis in Memphis and 70s Elvis in Vegas.
Amazing game... One of Magician's masterpieces
I got the PTV. I can play like Tal! Okay, not so much. But it's a good feeling, thanks Agad.
What a man Rashid was!!!!As People Trained with Him, They Came To know how Complicated tal Played.
Sometimes I wonder if it's worth watching a different chess youtuber just for some variety, but then why bother when Agadmator is just so crushing
#Suggestion
Gellert Karacsonyi vs Pranav V. 0-1
Reykjavik Open 2023 round 3
An interesting queen endgame nd a smash at the end by Pranav!
Your analysis is awaited!
20 years of age difference changed games a lot.😮
I have so much trouble reading the quotes on my phone. Can you make the type a little bigger please
Polugaevsky was technically playing down a piece the entire game. His dark square bishop didn't move once!
I also like to live dangerously...
Headline is great.
Just devastating.
Please keep the Tal's games coming
I’m Glad Tal prevailed he is one of my favorite players of all time this was an incredibly elaborate Checkmating idea going on by Tal Lev played as best as could but too much Tal 😂Thanks for the Game
Someone wake the dark square bishop, my man didnt do anything
At 9:40 why Lev didn't take the Knight with rook? Like Rxf2 Rxf2+ Qxf2 Rxf2+ Kxf2... Material would be like A Queen for Knight and Rook. Isn't it good??
Qxe4 is coming
Bishop to d4 w ✅️ is coming
& in general, a Rook is worth 5points , a ♞ is worth 3points , & a Queen is worth 9points
Can somebody tell me why pawn f2 check isn't a good move? @10:07
08:37 wouldn't Ba3 solve the hanging pieces?
Rashid Nezhmedinov Vs
Polugayevski the greatest game ever!
#suggestion
Sometimes it's not just about understanding how the other player plays, chess goes beyond the board it's about their personalities how they feel next to each other and sometimes players have inexplicably bad scores against a particular player even if that player is lower rated. We are faced this ourselves even with online play.
Even the Hal 9000 couldn't beat Tal! 😉
FYI "trick" doesn't really mean what you might think it means. Better would be, "I don't want to misinform you (guys)". Great game!
#suggestion Rashid vs Timofeev 1970. Spectacular game.
If only tal stuck around for a little bit longer
Nice video
More videos for Rashid Neghmenidov please
i got aa headache watching this
In that first pause the video, I thought rook F to F3 is the best one hahaha, but I guess its a good move too... somewhere 7:20
We must mention that Lev Polugaevsky BEAT Tal in RIGA (Tal's homeland) with the BLACK pieces. That is no easy feat.
It's not the same without when Tal do not sacrifices
but he is my favorite chess player and I like him anyway.
Hi Agad, you should try to promote Polugaevsky by showing some more vids of his great games. Just a thought
Is the a Nezhmedhinov saga?
Which website/program are you using for the chess analysis?
Breath my friend
Fun fact, In the USSR people always said this about Polugaevsky:
When it comes to chess he has everything, he can do everything, but he lacks the character of a champion.
Please show this type of rocking game.
White's dark bishop messed up any chance of defense....painful
Tal,Tal but what about Medo? 🙂👀
😎😎
It's very difficult to defeat a player of your own style
4:07. A nice what?
4:05 😅
He’s saying “zwischenzug,” otherwise known as an in- between move in German. The more popular term for it is “intermezzo” which is the Italian version.
gg
total annihilation
A question:Qf3 of Lev and not Qe2 is bad?
No, it's the engine's top move, and also the most popular. However, this is a very rare position.
😵
I thought Qxf1 was winning in the pause the video moment 7:22
After nb4 Qb3 could played instead of Qe3 because if knight moves just queen exchange
👍
Brutal attack
Tal is brutal!
🙂
Who was the best Attacker? Tal.
Ok, who was 2nd best? Younger Tal!
On 7'30, how about black queen x rook f1, then white king x queen f1, then knight d1 check and also can capture white queen?
Such a complicated game. Make my head spin. And lose hope of being a great chess player. Cant sere trhough any of the position and moves.
Talismmm💥💥💥💥
This might be the best win with black in history
Want to see a match where Tal got eliminated by him.
U haven't checked the variation, after the move ..Qxc4 white plays Nxa7+ ..Nxa7, then Qxa7 ..Qxe4 threatening the Nf3, but here, white can play Qa8+ and i think black has to exchange queens or else it's continuous check. I guess black will play ..Kd7 then Qa4+ and now ..Qc6 by Tal. Qxc6 ..Kxc6 and now may be a favourable ending for Tal or sth. But U should have definitively show that one !
great game!
People trained under Rashid are like...........
from ph
AlgorithmFood!
Obviously h5 mate is better....
queen to e2.. how about queen to f3.. !!!
TAL is the only master FOREVER
Soviet vs Soviet
Philippine women's chess #suggestion - WGM Janelle Frayna, the female Wesley So, upset Georgian GM (really GM not just WGM) Bela Khotenashvili at the 2022 world blitz.
There's a 13-move UNDERPROMOTION puzzle here.
[Variant "From Position"]
[FEN "6k1/6b1/1p1P3p/6pP/3pPpP1/p2NqP2/6K1/5Q2"]
1. Qd1 a2 2. Qb3+ Kf8 3. d7 Qe2+ 4. Nf2 Ke7 5. Qd5 Kd8 6. Qe6 Bf6 7. Qe8+ Kc7 8. Qc8+ Kd6 9. e5+ Qxe5 10. d8=R+ Bxd8 11. Qxd8+ Kc6 12. Qa8+ Kb5 13. Qxa2
For some reason none of the Philippine channels except Kelvinllovejr even cover this game. LOL. But Janelle did cover the game where e drew against Nemo, so maybe Janelle will cover this game later on.
P.S. Please help get Wesley So on Lex Fridman's podcast. See
xcdhgq