Vasyl Ivanchuk's Games from Linares 1991

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  • Опубликовано: 26 сен 2024
  • Check out Ben's Chessable courses here! www.chessable.... GM Ben Finegold discusses four of Vasyl Ivanchuk's wins from his first place finish in Linares 1991. This lecture was recorded March 3, 2021, at the Chess Club and Scholastic Center of Atlanta (CCSCATL) in Roswell, Georgia.
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    5:30
    Ivanchuk, Vasyl - Kasparov, Garry
    Linares (1991)
    20:00
    Ivanchuk, Vasyl - Karpov, Anatoly
    Linares (1991)
    26:50
    Anand, Vishy - Ivanchuk, Vasyl
    Linares (1991)
    36:16
    Ivanchuk, Vasyl - Gelfand, Boris
    Linares (1991)
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    GM Ben Finegold's personal RUclips channel: / gmbenjaminfinegold
    Intro and concluding music: “Da Jazz Blues,” by Doug Maxwell; • Da Jazz Blues - Doug M... Thank you Doug!

Комментарии • 66

  • @ibazulic
    @ibazulic Год назад +81

    The first game Ivanchuk vs Kasparov is an amazing masterpiece. To beat Kasparov in his peak like this is nothing short of amazing.

    • @h0wnr681
      @h0wnr681 Год назад +8

      I think it's considered to be Ivanchuk's immortal game, it's definitely in my top 5 favorite chess games of all time. Just a stunning strategic coup.

    • @mno7pro323
      @mno7pro323 Год назад +9

      Qh8 is the saddest move I have ever seen in my life
      Kasparov probably didn't believe he was losing like that to this guy

    • @Budha3773
      @Budha3773 Год назад +1

      @Keith Alfred Anthony Donovan true, but it wasn’t about Kasparov in that game

  • @fingerprince_
    @fingerprince_ Год назад +30

    I've watched all of Ben's lectures and this is easily my favourite. This event is such a great moment in chess history, Ivanchuk playing at his best like this is surely some of the most intelligent and inventive chess ever played. To beat Kasporov (during a good tournament for him!!) in such a way, both strategically and tactically utterly outplaying him, it's ludicrous.

  • @justchessminiatures1167
    @justchessminiatures1167 Год назад +34

    And can you name those to whom you could apply the term “genius”?
    Ivanchuk, Carlsen and Anand.
    -Judit Polgar

  • @KeithWhalen11
    @KeithWhalen11 Год назад +6

    That position is incredible. A star-studded back rank being protected by the nakedest king of all-time.

  • @antonmladenov161
    @antonmladenov161 Год назад +8

    Wish I could like this video more than once, always love Chucky's games!

    • @sasquatch2
      @sasquatch2 Год назад

      You can like this video twice, this is a repost

  • @socksgratecheese
    @socksgratecheese Год назад +2

    I'm glad i got a chance to like this video twice! Ben your analysis is the best.

  • @gishena
    @gishena 3 месяца назад

    Thanks Ben, I remember you telling this story, was searching for it for a long time!

  • @GustavoLL25
    @GustavoLL25 3 месяца назад

    Extraordinary comments by Great Master Ben!! Looks the games easier to understand...

  • @MagmaTeja
    @MagmaTeja Год назад +6

    got here so fast the video title says Vasyl Ivanchuk

    • @vasivasi4892
      @vasivasi4892 Год назад

      Me too hahahaha

    • @MrCheeze
      @MrCheeze Год назад +2

      That title is correct.

    • @FrogSkull
      @FrogSkull Год назад +6

      It's the Ukrainian version of his name (Vasili is the Russian version), which he started using after the invasion.

  • @hideomituns2184
    @hideomituns2184 Год назад +1

    Mr GMFinegold looking happier and healthier recently. Thanks for the lecture. Was really insightful. Recaps of Wijk were top notch as well.

    • @dw3yn693
      @dw3yn693 Год назад

      This lecture is from March 2021 its just a reupload from the old channel

    • @leagueaddict8357
      @leagueaddict8357 Год назад

      @@dw3yn693 Oof, poor ben being called a poor aging guy

  • @williamangelogonzales148
    @williamangelogonzales148 Год назад +7

    Chess start 6:00

  • @kdub1242
    @kdub1242 Год назад +4

    Two pairs of games - one for each of you.

  • @LittOnTheFifty
    @LittOnTheFifty Год назад +4

    Ivanchuk is a monster -- one of my favorites from my parent's generation. Second, of course, to Ben! Go 1969!!!

  • @Stromecek1000
    @Stromecek1000 Год назад +5

    wait i've seen this lecture before

    • @hindifandubs
      @hindifandubs Год назад +1

      Yes this is an old lecture. It was on youtube earlier.

  • @duncanglen3452
    @duncanglen3452 Месяц назад

    Love the interjection at around 9 mins 😂

  • @majidabdi9743
    @majidabdi9743 2 месяца назад

    Good lecture. For the Karpov game, perhaps explain how RC6 (passive defense) neutralizes g4.

  • @andriyandriychuk
    @andriyandriychuk Год назад +6

    Damn! Just watched this lecture but on UA YT channel! I'm from Ukraine 🇺🇦 Proud 💙💛

  • @yotoober1
    @yotoober1 Год назад +6

    Looking at Vasyl's '91 Linares, Can you do a video on the best tnmt performance of ALL TIME?
    KARPOV '94 Linares
    Score: 11/13 no losses
    Perf rating: 2985 😮
    There were 6-7 future/current world clampions or WC Candidates in the tnmt.
    Stock 🐟 would be proud.
    And what would be today's inflated rating of 2985 almost 30 years later? Like 3100 😯
    A virtual human Stockfish 🐟

    • @websnarf
      @websnarf Год назад +3

      The impression I had, was that the tournament was "tainted" by a kind of weird incentive by the then president of FIDE Campomanes. He paid players bonuses for playing "exciting" games, or penalized them for boring draws -- I can't remember whether it was one, the other, or both. So, everyone was playing unusually aggressively. Except for Karpov, because he just doesn't play that way. The result was that when everyone was playing against Karpov, they were playing like they were uncontrolled patzers playing cheapos, which Karpov just ate up for lunch. At least that's how I remember it, which would explain why nobody bothered to really analyze the games from this tournament, or make much note about Karpov winning with such an absurdly high score. I think Fabiano's massacre in St Louis several years ago is still the true best performance in a tournament of any chess player in history.

    • @thechosenone1192
      @thechosenone1192 Год назад +4

      fabi at 2014 sinquefield? beating 7 top 10 players in a row at 3105 rating perf.

  • @GozarianGozar
    @GozarianGozar Год назад +1

    Love me some Ivanchuk

  • @Opferschach
    @Opferschach Год назад +3

    Could it be that I have already seen that lecture almost two years ago on the Chess Club and Scholastic Center of Atlanta channel?

    • @robertr7923
      @robertr7923 Год назад

      Yes. The date is 3 March 2021 it says at the start

  • @lavitaingiallo2767
    @lavitaingiallo2767 Год назад +6

    Nooo a reupload... very suspicious.
    Btw beautiful lecture. Go Ben!

  • @yotoober1
    @yotoober1 Год назад +2

    Anatoly Karpov crushed the field with a performance that I personally believe has never been duplicated to this day.
    Following copied from a from a chartroom:
    The Ultimate Boa Constrictor, Karpov, playing for the slow accumulation of microscopic advantages the opponent not noticing until all of a sudden, he realizes that his position is lost. (Just like 🐟 plays! 😫 )
    In my opinion, you could easily make the argument that Karpov was the greatest champion ever.
    He twice defeated the arguably best player never to become world champion, Korchnoi.
    He jumped to a 5-0 games won advantage against Kasparov, in the WCC Match, whom many consider the greatest champion ever, before political shenanigans stopped the match.
    ***His performance in the 94 Linares Tournament will never be duplicated again, scoring *11/13 no losses* for a tournament performance rating ELO 2985!! With ratings inflation of 28 years, ELO would probably be easily 3100 today! A virtual human Stockfish 15 🐟 decades before it's time.
    Also, that tournament included at least 6 or 7 future world champions and or world champion match runner ups from all chess orgs., FIDE, PCA/GMA etc and you could even technically add the women's future world champion Judit Polgar. (whom Kasparov cheated against in that game, double touching a piece, caught on camera 📸)
    The talent in the 94 Linares Tournament was incredible.
    The field at Linares 1994 was one of the strongest ever, and Kasparov prior to the event commented that the winner could rightly call himself "world champion of tournament chess". He were to regret having said that. 😒 Karpov smashed 🔨 the chess world elite to bits and pieces with an amazing score of 11/13 (+9 =4 -0) and a record performance rating of **2985**, (Google it!) after having won his first 6 games and left Kasparov and Shirov 2.5 points behind. This was arguably the greatest achievement in the history of tournament chess
    They were: PCA World Champion Garry Kasparov (Elo rated #1 in the world), FIDE World Champion Anatoly Karpov (#2), future WC Viswanathan Anand (#3), WCC candidate Alexey Shirov (#4), WCC Candidate Vassily Ivanchuk (#5), future WC Vladimir Kramnik (#6), future WC Gata Kamsky (#7), WC Candidate Evgeny Bareev (#8), future WC Boris Gelfand (#9), GM Alexander Beliavsky (#16), future FIDE WC Veselin Topalov (#20) from Bulgaria, the best female player, future Women's WCC Judit Polgar (#22) from Hungary, Joel Lautier (#26) from France, and Miguel Illescas Cordoba (#68) from Spain. Of the the top 10 players, only Valery Salov (#10) was missing.
    Amazing feat not even today duplicated by Carlsen! 🏆

  • @YoussefRahoui
    @YoussefRahoui Год назад

    One of the greatest games ever played. Ivanchuk’s Mona Lisa.

  • @1man1bike1road
    @1man1bike1road Год назад

    saw him in gibraltar shook his hand a living legend of Chess

  • @chanky1000
    @chanky1000 Год назад

    8:40 good to remember

  • @strangelyrepulsive77
    @strangelyrepulsive77 Год назад +3

    korchnoi was almost 60

  • @andriyandriychuk
    @andriyandriychuk Год назад +1

    Ukraine also has Muzychuk sisters, they're good at chess

  • @Jabadamazo
    @Jabadamazo Год назад +1

    Why at 11:00 is is Kasparov not playing E5? It opens up a nice diagonal for the bishop and forces a tempo on the queen. Clearly I'm missing something - can someone better than me explain that? Seems an obvious move to me. Thanks!

    • @brigidwell
      @brigidwell Год назад

      I'm just speculating here, but it seems like ...e5 loses more ground than it gains. It seriously weakens the d5 and f5 squares which don't have pawns to cover them due to the way the opening was played, and white knights can pounce into these squares very quickly. The tempo is probably worth much less than normal in this position since it's slightly closed and both sides are strategically building. I like the idea to try to help Black's LSB, but ...e5 it may make things even more bottled up for his DSB which is an even more awkward piece. Black needs a plan to reliably unwind his position, and he was probably looking desperately for anything he could including a possible e5 break, but here it would've probably led to white immediately attacking.

    • @Jabadamazo
      @Jabadamazo Год назад +2

      @@brigidwell Wow, there is so much about chess I don't understand lol. Thanks! I appreciate the input.

  • @f.d.3289
    @f.d.3289 Месяц назад

    crushes one world champion after the other, but the main takeaway here is that he is a good checkers player xD

  • @NickKravitz
    @NickKravitz Год назад

    Where does Ben publish the zoom link to watch his lectures live?

  • @andyjackson2891
    @andyjackson2891 6 месяцев назад +1

    17:28 Kasparov creates the first Chess 960 losing game as black.

  • @doesntMetter1
    @doesntMetter1 Год назад +1

    So he beat the former, current and future world champions in the same tournament? What a beast!

  • @g412bb
    @g412bb Год назад +5

    Even the best SGM's know that the outcome of a game against Ivanchuk is an uncertainty.

  • @f.d.3289
    @f.d.3289 Год назад

    8:55 sounds like someone fainted

  • @chrisSo91
    @chrisSo91 Год назад

    Why did Kasparov play kg7? That looks like the most anti-positional move I've ever seen.

  • @jorghofmeister5225
    @jorghofmeister5225 Год назад +3

    Ivanchually, he won the game.

  • @sniffableandirresistble
    @sniffableandirresistble Год назад

    How was Topolov ever World Champion seems so unremarkable

  • @georgesikonomou3895
    @georgesikonomou3895 Год назад

    I have a silly question but why didn't Karpov played in that tournament?
    Was he sick or something?

  • @liorlioravraham9630
    @liorlioravraham9630 Год назад

    qg8

  • @ahrrydepp493
    @ahrrydepp493 Год назад

    Re

  • @abdulrahmansalameh8540
    @abdulrahmansalameh8540 Год назад +1

    No talking

  • @zacharyheflin6794
    @zacharyheflin6794 Год назад

    With a name like IvanChuk you know your in for a hard fight

  • @quarlmephystodot2201
    @quarlmephystodot2201 Год назад

    why does he grrr his voice so fake

  • @allanturmaine5496
    @allanturmaine5496 Год назад

    Which will win, my love for Ivanchuk's games or my disdain for listening to this man talk?

  • @andriyandriychuk
    @andriyandriychuk Год назад +2

    Ivanchuk is the most famous UA GM, born in Lviv, Ukraine

  • @1010tuta
    @1010tuta Год назад

    Go ben! Etc