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Last Chance!! – Anatoly Karpov vs Garry Kasparov – World Chess Championship 1985 – Game 22

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FIDE introduced a 24 game limit, with the title holder Karpov enjoying draw odds. If Karpov lost, he also had the automatic right to a rematch.[6] The prize for the match was 1.6 million Swiss Francs, with 62.5% going to the champion.[7] For each draw, FIDE would deduct 1% of the purse, and fine each player a further 1%.[2] The arbiters were Andrey Petrov Malchev and Vladas Ivanovich Mikenas.[8] Kasparov had vociferously, and successfully, objected to FIDE’s first choice of Svetozar Gligoric and Anton Kinzel, the arbiters from the Karpov – Kasparov World Championship Match (1984), because he thought they had been too ready to follow Campomanes.[9] Karpov’s seconds were Igor Arkadievich Zaitsev, Yuri Balashov,[10] Efim Geller, Sergey Makarichev and Evgeni Vasiukov.[11] Kasparov’s seconds were Aleksander S Nikitin, assisted by Josif D Dorfman, Gennadi Timoshchenko, Evgeny Vladimirov and Alexander Shakarov.[10] The match was played in the Tchaikovsky Hall, Moscow. Evgeny Vladimirov describes the scene: “…amongst the 1,500 spectators and the tens of millions of Soviet chess fans outside, there are no neutrals… Thousands stand in rows six feet deep all around the cordoned off Mayakovsky Square before the start of each game. A ticket for a good seat costs 2Β½ roubles but on the black market they are changing hands at 15 roubles…”[12]

Kasparov won the 1st game. Karpov evened the score in Game 4 by manoeuvering to build an overwhelming kingside attack, and then went ahead 2-1 when Kasparov pressed too hard for a win in Game 5. Karpov now experienced a period of weak play that lasted throughout the month of October. It started in Game 11, when Karpov made the crude blunder 22…Rcd8. Kasparov won the game with a queen sacrifice, tying the match. Karpov explains that he became distracted when the German news magazine Der Spiegel published a controversial story on September 30. It was about a large sum of money Karpov had allegedly received from a computer sponsorship deal, without notifying the Soviet authorities. This would have constituted a major violation of the exchange control regulations. Karpov was later cleared of the accusations. In an 1988 interview, Karpov agreed with the observation that he never played worse in a match against Kasparov than from October 1 to October 24, 1985. Furthermore, he said that Kasparov would not have become world champion in 1985 without help from Der Spiegel.[13]

In Game 16 Kasparov took the lead with what he regarded to be the “most beautiful” of the match and also “an important turning point. After this game I felt I could win the title, that I must win it. At the same time it became clear that Karpov felt the exact opposite.”[14] Karpov reported that in home analysis before the game, his second Efim Geller had found the improvement 12.Be3, but forgot to tell him![11] After a drawn 17th game Kasparov took a time out, assuming that Karpov would go all out against him with the white pieces in Game 18.[5] Kasparov secured a two point lead when Karpov lashed out unsuccessfully on the kingside in Game 19. The drawn Game 21 ended unexpectedly after Kasparov suddenly noticed a flaw in his adjournment analysis. This seems to have encouraged Karpov, and Kasparov took another time out.[15] Karpov cut the lead to a point by playing aggressively with the white pieces in Game 22. Kasparov explained that he “underestimated the opponent’s pawn offensive on the kingside.”[16] In Game 24 Karpov needed to win in order to tie the match and retain his title. In a “superb fighting game, worthy of a world championship decider,” Karpov built up a promising attacking position, but miscalculated after Kasparov sacrificed two pawns.[17] Garry Kasparov won the game, and so became the 13th world chess champion.

PGN:

1. d4 d5 2. c4 e6 3. Nc3 Be7 4. cxd5 exd5 5. Bf4 Nf6 6. e3 O-O 7. Nf3 Bf5 8. h3 c6 9. g4 Bg6 10. Ne5 Nfd7 11. Nxg6 fxg6 12. Bg2 Nb6 13. O-O Kh8 14. Ne2 g5 15. Bg3 Bd6 16. Qd3 Na6 17. b3 Qe7 18. Bxd6 Qxd6 19. f4 gxf4 20. exf4 Rae8 21. f5 Nc7 22. Rf2 Nd7 23. g5 Qe7 24. h4 Qe3 25. Rd1 Nb5 26. Qxe3 Rxe3 27. Kh2 Nb6 28. Ng3 Nc8 29. Nf1 Re7 30. Rd3 Ncd6 31. Ng3 Ne4 32. Bxe4 dxe4 33. Re3 Nxd4 34. Kh3 Re5 35. Kg4 h5+ 36. Kxh5 Nxf5 37. Rxf5 Rfxf5 38. Nxf5 Rxf5 39. Rxe4 Kh7 40. Re7 b5 41. Rxa7 b4 42. Kg4

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ginger_gm avatar; Simon Williams @ginger_gm ·
4 Oct 2022 1577345190330875922

(4/4) On another note I could do with some tips on how to get a good sleep. It seems like I am a fully fledged insomniac. πŸ˜΅β€πŸ’«
I was in bed at 1am last night but didn't even manage to get 1 minutes sleep after tossing and turning all night. Been awake for about 40 hours now. 😱

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STLChessClub avatar; Saint Louis Chess Club @STLChessClub ·
4 Oct 2022 1577342859849744399

Join us for the US Chess Championships Opening Ceremony in conjunction with celebrating the new inductees into the Chess Hall of Fame at the @AquariumSTL tonight! Check out https://saintlouischessclub.org/2022-us-championships-opening-ceremony for more info and tickets!

#STLChessClub #WorldChessHOF #USChessChamps #HallofFame

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chesscom avatar; Chess.com @chesscom ·
4 Oct 2022 1577342788949131265

Black to move in today's Daily Puzzle! β™œ
Do you see a way to take control of this game? πŸ€”

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Daily Puzzle: 10/04/2022 - A Tale of Two Centralized Pieces

Test your wits with our daily chess puzzles! Sharpen your chess skills with our repository with more than 10 yea...

www.chess.com

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ginger_gm avatar; Simon Williams @ginger_gm ·
4 Oct 2022 1577340399835832322

(3/4) I missed one very likely obvious winning move.
Here I played Bg2? but I should just play Qh6!
For some reason I had missed ...Qxh6 Bxh6 ...Nxc3 a3! Which is game over.
In the end I lost πŸ˜” after Johann played excellently.

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Lona_Chess avatar; Daniel Lona @Lona_Chess ·
4 Oct 2022 1577257221313863680

β™ŸοΈπŸ”₯New pod! πŸ”₯β™ŸοΈ

The ever-charismatic, IM @GregShahade!

In this episode:
β˜‘οΈ How blitz can improve your #chess if you follow his 2 suggestions
β˜‘οΈ Classic & hilarious trash-talking
β˜‘οΈ Will he ever do chess boxing? (Q courtesy of @Bennyficial1)

πŸŽ™οΈListen: https://www.adultchessacademy.com/blog/Ep-37-How-Blitz-Can-Help-&-Time-Management-&-Trash-Talking-with-IM-Greg-Shahade

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