Dzagnidze - Lei | Zukertort system | Landing on beautiful square
In this women's chess championship match Georgian player Nana Dzagnidze played Chinese grand master Lei Tingjie. Even though game started as an English opening, it by move 10 transposed into Zukertort-Colle System. This variation is very solid for white as White will have all its pieces developed by any means, it doesn't have a lot of forced lines and White normally will slowly push in the middle game. ► SUB: https://bit.ly/36J8of0 ► DONATE: https://bit.ly/2XSayGS ► INSTAGRAM: / instagrapido ► FB: / razdvatriceture 2019 King Salman World Rapid & Blitz Championships Moscow, 2019 Dzagnidze, Nana - Lei, Tingjie Women's World Blitz Championship 2019 round 13 1. c4 e6 2. Nf3 d5 3. e3 Nf6 4. b3 b6 5. Bb2 Bb7 6. Nc3 Nbd7 7. d4 Bd6 8. Bd3 O-O 9. O-O a6 10. cxd5 exd5 11. Ne2 Qe7 12. Ng3 g6 13. Rc1 Rfe8 14. Qc2 Rac8 15. Rfe1 Ne4 16. Qe2 Ra8 17. Bxe4 dxe4 18. Nd2 h5 19. Nc4 h4 20. Nf1 Nf6 21. h3 Bd5 22. Nxd6 cxd6 23. Rc2 Reb8 24. Rec1 Ne8 25. Ba3 Qd7 26. Nd2 a5 27. f3 exf3 28. Nxf3 Be4 29. Rd2 a4 30. b4 Rc8 31. Rdd1 Bxf3 32. Qxf3 d5 33. Qf4 Nd6 34. b5 Nc4 35. Bb4 Re8 36. Re1 Re4 37. Qf6 Rae8 38. a3 Qe6 39. Qg5 Rxe3 40. Qxh4 Kg7 41. Qf2 Qe4 42. Rcd1 Re2 43. Rxe2 Qxe2 44. Re1 Qxf2+ 45. Kxf2 Rxe1 46. Kxe1 Ne3 47. Kd2 Nc4+ 48. Ke2 Kf6 49. Kf3 Ke6 50. h4 Nb2 51. g4 Nc4 52. h5 gxh5 53. gxh5 Kf5 54. h6 Kg6 55. Bf8 f6 56. Kf4 Nd2 57. Bb4 Ne4 58. Bf8 Nc3 59. Bc5 Nxb5 60. Bxb6 Nxa3 61. Bd8 Nc2 62. h7 Kxh7 63. Bxf6 a3 0-1 Colle and Koltanowski each won many tournaments in the 1920s and 1930s. Colle finished ahead of Tartakower, Euwe and Rubinstein at various times.[1] The opening had even been referred to as the “dreaded” Colle System.[2] George Koltanowski, in his book, “The Colle System” said it offered “solid development”, combinations, a decent endgame, and it gives White “good chances of not losing against a stronger player”.[3] However, players like Capablanca and Tal found ways to take the sting out of some of its various lines. One such line that has been tested is 3...Bf5, sometimes called the “Anti-Colle.” [4] Plan for White Ignoring Black's responses in order to consider White's moves only, the typical plan is as follows: 1.d4 2.Nf3 3.e3 4.Bd3 5.0-0 6.Re1 7.c3 8.Nbd2 9.e4, with White rearranging the move order appropriately. It is a perfectly solid scheme of development, but, inflexibly applied, it cannot offer more than equality against a vigorous Black response. It may be a good tool for avoiding book variations, for Blitz play, or for forcing opponents to think for themselves early on. These days it is considered totally innocuous,[5] and is rarely seen at Master level or above. The strategic plan behind the Colle System is to aim for a kingside attack. The black king's knight will be either exchanged off on e4, or driven away by the advance e4–e5. This removes a guard from the h7 square, often enabling a classic bishop sacrifice on h7 as the start of a mating attack. Some authors even call this sacrifice "Colle's sacrifice". Lei Tingjie (born 13 March 1997[2]) is a Chinese chess grandmaster. She won the Women's Chinese Chess Championship in 2017. Career In 2014, Lei won the 4th China Women Masters Tournament in Wuxi on tie-break from Ju Wenjun and was awarded the title of Woman Grandmaster (WGM) by FIDE. In 2015, she won the women's open event of the Moscow Open, ahead of World Junior Girls Champion Aleksandra Goryachkina. Lei competed in the Women's World Chess Championship 2015, where she was knocked out in the second round by top seed Humpy Koneru. In December 2015, Lei tied for 1st–5th with Alexander Zubarev, Olexandr Bortnyk, Jure Skoberne and Maximilian Neef in the 32nd Böblingen International Open scoring 7/9 points. In 2016, she played on the gold medal-winning Chinese team in the women's event of the Asian Nations Cup in Dubai. She was awarded the full Grandmaster title in March 2017. In June, Lei won the 6th Chinese Women's Masters Tournament in Wuxi, ahead of Women's World Champion Tan Zhongyi. In December, Lei took the silver medal in the Women's World Rapid Chess Championship in Riyadh. In January 2018, Lei won the 43rd Sevilla International Chess Open. Blitz chess and rapid chess video. Live blitz and rapid chess. Rapid chess and blitz chess tournaments Blitz chess (also known as speed or fast chess) is a type of chess in which each player is given less time to consider their moves than normal tournament time controls allow. Openings, tactics and strategy are same. Nana Dzagnidze (Georgian: ნანა ძაგნიძე; born 1 January 1987) is a Georgian chess player. She was awarded the title of Grandmaster by FIDE in 2008. Dzagnidze was a member of the gold medal-winning Georgian team in the Women's Chess Olympiad in 2008 and European women's individual champion in 2017.

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