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Cassidy Noble에서 제공하는 콘텐츠입니다. 에피소드, 그래픽, 팟캐스트 설명을 포함한 모든 팟캐스트 콘텐츠는 Cassidy Noble 또는 해당 팟캐스트 플랫폼 파트너가 직접 업로드하고 제공합니다. 누군가가 귀하의 허락 없이 귀하의 저작물을 사용하고 있다고 생각되는 경우 여기에 설명된 절차를 따르실 수 있습니다 https://ko.player.fm/legal.
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In Her Ellement


1 Navigating Career Pivots and Grit with Milo’s Avni Patel Thompson 26:18
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How do you know when it’s time to make your next big career move? With International Women’s Day around the corner, we are excited to feature Avni Patel Thompson, Founder and CEO of Milo. Avni is building technology that directly supports the often overlooked emotional and logistical labor that falls on parents—especially women. Milo is an AI assistant designed to help families manage that invisible load more efficiently. In this episode, Avni shares her journey from studying chemistry to holding leadership roles at global brands like Adidas and Starbucks, to launching her own ventures. She discusses how she approaches career transitions, the importance of unpleasant experiences, and why she’s focused on making everyday life easier for parents. [01:26] Avni's University Days and Early Career [04:36] Non-Linear Career Paths [05:16] Pursuing Steep Learning Curves [11:51] Entrepreneurship and Safety Nets [15:22] Lived Experiences and Milo [19:55] Avni’s In Her Ellement Moment [20:03] Reflections Links: Avni Patel Thompson on LinkedIn Suchi Srinivasan on LinkedIn Kamila Rakhimova on LinkedIn Ipsos report on the future of parenting About In Her Ellement: In Her Ellement highlights the women and allies leading the charge in digital, business, and technology innovation. Through engaging conversations, the podcast explores their journeys—celebrating successes and acknowledging the balance between work and family. Most importantly, it asks: when was the moment you realized you hadn’t just arrived—you were truly in your element? About The Hosts: Suchi Srinivasan is an expert in AI and digital transformation. Originally from India, her career includes roles at trailblazing organizations like Bell Labs and Microsoft. In 2011, she co-founded the Cleanweb Hackathon, a global initiative driving IT-powered climate solutions with over 10,000 members across 25+ countries. She also advises Women in Cloud, aiming to create $1B in economic opportunities for women entrepreneurs by 2030. Kamila Rakhimova is a fintech leader whose journey took her from Tajikistan to the U.S., where she built a career on her own terms. Leveraging her English proficiency and international relations expertise, she discovered the power of microfinance and moved to the U.S., eventually leading Amazon's Alexa Fund to support underrepresented founders. Subscribe to In Her Ellement on your podcast app of choice to hear meaningful conversations with women in digital, business, and technology.…
Blindfold Chess Podcast
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Cassidy Noble에서 제공하는 콘텐츠입니다. 에피소드, 그래픽, 팟캐스트 설명을 포함한 모든 팟캐스트 콘텐츠는 Cassidy Noble 또는 해당 팟캐스트 플랫폼 파트너가 직접 업로드하고 제공합니다. 누군가가 귀하의 허락 없이 귀하의 저작물을 사용하고 있다고 생각되는 경우 여기에 설명된 절차를 따르실 수 있습니다 https://ko.player.fm/legal.
A bi-weekly look into a chess game between 20-25 moves. The goal is to help players work on their visualization by examining games of the Masters.
63 에피소드
모두 재생(하지 않음)으로 표시
Manage series 3454874
Cassidy Noble에서 제공하는 콘텐츠입니다. 에피소드, 그래픽, 팟캐스트 설명을 포함한 모든 팟캐스트 콘텐츠는 Cassidy Noble 또는 해당 팟캐스트 플랫폼 파트너가 직접 업로드하고 제공합니다. 누군가가 귀하의 허락 없이 귀하의 저작물을 사용하고 있다고 생각되는 경우 여기에 설명된 절차를 따르실 수 있습니다 https://ko.player.fm/legal.
A bi-weekly look into a chess game between 20-25 moves. The goal is to help players work on their visualization by examining games of the Masters.
63 에피소드
모든 에피소드
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Blindfold Chess Podcast

This week, we are looking at a 5-time US Women’s Olympiad participant, a 2-time Women’s World Chess Championship participant, a 21-time US Women’s Championship participant, and a lover of all things penguins - Women’s Grandmaster Tatev Abrahamyan. Born in Armenia, Tatev learned to play chess at the age of 8 when her father took her to the Chess Olympiad of 1996 which took place in her home country. While there, she met Grandmaster Judit Polgar - who at the age of 18 was competing in the Open division of the Olympiad and was the only woman in the Top 10 in the world. Tatev had commented - “I was in complete awe. My first thought was, ‘I want to be just like her’” .The following year, she established her first FIDE rating of 2113. In 2001, her family moved from Armenia to the United States. It did not take long for her to start making waves in the United States. Her first tournament was the 37th Annual American Open. She finished with a score of 4.5 out of 8 but it was good enough for a provisional rating of 2266 which was above the threshold for United States National Master… from 1 tournament. Two years later, she played in the US Junior Championship finishing in the middle of the pack of 10 players, but she was also the only female player in the tournament. In her second round of going to the Olympiad, Team USA placed 5th. That same year, she also picked up her Womens Grandmaster Title - which requires a FIDE rating above 2300 of at least 30 games and 2 norms. If that wasn’t enough, she also had her focus split between chess and studying as she earned a dual degree from California State University Long Beach for Psychology and Political Science. 2012, she was back to the US Women’s Championship in 6th and back to the Olympiad - this time Team USA finished in 10th place. Toward the end of the year, Abrahamyan played in her first Women’s World Chess Championship - a 64 player knockout tournament to see who would become the Women’s World Champion. She was seeded 51st and faced Alexandra Kostenuik the 14th seed where she lost and was eliminated ½ to 1 ½ . 2013 - she finished 3rd in the US Women’s Championship. 2014 - she ended in a 3-way tie for first at the US Women’s Championship where Irina Krush ended up the winner after rapid playoff games. Again by finishing in the top 3, Tatev had punched her ticket to the 2015 World Women’s Championship. She also played in the Olympiad - this time Team USA finished in 8th. The next year, she finished 7th at the US Women’s Championship and entered the Women’s World Championship as the 53rd seed. Her round 1 opponent was Dronavalli Harika, the 12th seed. Tatev ended up 0-2 and was eliminated. 2016, she finished 2nd at the US Women’s Championship. To round out her participation at the US Women’s Championship: In 2017 she came in 8th. 2018 - 6th, 2019 - 3rd. 2020 - 5th. 2021 - 4th. 2022 - 5th. 2023 - 4th. 2024 - 9th. For today’s game, we are traveling to the United States Championship back in 2006. Tatev Abrahamyan versus Natasha Christansen. Now, if we’re ready… let’s begin 1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 g6 3. d4 cxd4 4. Nxd4 Nc6 5. Nc3 Bg7 6. Be3 Nf6 7. Bc4 Qa5 8. O-O O-O 9. Nb3 Qd8 10. f4 d6 11. h3 Bd7 12. Qe2 Na5 13. Nxa5 Qxa5 14. Bb3 Bc6 15. Bf2 Rac8 16. Rad1 a6 17. Bh4 Rfe8 18. e5 Nd7 19. e6 fxe6 20. Bxe6+ Kh8 21. f5 Rc7 22. fxg6 hxg6 23. Rf5 Qxf5 24. Bxf5 gxf5 25. Qh5+ 1-0 https://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1399216 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tatev_Abrahamyan https://blindfoldchesspodcast.com/…
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Blindfold Chess Podcast

Hello everyone, this week we are looking at the youngest Alberta champion, at one point the highest rated bullet player on Chess.com, the highest rated active Canadian player, and a founder of the Youtube and Twitch channel the “Chessbrahs” - Eric Hansen. A couple of years after he started playing chess, in 2003, he participated in the Alberta Provincial Under 12 Championship where he scored 1st with a score of 5 out of 6 and established his provisional Canadian rating at 1316. Quickly, his Canadian rating started to skyrocket. By the end of that year, his rating was 1400. By the end of 2004, it was 1800. In 2005, he reached 2050. In 2006, he played in the Under 14 Alberta Championship and the Alberta Junior Championship - going undefeated and winning both tournaments. Two years later with his Canadian rating above 2300, Eric won the Under 16 Alberta Championship, he finished 1st at the Alberta Championship, and he finished in a tie for 1st at the Alberta Open to become the youngest Alberta Champion in history at the age of 15. Once that tournament concluded, Hansen attended the University of Texas on a chess scholarship. It was also around this time that he started to use the name ‘Chessbrah’ as one of his usernames on various chess websites like the Internet Chess Club or ChessCube. He also started to do live broadcasts of him playing on a website called livestream which was shutdown in January 2025. Toward the end of the year, he played in the American Continental Championship in Argentina. More than 200 players participated with the top 4 qualifying for the 2013 FIDE World Cup. Hansen finished in a 5-way tie for first. Since there were only 4 spots available, the 5 winners had to play rapid tie-breaks to determine who advanced. Hansen finished in 4th to grab the final World Cup spot. To cap off the year, he also won the Canadian Chess Player of the Year. The next year, he found himself tying for first with Nigel Short at the Canadian Open. He also found himself back at the FIDE World Cup - this time, seeded 98th out of 128. Again, he was eliminated in the 1st round, this time to Vladimir Malakhov who was the 31st seed with a score of ½ to 1 ½ . In 2014, he returned to the Olympiad - this time on board 2 scoring 5 out of 9. 2015, saw Eric back at the top of the Canadian Closed - this time in a 3 way tie for first. As of writing this, Eric is still an active player. He is sitting atop the Canadian rating list of active players by over 100 points and he is rated 150th in the world. The Chessbrah Youtube channel has almost 350,000 subscribers, they’ve amassed 170,000,000 channel views, and their Twitch account has 330,000 followers. For today’s game, we are going back just a couple of years to the World Blitz Championship of 2019 in Moscow. Eric Hansen versus Alexey Kim. Now, if we’re ready… let’s begin. 1. e4 e6 2. d4 b6 3. Bd3 Bb7 4. Nf3 g6 5. O-O Bg7 6. Re1 Ne7 7. a4 a6 8. Nbd2 O-O 9. c3 f5 10. b3 Qc8 11. Ba3 Re8 12. exf5 Nxf5 13. h4 Nc6 14. h5 Qd8 15. hxg6 hxg6 16. Ne4 Nce7 17. Qd2 Nd5 18. Ne5 Bxe5 19. dxe5 Qh4 20. g3 Qh3 21. Bf1 Qg4 22. Qxd5 Bxd5 23. Nf6+ Kf7 24. Nxg4 Rh8 25. Bg2 1-0 https://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1987346 Eric Hansen | Chess Celebrities - Chess.com https://www.youtube.com/chessbrah https://blindfoldchesspodcast.com/…
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Blindfold Chess Podcast

This week, we are looking at the long career of the 10th World Champion, the youngest person to become Grandmaster in history (at the time), the youngest Candidate to the World Championship (at the time), and the famed opponent of the 1972 World Championship against Bobby Fischer - Boris Spassky. Spassky learned to play chess at the age of 5 on a train evacuating Leningrad during the Siege of Leningrad during WWII. At the age of 10, he earned widespread attention by defeating the Soviet champion Mikhail Botvinnik in a simul. During this time, he was studying several hours a day with different Masters including Vladimir Zak who coached other players like Viktor Korchnoi, Alexey Yermolinsky, Gata Kamsky, and others. That type of coaching helped as it allowed Spassky to earn the Candidate Master level at age 11, the Soviet Master rank at age 15 and take home 2nd at the Leningrad Championship. At the age of 16, Spassky branched out of the Soviet Union to play in his first international tournament in Romania. He tied for 4th, but in the tournament he defeated Vasily Smyslov who was 1 year away from playing Mikhail Botvinnik for the World Championship. At the FIDE Congress of 1953, he was awarded his International Master title. At the Candidates tournament of 1956, Spassky tied for 3rd with 4 other players. However, the next two world championship cycles were less kind to Boris. In the last round of the Riga tournament where a win would advance him to the Portoroz Interzonal tournament, Spassky missed his winning chance against Mikhail Tal and ended the game with a draw. In the qualifying tournament for the Interzonal in 1960, he lost his last round game to Leonid Stein. He also finished 10th out of 20 in the USSR Championship in 1960. However, he did make some waves by being the first high level player in 50 years to play and win with the King’s Gambit against David Bronstein. This game would later be used 3 years later as reference in the James Bond film ‘From Russia With Love’. During his chess struggles, he was also going through marital struggles with his then wife. They divorced in 1961 and he also broke off training with his coach Tolush whose coaching strategy featured a very strong attacking style. One bright spot was in 1960 at the Mar del Plata tournament where he finished in a tie for first place… with Bobby Fischer. During their first career meeting, Spassky defeated Fischer. Boris changed his coach to Igor Bondarevsky - known for a calmer strategy. After the change, Spassky won his first USSR Championship in 1961. He tied for 2nd in Havana in 1962, he tied for 1st at the 31st Soviet Final in 1963, and he won 1st at Belgrade in 1964. For today’s game, we are traveling 65 years in the past to the Mar del Plata tournament of 1960 - Carlos Incutto versus Boris Spassky. Now, if we’re ready, let’s begin. 1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bb5 f5 4. Nc3 Nf6 5. d3 fxe4 6. dxe4 Bb4 7. Qd3 d6 8. Bd2 Bxc3 9. Bxc3 Bd7 10. O-O-O Qe7 11. Qe3O-O 12. h3 Kh8 13. Bc4 a5 14. Kb1 Be6 15. Bxe6 Qxe6 16. Ng5Qg8 17. Qe2 Nd7 18. g3 Nc5 19. b3 h6 20. h4 a4 21. Nh3 axb3 22. cxb3 Nxb3 23. axb3 Qxb3+ 24. Qb2 Qc4 25. Qc2 Nb4 0-1 https://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1128479 https://blindfoldchesspodcast.com/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boris_Spassky…
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Blindfold Chess Podcast

This week, we are looking (at the time) the youngest Women’s World Champion, a 13-time Olympiad Gold Medal Winner, the second Woman in history to be awarded the Grandmaster title, and a Women’s World Champion for 13 years - Maia Chiburdanidze. She was born in Kutaisi of the Georgian Soviet Socialist Republic of the USSR in 1961 where she learned to play chess at the age of 8. She played (and won) the 1974 at the Brasov women’s international tournament, when she was 13 years old. At the age of 15, she won the USSR Girls’ Championship of 1976. The next year, at the age of 16, she won the USSR Womens’ Championship with a score of 13 out of 17. Later that same year, she played in the Tbilisi Women’s Interzonal tournament. At the time, there were 2 interzonal tournaments - one in Roosendaal, Netherlands the other in Tbilisi, USSR. At each tournament, the top three finishers qualified for the Women's Candidates match. In 1986 - she won by the same score of 8 ½ to 5 ½ in 14 games to Elena Akhmilovskaya (again, of the Soviet Union). Winning the 1st, 5th, 7th, and 8th games, only losing in game 9. The January 1988 FIDE top 100 players - showed Maia’s peak rating as the 45th highest rated player in the world at 2560. Later that year, she defended her title once again against Nana Ioseliani (also of the Soviet Union). This was a close match where Chiburdanidze edged out an 8 ½ to 7 ½ victory. Maia had lost the 2nd to last game, reducing her lead to 1 point with 1 game to go. She tried to reclaim her title in 1993, but didn’t make it out of the Candidates tournament (placing 3rd). She reached the finals of the 1995 Candidates tournament, but lost to Susan Polgar. In 1997, she tried again, placing 4th in the Candidates tournament. The structure was changed to a 64 person knockout tournament in 2000. That year, she made it to Round 2 before being knocked out. In 2001 and 2004, she made it to the Semi Finals. 2006, she made it to the Quarterfinals. 2008, she lost in the 1st round. And in her last Candidates tournament in 2010, she was knocked out after the 2nd round. During her playing career, she was not only a World Champion and perpetual Candidate player, she also participated in a record breaking number of Chess Olympiads. At the 23rd, 24th, 25th, 26th, and 27th Women’s Olympiad, she was on Board 1 of the Soviet Union team winning gold every time. The 28th and 29th Olympiad, she finished in 2nd for the Soviet Union, earning silver. After the Soviet Union fell in 1991, Maia became the team lead of the newly formed Georgian Team. While at the helm, her team took home the gold at the 30th, 31st, 32nd, and 38th Olympiads. At the 33rd Olympiad, Georgia took home Bronze and at the 34th, they took home Silver. For this week, we are turning the clocks back 50 years to the USSR Women’s Championship of 1973, one of Maia’s first tournaments when she was only 12 years old. 1.e4 c5 2.c3 Nf6 3.e5 Nd5 4.d4 cxd4 5.cxd4 d6 6.Nf3 Nc6 7.Nc3 Nxc3 8.bxc3 dxe5 9.d5 e4 10.Ng5 Ne5 11.Nxe4 Qc7 12.Qd4 Bd7 13.Ba3 f6 14.d6 Qc6 15.dxe7 Bxe7 16.Bxe7 Kxe7 17.Qb4 Kf7 18.f4 Rhe8 19.fxe5 Rxe5 20.O-O-O Rxe4 21.Rxd7+ Ke8 22.Re7+ 1-0 https://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1429266 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maia_Chiburdanidze https://blindfoldchesspodcast.com/…
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Blindfold Chess Podcast

This week, we are taking a look at who CNN has called the “David Beckham of Chess” - the former World Rapid Champion, World Blitz Champion, World Chess960 Champion, former 2nd highest rating in the world, and 5-time Candidate for the World Championship - Levon Aronian. In 2004, he played in his first FIDE World Chess Championship - a 128 player knockout tournament. The winner of the tournament became the FIDE World Champion. Levon - age 22 (the 34th seed), met Magnus Carlsen - age 13 (the 95th seed) in the first round where Aronian won 2 ½ to 1 ½ . He advanced to the 3rd round before being eliminated by Pavel Smirnov. He also earned Bronze for Armenia in the Olympiad. In 2005, Aronian cracked the top 10 players in the world by rating. He won the Gibtelecom Masters tournament, the Karabakh tournament, and in the Russian Team Championship he had a performance rating of 2850, and in the Chess World Cup - the 128 player knockout tournament - he was seeded 3rd and ended up winning the event earning him a spot in his first Candidates tournament. Levon also won the Finet Chess960 tournament again - requalifying him for the Chess960 World Championship rematch against Peter Svidler. This time, he won 5-3 to become the Chess960 World Champion. In 2006, after a win at the Linares and Tal Memorial tournaments, Levon was the number 3 rated player in the world behind Topalov and Anand. He also assisted in earning the gold medal for Armenia in the 37th Chess Olympiad. In 2008 and 2009, Aronian played in the FIDE Grand Prix, a series of tournaments over 2 years where the players needed to accumulate points from different tournaments in order to qualify for the next Candidates tournament. He won the 2008 August tournament, the 2009 April tournament, and tied for second at the 2009 August (the average rating of all 3 tournaments was 2700+). He scored well enough to win the Grand Prix qualifying him for the 2012 Candidates Tournament. Again, there are so many accomplishments that Aronian has done in his career. Check out his Wikipedia page for a full list since I can't fit the entire script in this description :) This week, we are turning the clocks back to 1994 to the Under 12 European Championship. Levon Aronian versus Peter de Bortoli. Now, if we’re ready, let’s begin. —-------------- Though he has not won the Classical Chess World Championship, Levon has shown to be arguably one of the most under rated top players we’ve seen in recent memory. He has been the Rapid World Champion, Blitz World Champion, and Chess960 World Champion. For almost 30 years, the name Levon Aronian has been synonymous with elite level chess playing. That is all we have for this week, tune in next time where we will continue to work on our skills and look at another game of the Masters! —---------------------- 1.d4 Nf6 2.Nf3 d5 3.Bg5 Bf5 4.f3 e6 5.e4 dxe4 6.fxe4 Bb4 7.exf5 O-O 8.Nf3 exf5 9.Be2 h6 10.Bxf6 Qxf6 11.O-O Bxc3 12.bxc3 Nd7 13.Rb1 b6 14.Bd3 f4 15.Qd2 g5 16.Rbe1 Qg7 17.h4 g4 18.Qxf4 gxf3 19.Rxf3 Kh8 20.Rg3 Qf6 21.Qe4 1-0 https://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1397179 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Levon_Aronian https://blindfoldchesspodcast.com/…
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Blindfold Chess Podcast

In Season 1, we looked at one of the Polgar sisters - Susan. Today, we are looking at the youngest sister - Judit Polgar. Prepare yourself for a large list of records and milestones. Judit was born in 1976 in Hungary as the youngest of her two other siblings - Susan and Sofia. They grew up as part of an educational experiment carried out by their dad - Laszlo Polgar - with the hypothesis of - “Geniuses are made, not born”. The philosophy was to have the children focus on a specialized skill - chess - a game historically dominated by men - to show that anyone could prove excellence in any skill if they put the work in for it from a young age. In 1986 at the age of 10, Judit defeated her first International Master. In 1987, she defeated her first Grandmaster. Throughout their career, the sisters ran into sexism and bureaucracy problems when competing in “Men’s” events. The oldest sibling needed to earn 11 norms before receiving her Grandmaster title when the typical threshold was 3. In the published ratings of January 1989, Judit (age 12) was rated 2555 - number 55 on the World list and 35 points ahead of the Women’s World Champion Maia Chiburdandize. This is the start of her reign at the top of Women’s rating leaderboard. British Chess Magazine commented “Judit Polgar’s results make the performances of Fischer and Kasparov at a similar age pale by comparison”, GM Nigel Short remarked - “one of the three or four greatest chess prodigies in history”. GM David Norwood described Judit as: “this cute little auburn-haired monster who crushed you.” In 1991, Judit shattered several records by achieving her Grandmaster title after winning the Hungarian National Championship. At the age of 15 years and 4 months - she beat Fischer’s record by a month (a record that stood for 33 years). She was the 4th woman to become a Grandmaster behind - Gaprindashvili, Chiburdanidze, and her older sister Susan Polgar. Judit beat Susan’s record of being the youngest woman grandmaster by 7 years. There are so many accomplishments for her, I can't get all of them from the script into this description. Check out the Wikipedia page for more info! During her career, she never competed for the Women’s World Championship, but she is the only woman to have won 11 games against reining world number 1, current, or former World Champions including - Carlsen, Karpov, Kasparov, Kramnik, Spassky, Smyslov, Topalov, Anand, Ponomariov, Khalifman, Kasimdzhanov. This week, we are traveling back to the Olympiad of 2002, where Team Hungary lost 1 game out of the 56 played. Judit Polgar versus Shakhriyar Mamedyarov. Now, if we’re ready, let’s begin. —----------------------- Youngest GM, first woman in top 10, first woman to break 2700, first woman to play in the Candidates tournament, and the top ranked female player for 25 years - if anyone has any doubt of Judit’s skills, her Wikipedia article has 15 citations for “strongest female chess player of all time”. 1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bb5 a6 4. Ba4 Nf6 5. O-O Nxe4 6. d4 b5 7. Bb3 d5 8. dxe5 Be6 9. Nbd2 Nc5 10. c3 d4 11. Ng5 Bd5 12. Nxf7 Kxf7 13. Qf3+ Ke6 14. Qg4+ Kf7 15. Qf5+ Ke7 16. e6 Bxe6 17. Re1 Qd6 18. Bxe6 Nxe6 19. Ne4 Qe5 20. Bg5+ Kd7 21. Nc5+ Bxc5 22. Qf7+ Kd6 23. Be7+ Kd5 1-0 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Judit_Polg%C3%A1r https://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1256017 https://blindfoldchesspodcast.com/…
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Blindfold Chess Podcast

Hello everyone, welcome back to the third season of the Blindfold Chess Podcast. This week, we will be looking at a name synonymous with the chess community - Howard Staunton. If you have been around the game for any length of time, you may have heard of him as an unofficial World Champion in the mid-1800s, or you’ve heard of his opening - the Staunton Gambit of 1. d4 f5 2. e4, or you’ve heard of the House of Staunton chess sets/ company that has been recognized as the recommended chess set of use by FIDE since 2022, but he has more contributions than that to our game. Born in 1810 in London, Staunton did not become seriously interested in chess until 1836 when he was 26 years old. He started to play games against Captain Evans - the inventor of the Evans Gambit. In 1838, he lost a match to Aaron Alexandre - a German Chess Writer. In 1840, Staunton became the editor of the chess column of the New Court Gazette, then that was spun off into the Chess Player’s Chronicle - which Staunton owned and edited until the 1850’s. In 1843 - 5 years after starting to seriously get into the game - Staunton reached a new high. He challenged the French player Pierre Charles Fournier de Saint-Amant, the presumed strongest player in the world, to a match. Staunton lost that match 2.5 - 3.5. Later in the year, Staunton requested a rematch in Paris against Saint-Amant for a stake of £100 (a little over £12,000 today, or about $16,000). During that match, Staunton pioneered the playing of 1.c4 - that new opening that was later named the ‘English Opening’ after this match. Staunton gained a 7-game lead but faltered before eventually winning the match 13-8 (11 wins, 4 draws, and 6 losses) at the end of 1843. His winning of this match awarded him the title of the Unofficial World Champion. Saint-Amant wanted a 3rd match, but Staunton declined citing he’d developed heart palpitations during the 2nd match (which some reported was why he faulted). Eventually a 3rd match was agreed upon at the end of 1844, but Staunton caught pneumonia and almost died. The match was later canceled. Later that year, Staunton and Captain Kennedy played a game via telegraph in Gosport, England against a team of 3 players in London losing 0.5 - 2. The Staunton style is recognized by the tallest piece being the king with a cross over the head, a coronet on the queen, the rooks have battlements on the top, knights have a sculpted head of a horse - modeled after the horses in the Elgin Marbles), and pawns have a small ball on the head and are the smallest pieces. The human-like characters - like bishops, pawns, kings, and queens - there is a flat disk toward the top that separates the body from the head known as a collar. Having such a prolific writing career, having the official chess set named after you, having the 4th most popular opening named after you, organizing the first international chess tournament, and being the unofficial World Champion for almost a decade - it is no wonder Staunton’s name is etched into the wall of chess history. 1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.d4 exd4 4.Bc4 Bc5 5.c3 d3 6.b4 Bb6 7.b5 Qe7 8.O-O Nd8 9.e5 Ne6 10.a4 Bc5 11.Nbd2 Nh6 12.Ne4 Nf5 13.Qxd3 d6 14.Re1 O-O 15.exd6 Bxd6 16.Nxd6 Nxd6 17.Ng5 g6 18.Bxe6 Bxe6 19.Qe3 Rfe8 20.Ba3 Qf6 21.Bxd6 cxd6 22.Ne4 Qe7 23.Qd4 Red8 24.Nf6+ Kf8 25.Nd5 1-0 https://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1055861 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Howard_Staunton https://blindfoldchesspodcast.com/…
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Hi there, its me Cassidy, I’ve been the writer and voice of this podcast for a couple of years now. I have enjoyed doing the podcast, but life is starting to creep up so this will be my last episode before taking a hiatus. I appreciate each and every one of you who download and listen to me. The listenership has been so far beyond what I could imagine for. I was hoping to hold off on making an episode until I hit Master level myself, but that isn’t happening any time soon - in fact, I haven’t played in a tournament in over a year at this point and the thought of playing in one is quite a daunting effort. A bit about me: my mum taught me to play when I was in kindergarten. I didn’t really take much of an interest in it until I reached high school. I joined my local high school club and began playing in tournaments. My initial rating was 595. I found a lot of friends including my first coach - NM Tim McEntee - a 5 time Iowa state champion. It was also around this time that I started playing blindfold chess. In trigonometry class, a friend of mine started playing chess on a keychain chess board that I’d brought. We piled our books around the board to hide it and played during class… until we were caught. We put the board away and started passing a note back and forth with notations on it, and we kept doing that for the rest of the year. I finished high school and college with my rating in the mid 1600’s. After college, I joined a local university’s club that had great chemistry. A group of us would travel to local tournaments in various states. I made a challenge to jump from the 1600’s to 2000 in one year - I was studying 4-6 hours a day, I won my first Classical game against a Master, and finished close to my goal! By the end of the year I made it to 1975 and qualified for the Iowa State Championship in 2018. With months of prep, training, and studying - I finished dead last - half a point in 5 rounds. That was good learning, but brutal for confidence. It was about this point that I started to doubt just about everything I knew about the game, the tricks I could get away with at lower ratings didn’t work, the base level of knowledge I had in openings and middle games showed major cracks - it felt like I had to tear down everything I knew. I got a new coach who focused on overhauling my openings, and I started putting so much pressure on myself to perform. My rating fell back into the 1800’s until I started to get my footing. I fought my way back up including jumping 60 rating points at the Minnesota Open to qualify for the 2022 U2200 Minnesota State Championship. At the state championship, I performed well - scoring 3.5 / 5, a tie for first, and my rating crossed the 2000 barrier! Since then, I’ve reached a peak of 2031 before falling back into the 1900’s. That is where we are now. I’m going to take a break - I’m trying to re-love the game, trying to re-learn who I am, and discover what is out there. In today’s game - I want to go back to a blitz game I played back in 2019 that has always been one of my favorites. Cassidy Noble versus Jimmy Fuller from chess.com Now, if we’re ready - let’s begin. 1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 a6 3. d4 cxd4 4. Nxd4 Nf6 5. Nc3 e5 6. Nf3 Bb4 7. Bd3 d6 8. O-O O-O 9. Nd5 Nxd5 10. exd5 f5 11. Bc4 Kh8 12. Bg5 Qe8 13. c3 Ba5 14. Re1 Qg6 15. Be7 Re8 16. Rxe5 dxe5 17. Nxe5 Qb6 18. Nf7+ Kg8 19. d6 h6 20. Ng5+ Kh8 21. Qh5 Bd7 22. Qxh6+ gxh6 23. Bf6# 1-0 https://www.chess.com/analysis/game/live/3374579633 http://cassidynoble.com/…
This week, I wanted to look at a relatively new branch of chess - chess computers. The first ‘chess machine’ built in 1770 was called the Mechanical Turk. The supposed machine would play challengers with various indications that it was a functional machine. In reality, a human operated the machine using ‘The Turk’ as a sophisticated marionette. You have to jump almost 150 years in the future for the first verified chess computer. El Ajedrecista (ah-he-dre-sis-ta) in 1912 was capable of playing Rook and King versus King endgames - winning every time as well as identifying illegal moves. The 1950’s started the boom of chess computing, morphing machines into what we see today. In 1951, Turochamp was invented by Alan Turing and David Champernowne. The two of them helped create the first chess playing algorithm. Turochamp had a built in value of pieces - a pawn (being 1), a queen (being 10) - and it could see/understand undefended pieces, captures/recaptures, piece mobility, and other factors. It would calculate which move it could do to have the best internal score, then compare that to what would be the lowest opponent response. It would aggregate all those moves together to determine what move to do. This is the minimax algorithm in action. The computer was not strong enough as a computer to complete the algorithm in its entirety so it needed to be manually executed after each move. Fast forward to today, in 2024, the currently highest rated computer is Stockfish with an estimated rating of 3632 as of February 2024. For reference - the highest rated human player is 2882. It is incredible to see computers continue to climb. We no longer have an ego in the discussion of who is stronger - humans or engines. We use engines every day for learning, analysis, and personal improvement. Engines also act as a great tool to help teach people outside of the chess world on how to read a position without knowledge of the game itself. Engines have helped elevate the game far beyond what humans could have and we still have so much more to learn. After that crash course through history, that is all that we have for this week. Tune in next week where we will look at another chess game to continue to work on our blindfold skills. (Deep Thought versus David Bronstein - 1992) https://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1079163 1. e4 e5 2. f4 exf4 3. Nf3 g5 4. h4 g4 5. Ne5 Be7 6. Qxg4 d6 7. Qg7 dxe5 8. Qxh8 Bxh4+ 9. Kd1 Bg4+ 10. Be2 Bxe2+ 11. Kxe2 Qg5 12. Kf1 f3 13. gxf3 Qg3 14. Rxh4 Qxf3+ 15. Ke1 Qg3+ 16. Ke2 Nc6 17. c3 Qxh4 18. Qxg8+ Kd7 19. Qxa8 Qg4+ 20. Kd3 f5 21. Kc2 1-0 (Deep Blue versus Garry Kasparov - 1997) https://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1070917 1.e4 c6 2.d4 d5 3.Nc3 dxe4 4.Nxe4 Nd7 5.Ng5 Ngf6 6.Bd3 e6 7.N1f3 h6 8.Nxe6 Qe7 9.O-O fxe6 10.Bg6+ Kd8 11.Bf4 b5 12.a4 Bb7 13.Re1 Nd5 14.Bg3 Kc8 15.axb5 cxb5 16.Qd3 Bc6 17.Bf5 exf5 18.Rxe7 Bxe7 19.c4 1-0 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deep_Blue_(chess_computer) https://blindfoldchesspodcast.com/ https://www.chess.com/article/view/computers-and-chess---a-history https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_chess_engines…
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This week, we are looking at the opera writer and musician who documented chess books and endgames so well we are still using them today. Francois-Andre Danican (Dan-ee-con) Philidor came from a well known musical family. His grandfather was given nickname of Philidor by King Louis XIII of France because his oboe playing reminded him of the Italian oboist Filidor. When he was 6, Philidor joined the royal choir of King Louis XV of France in 1732. The story goes that Louis XV wanted to listen to the choir every day, so while waiting for the king, the kids would play chess to relieve their boredom. Philidor performed his first work directly for the king at the age of 11. When he was 14, his voice changed and he had to leave the royal choir. This started a life of excelling at a music career and chess profession at the same time. In the 1740’s - He worked in Paris as a performer, teacher, and music copyist.On the side, he played at the Cafe de la Regence where he played chess against a friends - Benjamin Franklin, Jean-Jacques Rousseau, and Francois Voltaire among others. In 1749, he wrote Analyse du je des Echecs , the book was so popular that by 1871 (almost 125 years later), it had 70 different editions translated into 5 languages. This book featured the now famous - Philidor Position - a staple of rook endgame studies still used today. In the mid 1750’s; For music, Philidor began to focus on writing musical scores. For chess, he played and won a match against his old coach and formerly strongest player in France - Legal de Kermeur (Ka-moor) (Legal is who the Legal’s mate is named after) - after the match, many people began to say Philidor was the strongest player in the world for the next almost 50 years. Side note: they did not have a formal World Championship cycle for another 80 years. In the 1760s; he wrote 3 of his most successful musical works - Le sorcier , Tom Jones , and Ernelinde , Princess of Norway . Philidor married his wife and later had 7 children with her. In the 1770s; the Freemasons’ Hall in London hosted Philidor’s first performance of Carmen Saeculaire . Chess was not considered a profession during this era. Philidor received payment from London chess clubs for his residency/lessons from February to June every year. On May 9th, 1783 he played 3 blindfold chess games at once. Philidor had the players sign affidavits as he thought future generations wouldn’t believe this feat was possible. In 1792, he was forced to leave France due to the French Revolution because his name was on the Revolutionary banishment list due to his family’s attachment to the King’s family service. During an era of sacrificing pawns, Philidor used pawns to solidify a position (control squares or form pawn chains) and avoid having weaknesses with them (backward or isolated) - these ideas became mainstream in the 1920’s (200+ years ahead of his era) drawing controversy from his peers. His quote of - “Les pions sont de l'âme du jeu” (pawns are the soul of the game) is referenced for middle game strategy today. This week, we are looking at an odds game - Francois-Andre Danican (Dan-ee-con) Philidor versus Cotter from 1789. In this game, white does not have a rook on a1. 1. e4 e5 2. f4 d5 3. Nf3 exf4 4. exd5 Qxd5 5. Nc3 Qe6+ 6. Kf2 Be7 7. d4 Nf6 8. Bxf4 Ne4+ 9. Nxe4 Qxe4 10. Bxc7 Nc6 11. Bd3 Qe6 12. Re1 Qxa2 13. Bb5 Bd7 14. d5 Qxb2 15. dxc6 bxc6 16. Bxc6 Bxc6 17. Rxe7+ Kxe7 18. Qd6+ Ke8 19. Qxc6+ Ke7 20. Bd6+ Kd8 21. Qc7+ Ke8 22. Qe7# 1-0 https://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1580864 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fran%C3%A7ois-Andr%C3%A9_Danican_Philidor https://blindfoldchesspodcast.com/…
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This week, we are looking at one of the most influential names in chess - Yasser Sierawan. Yasser was born in Damascus, Syria to his Syrian father and English mother. At the age of 7, his family immigrated to Seattle, Washington. He didn’t start playing chess until the age of 12 - this was in 1972, right in the thick of the Fischer Boom that was happening in the United States. The next year, at the age of 13, he became the Washington Junior Champion. In 1975, he participated in his first US Open where he defeated his first Grandmaster - Arthur Bisguier. At the age of 19, he played in (and won) the World Junior Championship. At a separate event, he played (and won) a game against former World Championship Challenger - Viktor Korchnoi. Korchnoi was impressed with Sierewan’s play and invited Yasser to train in Switzerland for the 1981 World Championship match between Karpov and Korchnoi. Yasser shares an interesting story about this where he was offered to sleep in Korchnoi’s master bedroom and Korchnoi would take the guest room. At the time, Korchnoi had just defected from the USSR so if there was an assassination attempt, they would shoot at the person in the master bedroom. I’ve left Yasser’s story in the show notes. In 1981, Yasser won his first US Championship in a 2 way tie as well as earned his Grandmaster title. Two years later, 1982, Yasser played Anatoly Karpov and defeated him. In a span of 10 years, Yasser went from no chess experience to defeating a reigning world champion. He received his first taste of the Candidates tournament in 1985 scoring in the middle of the pack and he won his first US Open. The following year, he won his second US Championship - this time in sole ownership. In 1988, he was in the Candidates again, eliminated in the first round, in 1989 he won the US Championship again. 1990, Yasser reached his peak world ranking list by placing 10th in the world. He won the US Open again. He was also invited to do the commentary for the World Championship between Kasparov and Karpov. Later in the year, he played in his final Candidates tournament - being eliminated in the round robin portion. Around this point, there was a schism in the chess world between FIDE and the newly created Professional Chess Association. Starting in 1993, there were 2 simultaneous World Champions In 2000, he returned to his winning ways by winning his 4th and final US Chess Championship. In 2001, Yasser released a plan called “Fresh Start” to join the chess world back together. The plan was signed by all parties in 2002 called the “Prague Agreement”. Eventually in 2006, the world championship title was reunited. The next year, Yasser was awarded the Chess Journalist of the Year award, and in 2006 he was entered in the Chess Hall of Fame. Today, you can see him as a commentator and a streamer appearing at the St Louis Chess Club, Chessbrahs, and others - teaching, sharing stories, and talking about games. This week, we are going to 1990 - Yasser Seirawan versus Boris Spassky. 1. d4 b5 2. e4 Bb7 3. Bd3 e6 4. Nf3 a6 5. O-O d6 6. c3 Nd7 7. a4 Ngf6 8. Re1 Be7 9. axb5 axb5 10. Rxa8 Qxa8 11. e5 dxe5 12. dxe5 Nd5 13. Bxb5 Bc6 14. Bxc6 Qxc6 15. Nd4 Qb7 16. Qg4 g6 17. Nd2 c5 18. N4f3 h5 19. Qe4 Qc7 20. Nc4 h4 21. Bg5 Bxg5 22. Nxg5 Rh5 23. Nxe6 1-0 https://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1129587 https://worldchesshof.org/hof-inductee/yasser-seirawan# https://blindfoldchesspodcast.com/ Assassination Story - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WiexLWApQC8…
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This week, we are looking at the Indian prodigy - Dommaraju Gukesh commonly known as Gukesh D. Born in 2006, Gukesh D learned how to play chess at the age of 7. Two years after he started to play chess, he won the Under 9 Asian School Championships in 2015 with a 1770 rating. He did not stop there, with his rating rapidly climbing - his father gave up his career as an ear, nose, throat surgeon to support his son while his mum continued to be a microbiologist. In March of 2018, Gukesh fulfilled the requirements for his International Master title at the age of 11. Later in the year, he participated in the World Youth Championships for the Under 12 division. At the event, he won 5 gold medals - one in each the: team rapid, team blitz, individual class, individual rapid, and individual blitz categories. He had a chance to become the youngest GM in history in December 2018, but he drew a must win game, falling short of his final GM norm by ½ of a point at the Sunway Sitges Chess Festival. In an interview with ESPN, Gukesh said - “I was disappointed for 2 days. Then I moved on”. The following year, in 2019, he became (at the time) the 2nd youngest player to ever earn his Grandmaster title at the age of - 12 years, 7 months, 17 days. He missed Sergey Karjakin’s record by 17 days. From getting his first International Master norm to his final Grandmaster norm, Gukesh played in over 30 tournaments over 16 months covering 276 games in 13 countries. Over a span of 5.5 years, he went from a rating of 1300 to 2500. In 2021, he earned gold on Board one at the Chess Olympiad with a 2867 performance rating. Last year was a very busy year for Gukesh, he surpassed Vishiwanathan Anand as the top ranked Indian player. The first time in 37 years that Anand was not the top ranked Indian player. He finished 2nd in the FIDE World Cup earning a spot in the 2024 Candidates tournament. He was the youngest to cross the 2750 rating barrier. Gukesh is still in school! He attends (Vel-a-mal Vid-e-a-lee-ya) (Mel Aye-an-a-back-um) Velammal Vidyalaya , Mel Ayanambakkam in Chennai. He attends the same school as Praggnanandhaa. In September of 2023, they both received 20 lakh from their school for their chess accomplishments. 20 lakh is approximately $24,000 USD or 22,000 Euros. So far in 2024, Gukesh finished in a 4 way tie for 1st in 2024 Tata Steel Chess Tournament. There doesn’t seem to be a ceiling for Gukesh’s accomplishments. Time will only tell what he will be able to do in the future. This week, we are going to the Tata Steel India tournament from last year - Dommaraju Gukesh versus Maxime Vachier-Lagrave. Now, if we’re ready - let’s begin. 1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 e6 3. Nf3 d5 4. Nc3 Nbd7 5. cxd5 exd5 6. Bf4 Bb4 7. e3 Ne4 8. Qc2 g5 9. Bg3 Nb6 10. Bd3 Bf5 11. Nd2 Qe7 12. a3 Bxc3 13. bxc3 h5 14.Bxe4 dxe4 15. h4 O-O-O 16. c4 Bg6 17. a4 Rxd4 18. a5 Rhd8 19. axb6 Rxd2 20. bxa7 Rxc2 21. a8=Q+ Kd7 22. Qa4+ Ke6 23. Qxc2 Qb4+ 24. Ke2 1-0 https://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=2569140 https://www.chess.com/players/gukesh-dommaraju https://blindfoldchesspodcast.com/ https://sportstar.thehindu.com/chess/praggnanandhaa-gukesh-felicitated-school-velammal-nexus-cash-prize-anand-udhayanidhi-stalin-india-chess-news/article67296473.ece…
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With a birthday less than a week ago, this week, we are looking at Spanish-Swedish star Anna Cramling. Anna has a very strong chess background - her father is Grandmaster Juan Manuel Bellon Lopez - the 5 time Spanish Chess Champion and 11 time Spanish Olympiad player. Her mother is - Pia Cramling - the 5th woman to ever to have earned her Grandmaster title, the number 1 woman player in the world in 1984, and she has 9 gold medals between the European Club Cup and Women’s Chess Olympiad. Anna started playing chess at the age of 3 and regularly accompanied her parents to tournaments due to not having a babysitter. In an interview with Chessbase, her mother commented: “sometimes, e.g. at Olympiads or similar tournaments, we could find someone to help us and you could see an arbiter carrying Anna around!... When she was already a bit older – she’d sit on my legs while I played or next to me sleeping in the trolley. She was a very quiet and calm child and very easy to take with us, so she was almost all the time traveling with her father and me to tournaments.” Anna earned her first FIDE rating of 1519 at the age of 10. Two years later, she gained 300 rating points over 4 tournaments in 2 months. At the age of 14, she broke the 2000 rating barrier. She also participated in her first Olympiad for Sweden. By doing so, she became the youngest female to ever participate in the Olympiad for Sweden - beating the record previously set by her mother. Her mum was also on the 2016 team on board 1 (earning a Bronze medal) and Anna’s father was the team captain. The team finished 23rd out of 140. 2018 was a busy year for Anna. She reached her peak rating of 2175, earning her her Women’s FIDE Master title. She participated in U20 world junior championships finishing 54th out of 98, she also participated in the U16 World Youth Championships finishing 59th out of 90. During the pandemic, Anna backed off of playing in tournaments and instead focused on her streaming career. She commentated with her mother on the 2020 Women’s World Championships, she signed with the Panda esports team becoming the first chess streamer and first Swedish chess player to sign with an esports organization, in 2023 and 2024 she was nominated for the Streamer Awards, and presently - she has more than 360,000 Twitch followers. Over 890,000 Subscribers on Youtube, and almost 400,000 followers on Instagram. Anna has done a wonderful job promoting chess and bringing more women into the chess community. This week, we are going to the Xtracon Open from 2019. Anna Cramling versus Tobias Lindgaard. Now, if we’re ready - let’s begin. 1. d4 Nc6 2. Nf3 d6 3. e4 g6 4. d5 Nb8 5. c4 Bg7 6. Nc3 Nf6 7. Be2 Nbd7 8. Be3 c5 9. dxc6 bxc6 10. O-O O-O 11. h3 Qc7 12. Rc1 Qb8 13. Qc2 e5 14. Rfd1 Rd8 15. c5 Nf8 16. Nxe5 Bb7 17. cxd6 Rxd6 18. Rxd6 Qxd6 19. Nxf7 Kxf7 20. Qb3+ Ne6 21. Qxb7+ Nc7 22. Nb5 1-0 https://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1969070 https://en.chessbase.com/post/a-strong-duo-an-interview-with-pia-and-anna-cramling https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anna_Cramling https://www.youtube.com/@AnnaCramling https://blindfoldchesspodcast.com/ http://cassidynoble.com/…
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Passing away in late 2023, International Master Jeremy Silman made a lasting impact on our game through his playing, his consulting, his writing, and his coaching. Born in 1954, Silman didn’t start playing chess until he was 12 where he went to his first tournament, ending with a rating of 1068. In high school, Silman expressed to his guidance counselor that he wanted to go to “Moscow University” to study chess from the best players of the Soviet Union. Considering this was in the middle of the Cold War, this was not really an option. Instead, he joined the Army but he lasted less than 3 months before being discharged and going to San Francisco in 1973. Two years later at the age of 20, earned his Master title. The next couple of years, his US Chess Rating began to grow. 2400 in 1980. 2500 in 1981 where he tied for first at the US Open. He hit his peak US Chess rating of 2556 in 1982. He met his future wife in 1988 and after 2 months of dating asked her to marry him. In an interview with the New York Times, Ms Feldman said she was unsure because the life of a chess player can be unstable, so she said she would marry him only if he fulfilled the requirements to become an International Master. Later in the year, he earned his final IM norm - shortly thereafter he and his wife got married. In 1990, he was the winner of the National Open. Two years later, he was the winner of the American Open. Silman reached his peak rating in 1995 when he reached a 2420 rating. He never had an interest in trying to achieve his Grandmaster title. His last tournament was in 1999, but by that point, he’d started to phase himself out of tournaments instead focusing on his writing and his coaching. He was a coach of the US Junior National Team as well as a columnist for Chess Life, New In Chess, and Chess.com. According to Chess.com, he wrote 481 articles for the website. Silman went on to write a total of 39 books selling over 600,000 copies including - Reassess Your Chess, Silman’s Complete Endgame Manual, The Amateur’s Mind, and The Complete Book of Chess Strategy . His success was predominantly in the United States, but his book has now been translated into French and German. Not only that, but he was also a chess consultant on high profile shows like - Criminal Minds, Arliss, Monk, Malcolm in the Middle, and Harry Potter (though he is uncredited for his puzzle in the Harry Potter movie). Unfortunately, Silman passed away in September of 2023 at the age of 69 from a form of dementia. Through his works and education, Jeremy Silman helped influence hundreds of thousands of chess players. Reassess Your Chess was given to me as one of my first chess books I’ve read and Silman’s Complete Endgame Course was one of the first endgame books I enjoyed. In today’s game we are going back to 1991 to the Reno Open. Jeremy Silman versus James MacFarland. Now, if we’re ready - let’s begin. 1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 e6 3.g3 d5 4.Nf3 Be7 5.Bg2 O-O 6.Nbd2 Nbd7 7.O-O c6 8.Qc2 b6 9.e4 dxe4 10.Nxe4 Bb7 11.Bf4 Nxe4 12.Qxe4 Nf6 13.Qe2 Bd6 14.Ne5 Bxe5 15.dxe5 Nd7 16.Rfd1 Qe7 17.Rd6 Rac8 18.Rad1 Nb8 19.Qg4 Kh8 20.Bg5 Qc7 21.Be4 c5 22.Bxb7 Qxb7 23.Bf6 1-0 https://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1124892 https://www.chess.com/news/view/jeremy-silman-1954-2023 https://www.nytimes.com/2023/09/26/books/jeremy-silman-dead.html http://cassidynoble.com/…
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Blindfold Chess Podcast

Fabiano Luigi Caruana, the chess phenom who was the youngest American to earn his Grandmaster title, the youngest to win the Italian Champion, the current top US player, and the number 2 player in the world… - his accomplishments go on for a while, but currently - he is playing in his 5th Candidates tournament aiming for the World Championship. Born in Florida in 1992 to his Italian parents, he moved to Brooklyn when he was 4. He played in an after school chess program when he was 5 when his chess talents were discovered. Later that year he played in his first tournament. In 2008, he won the Corus C tournament (the Tata Steel tournament) and won the Italian Championship again. In 2009, he won the Corus B tournament - becoming the first player to win back to back Corus C and Corus B tournaments. In 2010 and 2011, he won back to back Italian Chess Championships. However - the 2014 Sinquefield Cup was different. The tournament consisted of 6 players - the number 1,2,3,5,8, and 9 players in the world. Caruana had the performance of his life winning the first 7 games, then drawing 3, and having 0 losses earning him a performance rating of 3098. The highest performance rating in a single tournament ever. Later that year, he earned his peak FIDE rating of 2844 - the third highest rating in history. The following year, Caruana moved back to the United States from Italy and began to play under the American flag - in doing so - he became the highest rated American player (a title he has not relinquished since he moved). In 2016, he participated in his first Candidates tournament - finishing in a tie for 2nd. A month later, he was playing in his first US Championship. He finished a full point ahead of Wesley So and Hikaru Nakamura to become the US Champion. The next year, he landed on the Forbes 30 Under 30 list under the ‘Games’ category - becoming the first chess player to make the list. 2018 was also a big year for Fabiano. In March, he played in his 2nd Candidates tournament where he won and advanced to play Magnus Carlsen for the championship. He was the first American world championship challenger since Fischer in 1972. The match against Carlsen was close, what else do you expect when the world number 1 and 2 play a match? The first game was 115 moves. Game 6 - Fabi had a “chance” to win with a ‘forced mate in 30’ on move 67, but they drew. Carlsen had a chance in Game 12, but offered a draw. All 12 games they played ended in draws. Carlsen’s strategy was to beat Fabi in the rapid tie breaks - and that he did, winning all 3 and keeping his title. Since then, Fabiano has kept busy. He qualified again for the Candidates in 2020 and 2022. He won his 2nd and 3rd US Championships in 2022 and 2023, and how, he is playing in his 5th Candidates tournament to try to dethrone Ding Liren as the current World Champion. In today’s game, we are going back to the World Blitz Championship of 2010. Fabiano Caruana v Boris Gelfand Now, if we’re ready - let’s begin. 1. e4 c5 2. Nc3 d6 3. f4 g6 4. Nf3 Bg7 5. Bc4 Nc6 6. O-O Nf6 7. d3 O-O 8. f5 gxf5 9. Qe1 fxe4 10. dxe4 Be6 11. Nd5 Ne5 12. Nxe5 dxe5 13. Bg5 Bxd5 14. exd5 Qd6 15. Qh4 Nxd5 16. Rad1 e6 17. Rf6 Qc7 18. Bxd5 exd5 19. Rd3 Rfd8 20. Bh6 Bxh6 21. Qxh6 e4 22. Rg3+ 1-0 https://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1599806 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fabiano_Caruana https://blindfoldchesspodcast.com/ http://cassidynoble.com/…
Welcome back to another episode! In today’s episode, I will be providing you with the locations of the different pieces on the board. It is your job to figure out the solution by pausing the podcast before moving on. Today, we will be looking at 3 puzzles each around a different endgame theme starting from Easy and working our way to Hard. Here is your first puzzle - White has a king on e5 and a pawn on c5. Black has a King on d8 with white to move. Again, that is White has a king on e5 and a pawn on c5. Black has a King on d8 with white to move. Please pause and find the solution before moving on. Solution coming in 5 seconds. —- -— This puzzle looks at the concept of opposition. When the white king steps to d6, it forces black to protect the queening square by stepping to c8. White follows up with King to c6. If they could, they would ‘pass’, but black is forced to give up ground and white will procure the queening square by stepping to either b7 or d7. Time to move on to the next puzzle, this one is a little tougher. White has a King on c4, a rook on f7, and a rook on h6. Black has a king on e8 and a Queen on a5 with white to move. Again, that is a King on c4, a rook on f7, and a rook on h6. Black has a king on e8 and a Queen on a5 with white to move. Please pause and find the solution before moving on. Solution coming in 5 seconds. —- — This one is quite incredible. Even with so few pieces on the board, white is able to sacrifice their rook since the black queen is trapped. Rook to a7 attacks the queen, a queen that has no square to go to without being captured or allowing quite to access the ladder mate by playing Rook to h8 checkmate. Black gives up the queen and allows white to check the king and force it on the same rank as the queen. Then white will win the Rook versus King ending. Onto the last puzzle! This one is a little tricky, we’ll be looking at a couple variations. White has a king on h8 and a pawn on c6. Black as a king on a6 and a pawn on h5. Again, White has a king on h8 and a pawn on c6. Black as a king on a6 and a pawn on h5. Please pause and find the solution before moving on. Solution coming in 5 seconds. —- - — This puzzle is Richard Reti's Famous Endgame Puzzle originally published in 1921. Black has a passed pawn that ‘can’t’ be captured by the white king while white’s passed pawn is firmly under black’s control. White needs to utilize the idea of ‘multi-purpose’ moves in order to simultaneously move toward his pawn and track down black’s pawn. We are going to look at the second variation now which contains sub-variations. Return to the starting position and remember the position when we enter a sub-variation. —------- There are two main ideas here, but they both start with King g7 to move closer to both pawns. Black now has the option to either try to stop white’s pawn by moving his king closer which gives white time to move toward black’s pawn allowing both pawns to be captured - ending in a draw. Conversely, black could try to advance his pawn, giving white enough time to move toward his own pawn allowing his queen to promote at the same time as black’s - resulting in a draw. That concludes our 3 puzzles for this week. Tune in next episode where we will continue to work on our visualization with another game of the Masters. https://blindfoldchesspodcast.com/ http://cassidynoble.com/…
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Blindfold Chess Podcast

The Iron Tigran was Tigran Petrosian’s nickname for his solid defensive style. Born in 1929, he started learning chess when he was 8. During WWII - Petrosian was orphaned and needed to sweep streets to earn a living. During this time, he got sick and developed a hearing problem that would affect him for the remainder of his life. Using his ration money, Petrosian bought Chess Praxis by Nimzowitsch and by age 12, he began training at the Tiflis Palace of Pioneers - a place where students could focus on creative work and sports training. His first coach - Archil Ebralidze was a fan of Nimzowitsch and Capablanca who discouraged wild tactics and speculative combinations. Ebralidze’s solid style made its way into Tigran’s play. In 1951, Petrosian was in Moscow participating in the Soviet Championship. At that tournament, he played the World Champion Mikhail Botvinnik for the first time. That game went through two different adjournments and lasted a total of 11 hours of play to secure a draw. Tigran ended up finishing in 2nd in the tournament, earning him his International Master title. That tournament qualified him for the Interzonal Tournament in Stockholm where he finished in 2nd - earning him his Grandmaster title and qualifying him for his first of 8 different Candidates tournaments. Tigran developed a reputation for quick draws or in general just drawing his games. That made him incredibly consistent - never really losing, but also never really winning major tournaments, he would hold 2nd or 3rd place in many tournaments much to the chagrin of his colleagues and the press. His first 3 Candidates in 1954, 1956, and 1960 he placed 5th, 3rd, and 3rd. 1962 was different. Petrosian won clear first in the Candidates - 19 draws, 8 wins, and 0 losses - in fact in all of 1962 he never lost a tournament game. That qualified him to play Mikhail Botvinnik in the 1963 World Championships. Petrosian’s solid style suited him well in match play. The focus on prophylactic play allowed him to wait for an opponent's mistake before taking the opportunity to strike. He took down Botvinnik 12.5 to 9.5 to become the World Champion at age 33. As World Champion - Tigran campaigned for a chess newspaper across the entire Soviet Union rather than just Moscow. This newspaper was later rebranded as ‘64’ and is still in publication today. 3 years after his first win, he was challenged to the World Championship by Boris Spassky to which Tigran defended his title 12.5 to 11.5. The next tournament cycle in 1969 was a rematch between Petrosian and Spassky where Spassky came out the winner 12.5 to 10.5 relegating Petrosian back to the Candidates. In 1972, he lost to Bobby Fischer in the finals. That year Fischer became World Champion. During all of this, Tigran participated in 10 straight Olympiads from 1958 to 1978 winning 9 team gold medals, and 6 individual gold medals. Over the 20-year 129-games played period - he had 78 wins, 50 draws, and 1 loss. In today’s game, we are going back to the Bled tournament of 1961. Tigran Petrosian versus Ludek Pachman Now, if we’re ready - let’s begin. 1.Nf3 c5 2.g3 Nc6 3.Bg2 g6 4.O-O Bg7 5.d3 e6 6.e4 Nge7 7.Re1 O-O 8.e5 d6 9.exd6 Qxd6 10.Nbd2 Qc7 11.Nb3 Nd4 12.Bf4 Qb6 13.Ne5 Nxb3 14.Nc4 Qb5 15.axb3 a5 16.Bd6 Bf6 17.Qf3 Kg7 18.Re4 Rd8 19.Qxf6+ Kxf6 20.Be5+ Kg5 21.Bg7 1-0 https://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1104948 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tigran_Petrosian https://blindfoldchesspodcast.com/ http://cassidynoble.com/…
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Blindfold Chess Podcast

I have been a fan of Sam Shankland for several years. I love that he plays the Caro Kann, his books are good, but mostly - I appreciate his blunt and brutal honesty when talking to people. Born in 1991, Sam started playing chess at 6, but only really started playing in tournaments at the age of 11. When he was 17, he started making a splash nationally and internationally by winning the Pacific Coast Open, the California State Championship, and tying for first at the World Youth Under 18 Chess Championships which earned him his International Master title. In 2010, he won the US Junior Championship in back to back Armageddon games, qualifying him for his first US Chess Championship tournament. The following year, he earned his Grandmaster Title and participated in the World Cup - advancing to the second round by having the largest upset by beating the 18th seeded Peter Leko while Shankland was seeded 111th. In his second Chess Olympiad event in 2014, he took home Gold for his performance as a reserve player with a 9/10 score and a performance rating of 2829. He also defeated GM Judit Polgar in her last professional game before she retired. 2018 was a banner year for Shankland - he not only qualified, but won the US Chess Championships in St Louis amongst a field that included 3 top 10 players in the world. In that tournament, he increased his rating to 2701 becoming the 7th American in history to break the 2700 rating barrier. The following year at the Tata Steel tournament - he drew World Champion Magnus Carlsen and beat former World Champion Vladimir Kramnik in Kramnik’s final game before retiring. He also reached his peak rating of 2731 at number 21 in the world. In 2021, he won the Prague Masters tournament with a performance rating over 2900 - the highest in the tournament’s history. A couple of fun facts about Shankland: He has been an analyst for Magnus Carlsen in World Championship preparations in 2014 and 2016 (against Anand and Karjakin). He was also featured on Fox’s survival show ‘Kicking and Screaming’. Sam is also a successful author! He has written 4 different books. He doesn’t do it for the money or for others’ education. In an interview on the World Chess Youtube channel he said: “I don’t really write books for other people, I write them because it forces me to train really well... Whenever I think of some idea of something I want to work on a lot, ‘I think well if I force myself to write a book about it maybe I’ll work on it even better.’ ” . In the span of 14 years Shankland went from playing in his first tournament at age 11 to winning the US Championship that featured 3 of the top 10 players in the world. In his career - so far - He has participated in 11 US Championships in 13 years, been a 3 time-medalist on 10 different US Olympiad Teams, and aided a World Champion in their preparation. Sam is the role model for hard work and determination when pursuing a goal. This week, we are going to 2010 at the Philadelphia Open. Sam Shankland versus Vladimir Romanenko. Now if we’re ready, let’s begin. 1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 d6 3. d4 cxd4 4. Nxd4 Nf6 5. Nc3 a6 6. Be3 e5 7. Nb3 Be6 8. Qd2 Qc7 9. f4 Be7 10. f5 Bc4 11. O-O-O Nbd7 12. g4 Nxg4 13. Rg1 Nxe3 14. Qxe3 Rc8 15. Rxg7 h6 16. Kb1 Bg517. Qh3 Qd8 18. Bxc4 Rxc4 19. Rxd6 Qe7 20. Rxd7 Qxd7 21. Rxg5 Rc6 22. Rg1 Rd6 23. Nd5 Qa4 24. Qc3 1-0 https://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1579416 https://samshankland.com/…
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Blindfold Chess Podcast

Born in 1941, Nona Gaprindashvili was the youngest of 6 kids and the only girl. She began playing chess at 5 from watching her brother play. Her first major break came when her brother had to back out of a local Team Championship. Nona stepped in to fill his place and performed very well scoring 5th overall. There is a really nice interview she gave to Chessbase in 2018 walking through her chess life and accomplishments, I have left those in the show notes. Vakhtang Karseladze - one of Georgia’s top chess trainers of the time - noticed her play and offered to properly train her starting in 1954. Two years later in 1956 at the age of 14, Gaprindashvili won the Women’s Soviet Union Championship. Five years later was the start of Nona’s absolute dominance on the global stage. She won the 1961 Candidates tournament a full 2 points ahead of the 17 person field which qualified her to play in the 1962 Women’s World Championship against Elisaveta Bykova. Gaprindashvili crushed her in a 9 to 2 match score. Her victory at the World Championship stage was seen as the beginning of a ‘women’s chess revolution’ in Georgia and some go as far as an ‘intellectual revolution’ for Georgian women. She went on to defend her title: In 1965, against Alla Shulimovna Kushnir winning 8.5 to 4.5 In 1969, winning a rematch against Kushnir with the same 8.5 to 4.5 score In 1972, winning a close rematch against Kushnir that Gaprindashvili won 8.5 to 7.5 In 1975, she won against fellow Georgian Nana Alexandia 8.5 to 3.5 In 1978, she was finally dethroned by the then 17 year old (and 20 year younger) Maia Chiburdanidze, ending her 16 year reign as the Women’s World Champion. 1978 was busy for Nona. She participated in the Lone Pine International tournament scoring well enough to be the first woman to ever earn a norm for the title of Grandmaster. At a meeting by the FIDE Congress of 1978, Gaprindashvili was awarded the Grandmaster title. She has said her tournament performance at Lone Pine and earning her Grandmaster title as one of her greatest achievements in chess. AND she is still playing! She participated in the 2023 European Senior Women’s Chess Championships at the age of 82. She has won the Senior tournament 7 times with her most recent being in 2022 in the 65+ age division. Gaprindashvili not only was the first woman to earn the Grandmaster title, dominate the Women’s World Championship for 16 years through 5 different cycles, play in 12 Olympiads, and win 7 different Senior Championships - but she has been a role model that many have looked up to by causing women to get into the game, being an active voice in politics, and earning the Presidential Order of Excellence by the Georgian President. There is so much we can learn from players like her. This week, we are traveling back to 1963 to the 9th Soviet Team Championship. Nona Gaprindashvili vs Evgenia Guseva. Now if we’re ready, let’s begin. 1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 d6 3.d4 cxd4 4.Nxd4 Nf6 5.Nc3 g6 6.Be3 Bg7 7.f3 O-O 8.Bc4 Bd7 9.Qd2 Nc6 10.O-O-O Rb8 11.h4 Nxd4 12.Bxd4 b5 13.Be2 Qa5 14.h5 b4 15.Nd5 Nxd5 16.Bxg7 Nc3 17.Qh6 Nxe2+ 18.Kd2 b3+ 19.Kxe2 Rfc8 20.hxg6 Rxc2+ 21.Ke3 1-0 https://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=2285813 https://en.chessbase.com/post/nona-gaprindashvili-interview-bled-2018 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nona_Gaprindashvili https://blindfoldchesspodcast.com/ http://cassidynoble.com/…
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Blindfold Chess Podcast

This episode was a struggle to cram all of Viswanathan Anand’s accomplishments into a highlight script! The Indian Grandmaster has been one of the most dominant and successful players in the game for over almost 4 decades. He was born on December 11, 1969, and moved to Chennai, India, and began playing chess at the age of six from his mother who was a chess aficionado. Anand’s rise in the chess world was very quick. He won the sub-junior championship with a perfect 9/9 score in 1983 at the age of 14. The next year, he won the Asian Junior Championship picking up his International Master norm in the process. In 1985 he became the youngest Indian player to earn his International Master title at the age of 15. The next year, he won his first of 3 Indian Chess Championships in a row at age 16, 17, and 18. In 1988, when he was 18, he became India’s first Grandmaster at the Shakti Finance International tournament in Kovai, India. In 1993, he played in his first of 10 World Championship cycles with varying levels of success. In 1995, he faced Garry Kasparov for the World Championship losing 10.5 to 7.5. In 1998, the format was changed to a 100 person knockout tournament where Karpov beat Anand in the finals 5 to 3. In 2000, Anand won the 100 person knock out tournament against Shirov 3.5 to 0.5. In 2005, the format was changed to be a round robin tournament where Anand tied for 2nd with Svidler behind Topalov who won it. In 2007, Anand won the round robin World Championship a point ahead of the field. Starting in 2008, the format was changed to a 12 game match. Anand defeated Kramnik 6.5 to 4.5. In 2010, Anand defended his title against Topalov 6.5 to 5.5. In 2012, Anand defended his title against Boris Gelfand 8.5 to 7.5. In 2013, Anand was dethroned by Magnus Carlsen losing 6.5 to 3.5 in 10 games. In his last World Championship appearance in 2014, Anand fought through the Qualification cycles to rematch Carlsen but lost 6.5 to 4.5. Anand’s contributions to the game go well beyond the chess board as well. He has been awarded: An Order for Friendship from Russia Indian Sportsman of the Year, Indian of the Year, Excellence in Chess Award, Best Sportsperson, the Chess Oscar 6 different times, and the National Citizens Award In India, he has received a host of National Honors including the- Arjuna Award, Padma Shri, Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna, Padma Bhushan, and the Padma Vibhushan award He even has a planet named after him - Planet 4538 Vishyanand In an effort to give back to his home country, he has been on the Olympic Gold Quest Board to support India’s elite sportspersons. With his help and training, after he became the first Indian Grandmaster, India now has 84 Grandmasters, 10 of the top 100 Women players are Indian and 9 of the top 100 Open Global players are Indian (including 3 of the top 15). This week, we are going to 2013 at Wilk aan Zee Group A. Levon Aronian versus Viswanathan Anand. Now if we’re ready, let’s begin. 1. d4 d5 2. c4 c6 3. Nf3 Nf6 4. Nc3 e6 5. e3 Nbd7 6. Bd3 dxc4 7. Bxc4 b5 8. Bd3 Bd6 9. O-O O-O 10. Qc2 Bb7 11. a3 Rc8 12. Ng5 c5 13. Nxh7 Ng4 14. f4 cxd4 15. exd4 Bc5 16. Be2 Nde5 17. Bxg4 Bxd4+ 18. Kh1 Nxg4 19. Nxf8 f5 20. Ng6 Qf6 21. h3 Qxg6 22. Qe2 Qh5 23. Qd3 Be3 0-1 https://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1704763 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viswanathan_Anand https://blindfoldchesspodcast.com/ http://cassidynoble.com/…
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Blindfold Chess Podcast

This week, we are looking at the Hungarian chess player, commentator, and streamer - Anna Rudolf. She began playing chess at the age of 4 with her sister, Kata. The two of them had Laszlo Rudolf as a father who played competitive chess as well, reaching a peak rating of 2185 FIDE. Laszlo was also a world champion of Hexagonal Chess. At the age of 9, Anna drew media attention by beating Grandmaster Lajos Portisch in a simul. In 1999, Anna won the girls Under 12 division of the International youth tournament and the under 12, Hungarian National Championship while her sister won the Under 10 division of both tournaments. That victory qualified her for the World Youth Championship where Anna finished 9th out of 66. In 2003, Anna won the Hungarian National Championship in the Under 16 division finishing 1.5 points ahead of second place. That victory qualified her for the World Youth Championship where she finished 4th, 1 point behind the winners. 2007 was a busy year for Anna - she won the Under 20 Hungarian Junior Girls’ Championship crossing the 2300 rating barrier with an 8 out of 9 score. She earned her first two Women’s Grandmaster Norms at the European Individual Women’s Chess Championship. Then in December, she had her best tournament performance at the Vandoeuver Open where she beat a Grandmaster and an International Master. Midway through the tournament, 3 Latvian players accused her of hiding a chess computer in her lip balm - the allegations were untrue and Anna finished with a performance rating of 2541 earning her her final WGM norm and her first International Master norm. Now in the Adult division, Anna won the Hungarian National Championship 3 times in 2008, 2010, and 2011. She reached her peak rating in 2010 with a published rating of 2393, but for one tournament she had an unpublished rating above 2400 (she picked up her final international master norm in 2015). At her peak, she was number 71 in the top 100 women players in the world. She has also represented Hungary on the Chess Olympiad in 2008 and 2012 as well as the European Team Championship from 2009 to 2015. In 2016, Anna made a pivot and began focusing her efforts on streaming and broadcasting. She started her Youtube Channel in 2016 and Twitch in 2018. She hasn’t played in any tournaments since 2017, but she was named the “Outstanding Athlete of the City” in 2017 in her hometown of Bátaszék and she was an official commentator of the 2018 World Championship (Carlsen versus Caruana) with her idol Judit Polgar. Her online following has only grown, currently she has over 200,000 subscribers on Youtube and over 275,000 on Twitch that tune in to her variety of content that she streams. This week, we are going to 2001 at the Girls Under 14 European Championships. Anna Rudolf versus Marta Nestorow. Now if we’re ready, let’s begin. 1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 e6 3. Nc3 Nc6 4. g3 a6 5. Bg2 Qc7 6. O-O Nf6 7. d4 cxd4 8. Nxd4 Nxd4 9. Qxd4 Bc5 10. Qd1 h6 11. Kh1 d6 12. f4 O-O 13. g4 e5 14. f5 b5 15. g5 hxg5 16. Bxg5 Nh7 17. Nd5 Qd7 18. Ne7+ Kh8 19. Qh5 Bb7 20. Rf3 Bxe4 21. Qxh7+ 1-0 https://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1194324 https://www.twitch.tv/anna_chess https://blindfoldchesspodcast.com/ http://cassidynoble.com/…
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Blindfold Chess Podcast

This week we are looking at the young and rising Russian star - Andrey Esipenko. Born on March 22, 2002, Esipenko started playing chess at the age of five, and he quickly showed great promise. Esipenko's early chess accomplishments include winning the European U10 Championship in 2012 the next year, he earned his FIDE title. 2017 was a busy year for the 15 year old star. He won both the European Under 16 Championship and the World Under 16 Chess Championship and he didn’t stop there. At the end of 2017, he competed in the 2017 World Rapid Championship scoring a performance rating of 2622. During the tournament he played a queen sacrifice against Sergey Karjakin which broadcaster Leonard Barden commented may be “the move of the year”. We are not looking at that game today, but I have attached it to the show notes. https://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1904002 Fast forwarding to 2020, he finished in a tie for first in the Gibraltar Masters tournament with an incredible performance of 2809, but eventually was eliminated in a four-way playoff to the eventual winner David Paravyan. Kicking off 2021 with a bang - in January, the then 18 year old Esipenko competed in the Tata Steel Masters tournament. In round eight, he defeated the then World Champion Magnus Carlsen in their first game in a classic time control. Esikpenko chose an aggressive line against the Sicilian and caught Carlsen in an awkward tactical bind. After a long grind, Magnus resigned. I remember watching the game live - it was hard not to feel happy for Esipenko as his smile and sigh of relief came through after Carlsen’s resignation. He later commented that that was one of the happiest days of his life. I’ve left a link to that moment in the show notes - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iZsK96-mASY It is really hard not to feel emotional about chess after watching and experiencing moments like that. This was Carlsen's first loss to a teenager in classic time controls since 2011, and his first loss to a sub-2700 rated player since 2015. A quote from the letter says - “Chess teaches responsibility for one's actions; every step counts, and a mistake can lead to a fatal point of no return. And if this has always been about sports, now people's lives, basic rights and freedoms, human dignity, the present and future of our countries are at stake.” Joining Esipenko is - Ian Nepomniachtchi, Daniil Dubov, Peter Svidler, and many others. There is a lot of promise for Mr Esipenko - standing up to a world leader, beating the World Champion, and performance ratings above 2800 all before the age of 21 - he is someone to watch out for. In today’s game we are going to the Tata Steel Challengers Tournament of 2019. Andrey Esipenko versus Dinara Saduakassova Now, if we’re ready - let’s begin. 1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nf6 3. Nxe5 d6 4. Nf3 Nxe4 5. Nc3 Nxc3 6. dxc3 Be7 7. Be3 Nd7 8. Qd2 O-O 9. O-O-O c6 10. h4 d5 11. Kb1 Re8 12. Bd3 Nc5 13. Ng5 h6 14. Bh7+ Kf8 15. c4 Na4 16. Qd3 Qd6 17. Bc1 hxg5 18. hxg5 Bd8 19. cxd5 cxd5 20. Qf3 Be6 21. Bf5 Nb6 22. Rde1 Nd7 23. Rh8+ Ke7 24. Rxe6+ 1-0 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrey_Esipenko https://ruchess.ru/en/persons_of_day/andrey_esipenko/ http://cassidynoble.com/ https://blindfoldchesspodcast.com/…
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Blindfold Chess Podcast

Miguel Najdorf was a Polish-Argentine chess grandmaster who was one of the strongest players who never won a world championship. He was born on April 15, 1910, in Grodzisk Mazowiecki, Poland. He was introduced to chess by a friend at the age of 14. His chess career began to take off around 1929 when he was almost 20 with the game now called ‘The Polish Immortal’ where he sacrificed 5 pieces in a 22 move victory against Glucksberg. He won the Warsaw Championship in 1934 and placed 2nd in the 1935 Polish championship. During the 8th Chess Olympiad taking place in Buenos Aires, Argentina - Germany invaded his country of Poland. Being Jewish along with his teammates, Tartakower and Frydman - they stayed in Argentina. His wife, daughter, parents, and 4 siblings were murdered in the Holocaust. While in Argentina during the war, he set a world record for simultaneous blindfold chess games by playing 40 people at the same time. Reportedly, he had hoped the news of these records would be reported in Europe and his family would learn of his whereabouts, but they had already perished before the information arrived. He quickly became one of the strongest players in South America placing 1st or 2nd in 13 different tournaments during/shortly after the war. In 1944, he became an official citizen of Argentina. At this point, even though he was number 2 in the world according to Chessmetrics, he was not a full-time chess professional, he was still selling life insurance as a day job. As the World Championship cycle wasn’t formalized yet tournaments around the world helped determine who the world championship caliber players would be. His victories in Prague in 1947 were downplayed, claiming the tournament was ‘weak’. However, in 1950, he was granted the inaugural Grandmaster title by FIDE along with 26 of his peers. He was in the Candidates Tournament in 1951 (finishing 5th) and 1953 (finishing 6th), but he could not re-climb the mountain to get back to the World Championship. Toward the end of his career, he participated in the 1970 USSR versus Rest of the World match achieving an even score against 38 year old Mikhail Tal. During the commentary of the match Najdorf remarked “When [World Champion] Boris Spassky offers you a piece, you might as well resign then and there. But when Mikhail Tal offers you a piece, you would do well to keep playing, because then he might offer you another, and then another, and then… who knows?” Najdorf ended up passing away from complications from surgery when he was 87. Najdorf’s impact on the game has been absolutely monumental. He was particularly known for his mastery of the Sicilian Defense, he developed a variation of the Sicilian that is now known as the Najdorf Variation, which is still played in 3% of all chess games. He defeated many of the game's greatest players, including Fischer, Karpov, and Tal. And created a blindfold chess record of 45 games at once that stood for over 60 years. It is hard to spend time in the chess scene without encountering his name. This week, we are heading to 1955 in the Argentine Championship in Buenos Aires. Miguel Najdorf vs Ruben Shocron Now if we’re ready, let’s begin. 1.c4 f5 2.d4 Nf6 3.Nc3 e6 4.e3 b6 5.Be2 Bb7 6.Bf3 Nc6 7.Nge2 Be7 8.b3 Qc8 9.O-O g5 10.Bb2 Nd8 11.Bxb7 Qxb7 12.d5 O-O 13.e4 fxe4 14.Ng3 b5 15.dxe6 Nxe6 16.Nf5 Rae8 17.Nd5 Bd8 18.Qh5 Ng7 19.Qxg5 Nh5 20.Nh6+ 1-0 https://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1101350 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miguel_Najdorf https://blindfoldchesspodcast.com/…
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Blindfold Chess Podcast

Chess has historically been commented on as black and white, that extends beyond the board too. There are female and ‘open’ tournaments (which are traditionally male), ‘open’ and female titles, and if they are integrated in the same tournament, there are sometimes ‘open’ and female prizes. This freedom of expression has been challenged by FIDE in August 2023. FIDE announced a policy that is… difficult for the transgender community to say the least. Examining the FIDE Regulations on Transgender Chess Player’s Registration on FIDE Directory. I go over some of the “highlights” in the episode. These rules in particular harm all trans players, specifically targeting AMAB (MtF) players. This week, I wanted to look at someone who has challenged the gender binary by looking at Spanish Master Natalia Pares Vives - the woman who pioneered as being openly trans in the chess community. Born in 1955, she won runner up for the Spanish Under 20 Championship in 1973 and 1975. She was the runner up in the 1975 and 1987 Catalina Chess Championship, the runner up in the 2008 Women’s Olympiad, the runner up in the 2008 Catalonia Women’s Championship, and she has represented Spain in both the Olympiad and the European Individual Chess Championship. She acquired her FIDE Master rating in 1985 at the age of 30. She is often cited for Mastering the Englund Gambit. It was around this point that she disappeared from tournament play for close to 10 years. A period that she has called her ‘discovery phase’. ‘I couldn’t keep my mind on various fronts, and chess was pushed aside despite the fact that for many years it was an important part of my life.’ Vives said, translated from an article linked in the description. During her time away, she was involved as the President of the Collective of Transsexuals of Catalonia and the president of the Federation of Transsexuals of Spain. Vives was also an early pioneer in designing and programming chess computers. She led the creation of the program Tigran,the first official chess program to come from Spain. Her computer scored 4th in the 1996 Spanish Computer Chess Championships. Upon returning to play in 1998, President of the Spanish Chess Federation, Javier Ochoa de Echaguen (oh-cho-a de eh-sha-gen), said: ‘This is the first time that a similar case has been presented in the world of chess. Natalia meets all the legal requirements and therefore has the same rights to that of any player.’ Fast forward to today, a full 25 years later, and there are constant controversies around the world pertaining to the participation of trans men and women in sports, and chess has become no exception. This type of anti-transgender policy is an attempt to keep incentives high for biological women to play the game. In today’s game, we are traveling back to Round 4 of the 2009 Women’s Team Championship. Natalia Pares Vives versus Sanja Dedijer Now, if we’re ready - let’s begin. 1. e4 e6 2. d4 d5 3. Nc3 dxe4 4. Nxe4 Bd7 5. Nf3 Bc6 6. Bd3 Nd7 7. O-O Ngf6 8. Ned2 Be7 9. Nc4 Bd5 10. Nce5 O-O 11. Re1 b6 12. c4 Bb7 13. Ng5 h6 14. Nexf7 Rxf7 15. Nxe6 Qb8 16. Bg6 Bd6 17. Bxf7+ Kxf7 18. Qc2 c5 19. Qf5 cxd4 20. Qh3 Ne5 21. Nxd4 Neg4 22. Nf5 Bxh2+ 23. Kf1 Be5 24. f3 Nh2+ 25. Kg1 Bc8 26. Bd2 Qc7 27. Bb4 Qd8 28. Rad1 Qc7 29. f4 Bxf5 30. Qxf5 Bxf4 1-0 https://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1561238 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natalia_Par%C3%A9s_Vives https://transstudiesarchive.wordpress.com/2021/12/06/trans-chess-master-natalia-pares-vives/ https://escacs.cat/premsa/marcamarzo4.pdf https://handbook.fide.com/chapter/TransgenderRegulations…
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Blindfold Chess Podcast

Rameshbabu Praggnanandhaa, sometimes nicknamed as Pragg, is a young Indian chess player who has made waves in the international chess scene with his impressive performances. Born on August 10, 2005, in Chennai (Chin-eye), India, he began playing chess at the age of three. Praggnanandhaa's talent was immediately apparent, and he quickly rose through the ranks to become one of the top chess players in his age group. He has won numerous national and international titles, and his accomplishments include: In 2013 at the age of 7, he won the World Youth Championship in the Under-8 year old division earning him his FIDE Master title. He also won the Under 10 section in 2015. He became the World’s youngest International Master in 2016, at the age of just 10 years and 10 months. Two years later, he earned his 3rd Grandmaster norm at the Gredine Open in Italy to become the 2nd youngest person ever to earn his Grandmaster title at the age of 12 years, 10 months, and 13 days. (Since that point, 3 others have earned it quicker placing him 5th on the list). The same year, his older sister - Vaishali - earned her Women’s Grandmaster Title. In 2021, he was in the World Cup seeded 90th and made it to the 4th round before losing to Maxime Vachier-Lagrave (the 7th seed). Pragg has also competed in the Tata Steel Tournament in 2022 and 2023 with okay scores, but he did beat World Champion Ding Liren. In the past 2 years, he has also beaten Magnus Carlsen on 4 different occasions (only the 3rd Indian player to have beaten Magnus and at the time the youngest to have beaten Magnus since he had become the World Champion). Earlier this year, at the age of 18, he became the world’s youngest player to reach the Chess World Cup Final, he lost to Carlsen but secured 2nd place qualifying him for the 2024 Candidates Tournament. The youngest IM, 2nd youngest to become a GM, and having beaten two World Champions - Praggnanandhaa's accomplishments in chess at such a young age are truly remarkable. He has proven himself to be a fierce competitor and a rising star in the chess world. With his talent, we can expect him to achieve even greater things in the future. This week, we are going to the fairly recent Reykjavik Open in 2022. Rameshbabu Praggnananadhaa versus Mattieu Cornette. Now, if we’re ready… let’s begin. 1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 e6 3. Nc3 Bb4 4. e3 O-O 5. Bd2 d5 6. Nf3 b6 7. cxd5 exd5 8. Bd3 Bb7 9. Qc2 Re8 10. a3 Bf8 11. Ng5 g6 12. h4 Bg7 13. O-O-O Ng4 14. Nxh7 Kxh7 15. h5 Kg8 16. hxg6 f6 17. Rdf1 Nc6 18. Ne2 Qd6 19. Ng3 Ne7 20. Rh7 f5 21. Nh5 Bf8 22. Bxf5 Nf6 23. Bb4 c5 24. dxc5 bxc5 25. Bxc5 1-0 https://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=2267590 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R_Praggnanandhaa https://www.patreon.com/BlindfoldChessPodcast https://blindfoldchesspodcast.com/ https://blindfoldchesspodcast.com/cassidynoble/chess/…
Hello and welcome back for another episode! This month, we will be looking at King and Pawn puzzles! In today’s episode, I will be providing you with the locations of the different pieces on the board. It is your job to figure out the solution by pausing the podcast before moving on. Today, we will be looking at 3 puzzles each around a different endgame theme starting from Easy and working our way to Hard. Here is your first puzzle - White has a king on b2 and a pawn on g5. Black has a king on c4. It is white to play. Please pause and find the solution before moving on. Solution coming in 5 seconds. -- This puzzle demonstrates the ‘Rule of the Square’. If you draw a diagonal from the white pawn until you reach the end of the board. Now, imagine another line starting at the ending square of the diagonal and extend it upwards until it reaches the rank of the pawn. If the black king can enter that square, the pawn can be caught. If he cannot - the pawn will promote. Time to move on to the next puzzle. White has a king on f1 and a pawn on d4. Black has a king on h8. It is white to play. Please pause and find the solution before moving on. Solution coming in 5 seconds. -- This puzzle discusses the concept of Critical Squares / Key square which is exclusive to king and pawn endgames. As long as the king is in one of these squares they can force pawn promotion. Such ideas of Key Squares can take the forms of - shouldering, opposition, and boxing out. To determine Key Squares - if the pawn is on the 2nd through 4th rank - as long as the king is in any of the 3 squares that are 2 ranks above the pawn, you can force promotion. For example - if the pawn is on d4, the king can occupy c6, d6, or e6 to force promotion. This changes when the pawn is on the 5th-7th rank, the king can occupy any of the 3 squares that are 1 or 2 ranks in front of the pawn. There is some funky behavior for rook pawns, but the general rules applies. The last puzzle is a bit of a tough one. White has a pawn on b3, a pawn on g4, and a king on f3. Black has a pawn on a6, b5, and a king on g5. Please pause and find the solution before moving on. Solution coming in 5 seconds. --- This has been coined as ‘Stopping two pawns with one’ and International Master Silman as the ‘Fox in the Chicken Coupe’. The idea is, you can lock up two pawns with one by preventing your opponent from advancing their pawns without giving you a passed pawn. Then, on the other side of the board, you lure the king further down the board and away from their pawns. Once they are far enough, you can abandon your extra pawn, collect the two of your opponent’s, then promote your own. This has more practical effects with more pawns on the board, especially if you can keep distracting them. https://blindfoldchesspodcast.com/ https://blindfoldchesspodcast.com/cassidynoble/chess/…
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Blindfold Chess Podcast

Robert James Fischer, also known as Bobby Fischer, was an American chess player who is widely considered one of the greatest chess players of all time. Born in Chicago on March 9, 1943, he learned how to play chess at the age of six, and quickly demonstrated exceptional talent for the game. Fischer began playing in competitive chess tournaments at the age of eight, and by the age of 13, he had become the youngest player to win the United States Junior Chess Championship. In 1958, at the age of 15, Fischer won his first United States Championship, and he went on to win the tournament a total of eight times in his career by at least 1 point (all of this happening between the ages of 14 to 23). This included between 1963 and 1964, he completed a feat that no one has replicated - getting a perfect score in the US Championship with 11 wins, no losses, and no draws. In 1960, at the age of 17, Fischer became the youngest player ever to represent the United States in the Chess Olympiad. He won the gold medal for his performance in that tournament. He went on to represent the United States in the Olympiad a total of eight times in his career, winning a total of four gold medals, one silver medal, and one bronze medal. Fischer's first major international tournament success came in 1963, when he won the Interzonal Tournament in Yugoslavia with a score of 17.5 out of 22. This victory qualified him for the Candidates Tournament, which he won in 1971, earning him the right to challenge Boris Spassky for the World Chess Championship. The 1972 World Chess Championship, held in Reykjavik, Iceland, was one of the most famous chess matches in history. Fischer threatened to not play, but eventually agreed to compete. After losing the first game and forfeiting the 2nd game, Fischer won the third game and then proceeded to dominate the match winning 12 ½ to 8 ½. Fischer's victory over Spassky made him the first American to officially win the World Chess Championship. His victory saw membership to US Chess double in 1972, peaking in 1974. After his World Championship victory, he made demands to FIDE before the next Championship in 1975 that included - The match continues until one player wins 10 games There is no limit to the number of games played If there is a 9-9 tie, the champion retains his title FIDE opted to not accept those demands and as a result, Fischer declined to play, forfeiting his title to Karpov. After that, Fischer dropped out of the spotlight for close to 20 years. In addition to his World Chess Championship victory, Fischer won a number of other major international tournaments during his career. He won the United States Open Chess Championship four times, the Chess Olympiad four times, the Interzonal Tournament twice, and the Candidates Tournament once. He understood the game at such a high level that many at the top level had a hard time keeping up. FIDE’s January 1972 rating list had Fischer’s rating at 2785, a full 115 points above 2nd place Spassky. For reference, 115 points below 2nd place Spassky’s rating of 2660 would put you 38 people lower to number 40 on the rating list. In today’s game, we are looking at the game that won the Brilliancy Prize in the 1963/1964 US Championship. Robert Byrne v. Bobby Fischer. Now if we’re ready… let’s begin. 1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 g6 3.g3 c6 4.Bg2 d5 5.cxd5 cxd5 6.Nc3 Bg7 7.e3 O-O 8.Nge2 Nc6 9.O-O b6 10.b3 Ba6 11.Ba3 Re8 12.Qd 2e5 13.dxe5 Nxe5 14.Rfd1 Nd3 15.Qc2 Nxf2 16.Kxf2 Ng4+ 17.Kg1 Nxe3 18.Qd2 Nxg2!! 19.Kxg2 d4! 20.Nxd4 Bb7+ 21.Kf1 Qd7 22.Qf2 Qh3+ 23.Kg1 Re1+!! 24.Rxe1 Bxd4 0-1 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bobby_Fischer http://cassidynoble.com/…
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Blindfold Chess Podcast

During the 2020 Pandemic, chess caught fire due to the access of streaming and the Netflix show - Queen’s Gambit. In the show, we saw the main character, Beth Harmon, go from discovering the game to taking down the World Champion in one game. While the show takes a couple liberties to dramatize the chess scene - it is still one of the best chess pieces of media that are out there… and there are some bad ones out there. *ahem* Looking at you Geico chess commercial - don’t think you can sneak 2 light square bishops past me. The 1983 novel was written by Walter Tevis. There were original plans for a screenplay adaptation, but was called off after Tevis’s death in 1984. There will be some spoilers for the Queen’s Gambit - if you have not watched/finished it - you have been warned. Tevis loosely based the book on his chess experiences as a ‘C’ class level player, but the journey that Beth takes is loosely based on Bobby Fischer - poor, misunderstood child prodigy to the best of the world. The coming of age journey sees Beth being placed in an orphanage after her mother dies. There, the staff gave tranquilizers to the students to keep them calm. Beth becomes addicted to the tranquilizers, coupled with borderline alcoholism as she becomes an adult. Along the way, she discovers chess, defeats local players, goes on to the US Championship, wins that, then moves on to the International stage where she eventually defeats the reigning world champion. The show does a great job at capturing the chess scene of the 1950s and 60s including the rarity of blitz, adjourned games, various archetypes of players, and general etiquette of a chess tournament. The show also took painstaking efforts to ensure the chess over the board was accurate. Every shot of a chess board included a position from a real life game. I’ve included a link in the show notes of all the games and positions referenced, but here are a couple highlights. In Episode 1 where Beth is playing the school janitor Mr. Shaibel, the game comes from a 14 move game with Greco from the year 1620. In Episode 2, we see a game from 1955 with Nezhmetdinov (nez-met-deen-of) vs. Kasparian. Episode 4 is taken from a Bobby Fischer versus Bent Larson game with some tweaks. Episode 5 sees both an Ivanchuk game from 1995 and a Kramnik game from 2005 both of which… didn’t happen for another 30-40 years. But I suppose I’m splitting hairs. And - it wouldn’t be a chess show without throwing in Paul Morphy’s Opera House game - probably the most famous chess game in existence. Episode 6 we get a game from Paul Morphy, the unofficial American World Champion. Episode 7 we get 5 different games referencing - Kasparov, Petrosian, Korchnoi, Ivanchuk, and Topalov. I’m glad the producers spent so much time researching and referencing real games to elevate the show. In today’s game, we are looking at a game from Episode 4 featuring Bernstein versus Capablanca in 1914. This is a touch longer than we usually do, so… if we’re ready - let’s begin. 1. d4 d5 2. c4 e6 3. Nc3 Nf6 4. Nf3 Be7 5. Bg5 O-O 6. e3 Nbd7 7. Rc1 b6 8. cxd5 exd5 9. Qa4 Bb7 10. Ba6 Bxa6 11. Qxa6 c5 12. Bxf6 Nxf6 13. dxc5 bxc5 14. O-O Qb6 15. Qe2 c4 16. Rfd1 Rfd8 17. Nd4 Bb4 18. b3 Rac8 19. bxc4 dxc4 20. Rc2 Bxc3 21. Rxc3 Nd5 22. Rc2 c3 23. Rdc1 Rc5 24. Nb3 Rc6 25. Nd4 Rc7 26. Nb5 Rc5 27. Nxc3 Nxc3 28. Rxc3 Rxc3 29. Rxc3 Qb2 0-1 https://www.chessgames.com/perl/chesscollection?cid=1045315 https://www.chess.com/article/view/queens-gambit-every-chess-position https://blindfoldchesspodcast.com/…
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Blindfold Chess Podcast

With a birthday tomorrow, this week we will be focusing on Alexandra Botez, the Canadian- American chess player and content creator who has made a significant impact on the online chess community. She was born on September 24, 1995, in Dallas, Texas to Romanian immigrant parents, then grew up in Vancouver, Canada. Botez started playing chess at the age of six and quickly became one of Canada's top junior players. At the age of 8, she won her first Canadian Children’s National Championship. At the age of 12, she played for the National Canadian Team, and she later won 4 more Canadian Youth National Titles. Around the age of 15, she moved back to the United States and won the US Girls Nationals Championship. Later, she represented the state of Oregon at the SPF Girls’ Invitational. The SPF is the Susan Polgar Foundation Invitational Tournament. In 2013, at the age of 18, she earned the WFM title - Women’s FIDE Master. All in all, she won 5 national titles as a teenager. Toward the later part of her college career, she began streaming chess. Due in partial part to the chess boom that occurred during the COVID-19 Pandemic, Alexandra’s channel exploded. She had her sister, Andrea, join her. Together, she has amassed a following of 1.2 million followers on Twitch and 1.3 million on Youtube. The success of the channel has allowed them to collaborate with various other streamers like Hikaru Nakamura or Qiyu Zhou as well as expand beyond playing chess, by participating in poker tournaments, being elected to the Susan Polgar Foundation board of directors, and being a commentator for the PRO Chess League. In over the board play, Botez has achieved a peak FIDE rating of 2092. While she has not competed in many traditional over-the-board tournaments in recent years, Botez has had a major impact on the chess community. Her followers helped coin the term ‘The Botez Gambit’ referring to when she would accidentally lose her queen. The phrase is now used across the chess streaming community. She has also collected several awards as a streamer and commentator including the 2021 Twitch Streamer Award for ‘Best Chess Streamer’ beating out Hikaru Nakamura and GothamChess. As well as winning The Streamer Awards in 2022 and being nominated in 2023. Overall, Alexandra Botez has made a significant impact on the chess world as both a player and content creator. Her entertaining and educational streams have helped make chess more accessible and popular among a wider audience. In today’s game we are traveling to the Istanbul Olympiad of 2012 where Alexandra Botez faced Maria Paula De Mey. Now, if we’re ready… Let’s begin. 1. d4 d5 2. c4 e6 3. Nf3 Nf6 4. Nc3 Be7 5. Bf4 a6 6. e3 Nc6 7. a3 h6 8. c5 Bd7 9. Bd3 b6 10. b4 g6 11. Qc2 g5 12. Bg3 a5 13. b5 Na7 14. c6 Bc8 15. Ne5 Bd6 16. a4 Bb4 17. O-O Bxc3 18. Qxc3 Ne4 19. Bxe4 dxe4 20. f3 exf3 21. Rxf3 f6 22. Qd3 fxe5 23. Qg6+ Ke7 24. Rf7+ Kd6 25. Qe4 1-0 PGN: https://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1684972 Botez Live: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCAn8NrZ-J4CRfwodajqFYoQ https://www.twitch.tv/botezlive Links: https://blindfoldchesspodcast.com/ http://cassidynoble.com/…
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Blindfold Chess Podcast

Born to a family of economists in 1996, Hungarian native Richard Rapport got into chess when his father was concerned about his lack of concentration in primary school. Shortly after an introduction to the game, Richard was hooked so much that his father became concerned that he was concentrating too much on chess. Rather than pulling him away, his parents embraced the enthusiasm by coordinating extended leaves from school to travel and play in tournaments. Quite quickly, Richard’s success snowballed. At age 11, he became a FIDE Master. He earned his International Master title the next year. He picked up his 3 Grandmaster Norms in 3 consecutive tournaments. He earned his Grandmaster title at the age of 13 years and 11 months, making him the youngest Hungarian Grandmaster at that time to do so and the 5th youngest ever. After acquiring the GM title, Rapport has only continued to grow, in 2016 (at the age of 20), he was the highest rated Under 21 player in the world with a 2717 rating - solidifying that by playing (and winning) a match against the number 2 junior in the world Wei Yi (rating of 2707). In 2017, he played in the Tata Steel tournament where he faced Magnus Carlsen for the first time and beat him in 33 moves. Later that year, he won the Hungarian Chess Championship. In 2022, he qualified for the Candidates Tournament by placing second in the 2022 Grand Prix event, he didn’t perform well in the Candidates, but he did act as Challenger Ding Liren’s second during the 2023 World Championship where Ding later defeated Ian Nepomniatchi. The accolades and accomplishments are not why I enjoy Rapport, he has a unique and creative playing style. He is known for his unorthodox openings and his ability to create complex and unpredictable positions on the board. Sometimes - even at the detriment of his own position just exhibit interesting ideas. There are jokes that go around that Rapport looks to leave book/theory as soon as possible to just play chess and that is amazing to watch at such a high level. It is a rather high level of risk to play that way at such a high level. This week, we are traveling to St. Louis during the 2019 Champions Showdown. Richard Rapport versus Samuel Shankland Now, if we’re ready… let’s begin. 1. d4 d5 2. Nc3 Nf6 3. Bg5 Nbd7 4. e3 c6 5. Nf3 e6 6. Bd3 Be7 7. O-O O-O 8. h3 c5 9. a3 a6 10. Ne5 h6 11. Bf4 Nxe5 12. dxe5 Nd7 13. Qg4 f5 14. Qg6 Rf7 15. Qxe6 Nf6 16. Bxf5 Bxe6 17. Bxe6 Ne8 18. Nxd5 Nc7 19. Nxc7 Rb8 20. Bxf7+ Kxf7 21. Rad1 Qf8 22. Rd7 Rd8 23. Rfd1 Rxd7 24. e6+ 1-0 PGN: https://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1945766 Bio/Story: https://en.chessbase.com/post/richrd-rapport-a-new-star-in-che Links: https://blindfoldchesspodcast.com/ http://cassidynoble.com/…
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