11/13/2023 – After two rounds in the open section of the European Team Championship, six teams are sharing first place with 4/4 match points: Germany, France, the Netherlands, Serbia, Poland and Israel. Among the six teams standing a match point behind is Austria, who stunned Norway despite Valentin Dragnev failing to make the most of an advantageous position over Magnus Carlsen. In the women’s section, Azerbaijan, France, Poland, Spain and Serbia are sharing the lead, with Spain joining the leading pack after beating the top seeds from Georgia. | Photo: German Chess Federation
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Austria upset Norway, Israel upset Spain
Most round-2 top-board matches were closely contested affairs, with Germany, France, the Netherlands, Serbia, Poland and Israel grabbing a second consecutive match win to go into the third round sharing the lead with 4/4 match points.
In all the matches featuring the now co-leaders, a single win tipped the balance in their favour. The heroes for each winning squad were Vincent Keymer (Germany), Maxime Lagarde (France), Jorden van Foreest (Netherlands), Velimir Ivic (Serbia), Mateusz Bartel (Poland) and Evgeny Postny (Israel). Out of these six teams, only Israel defeated an opponent with a higher rating average: Spain.
The Indian chess grandmaster Vidit Gujrathi with an ELO of over 2700 (June 2023) is one of the best 20 players in the world. For the first time, the sympathetic top player presents himself in a video course. Let a world-class player show you tactical moti
As usual, most eyes were put on Magnus Carlsen’s game, despite Norway having drawn their first match. In the end, the Norwegians suffered an upset loss against Austria, who scored the deciding victory on board 4, where Felix Blohberger defeated Lars Oskar Hauge. Shockingly, Carlsen was inches away from losing his game against Valentin Dragnev. The former world champion, let us not forget, comes from suffering two losses against much lower-rated opponents in the Qatar Masters.
Alexandr Predke, Robert Markus and Velimir Ivic (Serbia) | Photo: Mark Livshitz
Let us learn together how to find the best spot for the queen in the early middlegame, how to navigate this piece around the board, how to time the queen attack, how to decide whether to exchange it or not, and much more!
Hungary versus Germany | Photo: German Chess Federation
Five teams grabbed back-to-back wins in the first two rounds of the women’s championship: Azerbaijan, France, Poland, Spain and Serbia.
The Serbians have the lowest rating average in this group, and they joined the lead by upsetting Armenia in round 2, with Tijana Mandura scoring a 19-win over Maria Gevorgyan on board 4 — the latter was over-optimistic when she played 7.f4 in the following position.
In a total of 6 chapters, we look at the following aspects: the right decision based on tactical factors, decisions in exchanges and moves, complex and psychological decisions in longer games and in defence.
Mandura realized that her opponent’s pawn push was suspicious and spent almost a half hour before playing the accurate 7...Bg4. The Serbian’s conversion was not flawless, but she nonetheless managed to score a quick win that gave her team a crucial victory.
Serbia versus Armenia | Photo: Mark Livshitz
Even more surprising was Spain’s win over the top seeds from Georgia. Marta García and Ann Matnadze won their games on boards 1 and 4, respectively, to take down the favourites.
García’s passed e-pawn was the key factor in her victory over Bella Khotenashvili.
Playing the ugly-looking 26...Bc8, to deal with the passer, was necessary here. After 26...Kh7 27.e6, on the other hand, there was no stopping White’s initiative, as García showed good technique to make the most of her positional edge until getting a 48-move victory.
Carlos Alberto ColodroCarlos Colodro is a Hispanic Philologist from Bolivia. He works as a freelance translator and writer since 2012. A lot of his work is done in chess-related texts, as the game is one of his biggest interests, along with literature and music.
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In this volume, we dive into core aspects of chess technique. Smyslov taught the principle of tactical hierarchy, “checks, double attacks, and unprotected pieces”, and Mikhalchishin demonstrates how this method of calculation is vital.
Videos: Nico Zwirs examines two Petroffs from the 2026 Candidates. Robert Ris has a tip against the Caro-Kann Advance Variation with 3…c5. Fiona Sieber reveals a surprise weapon against the Najdorf. ‘Lucky Bag’ with 40 analyses by Ganguly, L'Ami et al.
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In this powerful new course, endgame expert Karsten Müller teams up with rising star Leon Mendonca to deliver what truly matters: 10 essential rules that every player must know.
In this video course experts examine the games of Bent Larsen. Let them show you which openings Larsen chose, where his strength in middlegames were, how he outplayed his opponents in the endgame & you’ll get a glimpse of his tactical abilities!
From the 2026 Candidates Tournament, featuring a video review by Dorian Rogozenco, to Jan Werle’s opening video on the French Tarrasch Defence, and Oliver Reeh’s tactical column ‘Top Grandmasters at Work’. Analyses by Giri, So, Wei Yi and many others.
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