i dont understand why that sac was immediately good. or even positionally good in the long run. white is so strong positionally before the sac. why is it even necessary? what does it necessitate? dedass the computers said it was even. and after gotham follows the moves at 7:19 w the black queen c6 move, he says its a relatively even game after all the trades. i dont get what it does?
@@ooDirtyMickoo actually we shouldn't only look at computer evaluation, because the machine doesn't have something like "hard to play sytuation", and also it considers move human not even look at at depth over 20 moves. Personally I think this queen sacrifice helped him a lot with pressureing opponent.
@@jankot6187 well sure, computers dont evaluate every scenario perfectly, but theyre partly telling. how is the pressuring especially better, or worth giving up the queen? i dont understand? like what does the sac do that he couldnt do otherwise?
Just after the game Daniil explained all lines, and he said that Sergey wanted to save his Queen to win, because he didn't want a draw (this was the only mistake).
There was a great interview with Dubov, where he specifically says he's not afraid of showcasing his prep and research in unimportant tournaments or games, because "by the time an important tournament comes around, half a year to a year later, he'll have thought of new ideas." This is showcased perfectly here. He's not afraid to rock the boat, throw stuff at the wall and see what sticks.
I have checked this game with an engine and the engine doesn't know when Karjakin went wrong, it just realizes that black is lost after black captures on f2 (Bxf2+) which is the best move recommended by the engine. It is insane how many engine moves both Dibov and Karjakin played in this crazy game. The engine first thought that after a5 black was better (-3) but then it changed its mind all the way to +0.5 evaluation.
Jan Gustaffson said after he got done making his e5 chessable course that the Italian is actually a very vicious opening if you don't play the mainline c3 d3 ideas. He was using a pretty advanced version of Leela too. He also said that Leela proposed some new lines in the Marshall Attack that traditional engines didn't like with Leela saying there's enough long-term compensation.
As much as I love Hikaru and respect Carlsen (talking about super GMs) I admire how creative Dubov is. If somebody will let him do his magic there is no way out.
I am so here for this dude's content. I need this type of productive energy in my life with the amount of quality content he's putting out. Entertaining. Highly educational. Levy always delivers. 💯🤙🏿
About 2:25, according to agadmator's video, if d5 exf6 dxc4, you now have b5 kicking the knight out, and the knight doesn't have the usual e7 square to retreat to. Black would either have to undevelop with Nb8 or go to the rim with Na5, and probably Karjakin wanted to avoid that position. Do you think there should be more than this to consider, or knowing this, would you say Karjakin was correct to move his knight to e4?
An interesting line in the ..d5 variation, where black leaves his c6 knight hanging for 3 moves because white taking the knight is always too slow: 1.e4 e5 2.Bc4 Bc5 3.Nf3 Nc6 4.c3 Nf6 5.d4 exd4 6.b4 Bb6 7.e5 d5 8.exf6 dxc4 9.b5 O-O 10.O-O dxc3 11.fxg7 Re8 12.Qxd8 Nxd8
One of the issues with black playing d5 after white pushed e5 was that after exf6 dxc4 white has the intermezzo b5, which gains a tempo on the knight and allows white to play Ba3 after which Re1+ becomes a significant threat.
Umm he couldn't play rook e4 as then the ensuing line would have traded most pieces and ultimately lead to White's attack fizzling out with no counterplay with black being -2
I think that because after Qxc4 and Rxc4 black can take the f6 bishop with either pawn or rook so they would both end up with 2 rooks and a piece ( Knight for white and bishop for black ) but black would have 1 more pawn and white simply loses its attack since the f6 bishop is key .
9:45 instead of Rc1, wouldn't c8=Q be completely winning for white? the rook on the 8th rank couldn't take because of Rxg7+, Kh8, Rc7+, and then you have the discovered check and you're winning the rook with check again I would've liked to see this line explored, or to see if there's something I missed Edit: I went to check in analysis and it doesn't quite work because the queen can take the rook on e1
I was thinking about asking you about the game in the next stream, since I was watching the game live, and boom, delivered a great video. Easy to watch and follow, kudos sir
am so happy i subscribed to this channel, this is what it looks like when a very good player explains chess games. For this year, the best chess channel so far. agadmator could take any other position.
I was wondering the same. But i giess than dubov would loose both bishops and he is totally down on material without any attack left. Maybe. Im not sure
Fascinating game and analysis! Thank you! Question: when you said the king "...could have went" at 10:25, we're you just pretending to be ungood at grammar, or are you actually shaky on your tenses?
getting material is not always good, in this case karjakin had 4 points and was not even winning. after rook e4 black take the f6 bishop, Bxf7+, Rxf7. and it will be a winning endgame with an extra pawn for black
I assume you're asking if it's possible to deflect the g8 rook and promote in that position. So few things to consider: The queen is attacking the undefended e1 rook. Technically, the only forcing move is Rxg7. If Rxg7+, Rxg7 c8=Q Qxe1, you're not free to recapture the rook on g7 because if Bxg7 or Nxg7, Bg1+ Kh1 Bf2+ Kh2 Qg1# is checkmate. So you'd end up with a queen, bishop and knight against a queen, bishop and rook, plus a position where the white king needs some defending. White's a-pawn is also loose and losing it could mean black gets a passed pawn. If Bxg7 (defending the e1 rook with the e7 rook), the rook doesn't need to recapture. The king could move out of the way with Kg6, attacking the knight on f5. If the knight moves away to a safe square, say g3, now Rxg7 is a threat because if c8=Q, Rxe7 Rxe7 Qxe7, material is more or less even. If Nxg7, you stop defending the e7 rook, and just Qxe7. White is completely lost here. So maybe Bxg7 had something, but what Dubov played was just much better.
You don't go d5 because after exf6 and dxc4 white pushes b5 and the knight has to go to the rim. I got this from the biggest chess channel, Agadmator. It's the biggest chess channel btw. Thought I should mention it.
It's highly unusual not only because of the somewhat intuitive "it's not worth to see a failing Queen sac" reason but because it is actually quite uncommon. No one sacs his Queen if they aren't truly damn sure they are going to get away with it. Also, a failing Queen sac might be worth analyzing to learn how to detect when it is wrong and what dangers it bears, 'cause correct qs's played by gm's just seem so natural and great since they only do them when they know they will win/get a great positional advantage after that. BTW: For failing crazy attacks look for Stofvlees recent games.
That agadmator guy gives a much better breakdown. Remarkable game.
Woww you got pinned😀
then why are you here?
Even Gotham did a great job :/
Sorry about that
Why did you have to say something so controversial yet so brave
Wow... this game gives the legendary XQC vs MoistCritical brilliancy a run for its money
hi handsome
Nice!
Hahahahaha two ims having fun
Lol
@@GothamChess stop flirting with people😂
Dubov playing Dubov variation
Me trying the same thing : Dubious variation
XDD
underrated comment lmfaoo
😂
Now i know karjakin for another losing game
The dubov variation, or as dubov calls it; the variation.
Instead of Delayed Evans Gambit, I really like the name "B4lenciaga Variation".
Gotta aim high for that custom piece of Balenciaga
Yes! that's what it will be called henceforth.
Now I'm wondering if this whole video was just the build up to that comment. Either way, worth it.
It's definitely a better game Levy!
...a dubov gambit 😁
Bless you
That is a true "oh no my queen" moment, stunning move
Call an ambulance
But not for mee
i dont understand why that sac was immediately good. or even positionally good in the long run. white is so strong positionally before the sac. why is it even necessary? what does it necessitate?
dedass the computers said it was even. and after gotham follows the moves at 7:19 w the black queen c6 move, he says its a relatively even game after all the trades. i dont get what it does?
@@ooDirtyMickoo actually we shouldn't only look at computer evaluation, because the machine doesn't have something like "hard to play sytuation", and also it considers move human not even look at at depth over 20 moves. Personally I think this queen sacrifice helped him a lot with pressureing opponent.
Oh no, anyways
@@jankot6187 well sure, computers dont evaluate every scenario perfectly, but theyre partly telling. how is the pressuring especially better, or worth giving up the queen? i dont understand? like what does the sac do that he couldnt do otherwise?
Phrases like “pawn getting the police escort” is why I keep watching these lol
@GothamChess note this
Italian opening -> B4lenciaga Variation -> Botez Gambit -> Passed pawn -> Ladder Checkmate in the middle of the board. What a game!
Botez Gambit 😆😆
Daniil Dubov
A man who Magnus Carlsen himself praised for being a fierce attacker that he can learn from..
A true playa over the board..
Watching this video again after Karjakin threw shade at Dubov for helping Carlsen vs. Nepo in the 2021 Fide World Championship.
Just came here to write this but you did it, have a nice day.
Same
same here
what happened?
@@Lukygus The Russian National Team was upset that Dubov was on Magnus Carlsen's team instead of helping fellow Russian Ian Nepomnatchi.
Just after the game Daniil explained all lines, and he said that Sergey wanted to save his Queen to win, because he didn't want a draw (this was the only mistake).
Dubov hands down has the most entertaining games. He's our time's tal
It looks like Dubov trades his material for thin air, but then air checkmates opponents king
Opponents King: "That air was thick and fearsome, don't mock me."
When a GM "hangs" a piece it usually means you are about to get mated.
There was a great interview with Dubov, where he specifically says he's not afraid of showcasing his prep and research in unimportant tournaments or games, because "by the time an important tournament comes around, half a year to a year later, he'll have thought of new ideas." This is showcased perfectly here. He's not afraid to rock the boat, throw stuff at the wall and see what sticks.
I have checked this game with an engine and the engine doesn't know when Karjakin went wrong, it just realizes that black is lost after black captures on f2 (Bxf2+) which is the best move recommended by the engine. It is insane how many engine moves both Dibov and Karjakin played in this crazy game. The engine first thought that after a5 black was better (-3) but then it changed its mind all the way to +0.5 evaluation.
I really like the sound of The Italian game: Dubov variation
Indeed, it sounds cool!
The Italian game: Evans gambit delayed, Dubov variation 😂
russian gangster variation
@@teranyan now that's what an opening i'd like to play
@@manucalin8502 The Italian game: Balenciaga gambit, Dubov variation
This video might blow up in light of current events.
You know a game is gonna be insane if Agad and Levy instantly make a video about it back to back.
Everyone in the chess world is talking about this. It really is a historic game.
_"For some reason Kariakin decides to hang on to the Queen, goddam it..."_
Good one.
This is why classical will always be interesting
This video should blow up after Karjakin Dubov controversy in World champion
I just finished watching your 1 and a half hour video on how to win and there's already another upload? Is it Christmas already?
Me too!
i still havent finished
Just a random question :
What does Singh mean in hindi?
You wish!
@@manu-singh so your last name is you wish???
11:39 levy just coined a term
Dubov Gambit: Delayed Evans Counterattack
Other players mission : take the first place
Dubov : Lets defeat the no.1 and no.2 rank in the tournament and lets settle with 3rd place
i would never have guessed this was an italian from the middle
Jan Gustaffson said after he got done making his e5 chessable course that the Italian is actually a very vicious opening if you don't play the mainline c3 d3 ideas. He was using a pretty advanced version of Leela too. He also said that Leela proposed some new lines in the Marshall Attack that traditional engines didn't like with Leela saying there's enough long-term compensation.
Khal Draco Is leela the best engine to use to discover new lines?
@@dinkleberg794 yes, stockfish is just a tactical monster and doesn't really relate to humans
As much as I love Hikaru and respect Carlsen (talking about super GMs) I admire how creative Dubov is. If somebody will let him do his magic there is no way out.
Only levy can make chess commentary this exciting
I think you are forgetting Agadmator
Pepe Cuenca gets more excited, trust me xd.
Just for context - if Karjakin just drew the match, he would have won the entire championship!
Saw dubov explaining that if karjakin didn't try to play for a win (trying to save his queen), he would've drew
It's so refreshing to see a new "weird" and unconventional game all throughout. Very nice recap Levy
Me, a beginner that doesnt even know how squares are called trying to understand the positions: 👁👄👁
I am so here for this dude's content. I need this type of productive energy in my life with the amount of quality content he's putting out. Entertaining. Highly educational. Levy always delivers. 💯🤙🏿
I LOVE YOUR PICTURE! we stan diane
"Cry-ane you nerd"- her brothers, probably
But how savage is Dubov. Crazy, cheers Levy
Dubov actually shits on everything I know about chess lmao
Yesssss, another chess recap.
Christmas coming early
I know little to nothing about chess, but this was one of the most riveting games of any sport I've ever seen.
About 2:25, according to agadmator's video, if d5 exf6 dxc4, you now have b5 kicking the knight out, and the knight doesn't have the usual e7 square to retreat to. Black would either have to undevelop with Nb8 or go to the rim with Na5, and probably Karjakin wanted to avoid that position. Do you think there should be more than this to consider, or knowing this, would you say Karjakin was correct to move his knight to e4?
Daniil Dubov can be a legend if he becomes more consistent
Dubov is the most creative chess player, more than a genius, an Artist !
When the Gotham title lives up to the content! Holy shit, that Queen sac, brilliant game, more recaps please!
Dubov is the name of inspiration in the engine era!!
the fact that it isnt even clear where Karjakin made a mistake is mindblowing
There was a high level game in this line. Oleg Skvortsov vs Viswanathan Anand
Exhibition Game (2017)
It seems that Tal"s spirit just came inside Dubov.
I didn't know spirits could ejaculate.
@@davidcopson5800 HAHAHAHAHAHAHA
Levy really deserves a GM tag
yea
Yea
yea
Not quite yet
Yea
At 2:27 I believe that d5 runs into b5, so I think that’s why knight e4 was played
The light square bishop covers the b7 square at the end of that line, so you can move the F knight safely
A few corrections. The move 10. Bg5! was the TN. ({Predecessor:} 10. O-O
h6 11. Qb3 O-O 12. Qxc3 d6 13. exd6 cxd6 14. Rd1 Qe7 15. Bb2 Ne5 16. Nxe5 dxe5
17. Qxe5 Qxe5 18. Bxe5 {1/2-1/2 (51) Greiff,H-Hansen,L (2562) Copenhagen 2000})
It is clear by computer analysis that 15..a4 was the error by Karjakin that lost the game. 15..Nf5 needed to be played.
Dubov played with near perfection in the game. Computer scores Dubov with a very high accuracy rating of .11 vs Karjakin's score of .69. A score of .69 is very weak play by a GM.
Computer analysis engine was Dragon running on a 2950x at 32 threads. TN 10. Bg5! and analysis was found by Chessbase 16.
[Event "?"]
[Site "?"]
[Date "????.??.??"]
[Round "?"]
[White "Dubov"]
[Black "Karjakin"]
[Result "1-0"]
[Annotator "Tactical Analysis 4.0 (15s)"]
[PlyCount "75"]
1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bc4 Bc5 4. c3 Nf6 5. d4 exd4 6. b4 {C54: Giuoco Piano:
4 c3 Nf6, main lines with 5 d4 and 5 d3.} ({White should try} 6. e5 $11 d5 7.
Bb5 (7. exf6 dxc4 8. fxg7 Rg8 $15)) 6... Bb6 $15 7. e5 (7. b5 $15 Na5 8. Bd3)
7... Ne4 (7... d5 $1 $17 {And now ...Ne4 would win.} 8. exf6 dxc4 9. Qe2+ (9.
fxg7 Rg8 $17) 9... Be6) 8. Bd5 {Black is slightly better.} Nxc3 9. Nxc3 dxc3 {
[#]} 10. Bg5 $146 (10. a4 $15 a5 11. bxa5 Bxa5 12. O-O) ({Predecessor:} 10. O-O
h6 11. Qb3 O-O 12. Qxc3 d6 13. exd6 cxd6 14. Rd1 Qe7 15. Bb2 Ne5 16. Nxe5 dxe5
17. Qxe5 Qxe5 18. Bxe5 {1/2-1/2 (51) Greiff,H-Hansen,L (2562) Copenhagen 2000})
10... Ne7 $1 $17 11. O-O {Threatening Nh4.} h6 12. Bh4 O-O (12... g5 $15 13.
Bg3 c2 $1) 13. Re1 $1 $11 Qe8 14. Bb3 a5 15. Bf6 a4 (15... gxf6 $2 16. exf6 d5
17. fxe7 $18) (15... Nf5 $11 {keeps the balance.} 16. Qd3 d6 17. exd6 Qd7 18.
bxa5 Bxa5 19. Bxc3 Qxd6 20. Qxd6 Nxd6 21. Bxa5 Rxa5) 16. Bc4 $1 $16 Ng6 (16...
gxf6 $2 17. exf6 d5 18. Qc1 $18) 17. Qd3 (17. Nh4 $142 $1 {Hoping for Nxg6.}
Nxh4 18. Qg4) 17... d5 18. exd6 $40 {Intending Qxg6 and mate. White has strong
attack.} Be6 {[#]} 19. Qxg6 $3 fxg6 20. Rxe6 Qf7 (20... Qc6 $16 {keeps
fighting.} 21. Re7+ Qxc4 22. Rxg7+ {Double Attack} Kh8 23. Rxc7+ {Discovered
Attack} Rxf6 24. Rxc4 Rxd6) 21. Bxc3 $18 Kh8 {Strongly threatening ...cxd6.}
22. Re4 $1 Qf5 {[#]} 23. Re7 {[#]} Rg8 {Black cannot hold the game after this.}
24. Bxg8 Rxg8 25. dxc7 Qc2 26. Be5 Bxf2+ 27. Kh1 Bb6 28. h3 Kh7 29. Re1 a3 30.
Kh2 g5 31. Nd4 Qc4 (31... Bxd4 $142 32. Bxd4 h5) 32. Nf5 Qxb4 33. Rc1 (33.
Rxg7+ Rxg7 34. c8=Q Qxe1 $19) 33... Kg6 34. Rxg7+ {Double Attack} Kxf5 35. Rxg8
Bxc7 36. Bxc7 ({Inferior is} 36. Rxc7 Kxe5 37. Rc2 Qd6 $11) 36... Qb2 37. Rc5+
Ke4 38. Rd8 {Weighted Error Value: White=0.11/Black=0.69} 1-0
An interesting line in the ..d5 variation, where black leaves his c6 knight hanging for 3 moves because white taking the knight is always too slow: 1.e4 e5 2.Bc4 Bc5 3.Nf3 Nc6 4.c3 Nf6 5.d4 exd4 6.b4 Bb6 7.e5 d5 8.exf6 dxc4 9.b5 O-O 10.O-O dxc3 11.fxg7 Re8 12.Qxd8 Nxd8
DUBOV is so underrated. PS: Rajdabov's game was lit.
Love your content dude!
Magic in the clutch created over the board, no prep team and memorized computer lines. This one's for you Bobby. R.I.P
Finally a super GM game with my favorite line of giuoco piano with d5
Have been following ur videos for a long time now. You completely deserve ur subs. Continue the good work
My fav commentary of this game and trust me I was looking everywhere.
I love Dubov and his attacking chess
I got really amazed by the game between timur gareyev and daniel naroditsky really complicated lines involved
Dubov might be my favourite chess player.
Imagine playing chess in front of millions of people everyday on live television. Shit sounds tiring
Gotham: game of the year maybe even the game of the decade
Me: visible confusion
I'm sorry is this supposed to be funny ?
game was absolutely crazy. thanks for the content sir levy
One of the issues with black playing d5 after white pushed e5 was that after exf6 dxc4 white has the intermezzo b5, which gains a tempo on the knight and allows white to play Ba3 after which Re1+ becomes a significant threat.
Why didn't Dubov play rook to e4 at7:39? Am I missing something?
Bcs engines are stupid and queen can actually sacrifice itself for bishop.
@@notAYUSHGAMING so the queen sacrifice is ok for black???
Umm he couldn't play rook e4 as then the ensuing line would have traded most pieces and ultimately lead to White's attack fizzling out with no counterplay with black being -2
I think that because after Qxc4 and Rxc4 black can take the f6 bishop with either pawn or rook so they would both end up with 2 rooks and a piece ( Knight for white and bishop for black ) but black would have 1 more pawn and white simply loses its attack since the f6 bishop is key .
@@ayebarberfuckmeup4689 queen will sacrifice itself for both bishop and here bishops are more powerful than queen
I was feeling low today and honestly this video made my day. Thanks Levy :)
0:56 BEST AGADMATOR REFERENCE OF 2020?
Evans gambit is not an agadmator reference, its just a possible move
9:45
instead of Rc1, wouldn't c8=Q be completely winning for white?
the rook on the 8th rank couldn't take because of Rxg7+, Kh8, Rc7+, and then you have the discovered check and you're winning the rook with check again
I would've liked to see this line explored, or to see if there's something I missed
Edit: I went to check in analysis and it doesn't quite work because the queen can take the rook on e1
Evaluation bar always makes things better. I know you are evaluating, but with that bar going up and down makes it even better.
Man its sad not to see him in the finals ..
I was thinking about asking you about the game in the next stream, since I was watching the game live, and boom, delivered a great video.
Easy to watch and follow, kudos sir
that bishop move is actually gangsta
Great game, good to see some new moves. Both great players that are thinking outside the box.
Great game and great analysis! Thanks! 🎄
So gangster! Thank you for the recap.
This technique by Dubov is on point. The pawn to b4 is the key move because it doesn't allow any evolving position for Karjakin
am so happy i subscribed to this channel, this is what it looks like when a very good player explains chess games. For this year, the best chess channel so far. agadmator could take any other position.
Love your reviews man!!!! Keep up with your humor and style, love it!
Hold on. At 7:38 could Dubov not play Rook to e4, then Karjakin will lose the queen as it is pinned to the King?
I don't get it.
I was wondering the same. But i giess than dubov would loose both bishops and he is totally down on material without any attack left. Maybe. Im not sure
I don’t know what was better the game or the commentary, great vid man.
2:47 this is the first novelty I have ever seen. This is exciting!
@Yousuf Hassan I know. I meant an early one
10:28 sounds so good
Glad someone covered a game from this 👍
I thought the two 'breakdowns' complemented each other perfectly.
all of dubov's games this tournament have been entertaining af
Fascinating game and analysis! Thank you! Question: when you said the king "...could have went" at 10:25, we're you just pretending to be ungood at grammar, or are you actually shaky on your tenses?
At 7:37 why wouldnt white go rook e4 winning blacks queen by pin from bishop on c4 and defending the bishop? instead of bxc3
getting material is not always good, in this case karjakin had 4 points and was not even winning. after rook e4 black take the f6 bishop, Bxf7+, Rxf7. and it will be a winning endgame with an extra pawn for black
@@arkline9937 Oh I see it. Thank you for explaining this : ).
9:45 isnt possible capture the pawn on g7 and if changes rooks just advance the pawn and get the Queen
I assume you're asking if it's possible to deflect the g8 rook and promote in that position. So few things to consider:
The queen is attacking the undefended e1 rook.
Technically, the only forcing move is Rxg7.
If Rxg7+, Rxg7 c8=Q Qxe1, you're not free to recapture the rook on g7 because if Bxg7 or Nxg7, Bg1+ Kh1 Bf2+ Kh2 Qg1# is checkmate. So you'd end up with a queen, bishop and knight against a queen, bishop and rook, plus a position where the white king needs some defending. White's a-pawn is also loose and losing it could mean black gets a passed pawn.
If Bxg7 (defending the e1 rook with the e7 rook), the rook doesn't need to recapture. The king could move out of the way with Kg6, attacking the knight on f5. If the knight moves away to a safe square, say g3, now Rxg7 is a threat because if c8=Q, Rxe7 Rxe7 Qxe7, material is more or less even.
If Nxg7, you stop defending the e7 rook, and just Qxe7. White is completely lost here.
So maybe Bxg7 had something, but what Dubov played was just much better.
wow dubov will definitely go down in history of chess as one of the most creative players of this era
A very nice watch Levy🙌🏼
7:38 why no Re4?
Great enthusiasm. I could tell if you hadn't gotten this video out you would have exploded.
1:55he didn't play d5 because white can play b5 instead of your suggestion to play pawn capture g7.
That was such a fun game. You gotta feel great winning that one.
This was actually super nuts. Great game
this is my favourite part of this channel. the fact that comments like this are the ones that get pinned is beautiful
You don't go d5 because after exf6 and dxc4 white pushes b5 and the knight has to go to the rim. I got this from the biggest chess channel, Agadmator. It's the biggest chess channel btw. Thought I should mention it.
still looking for a game analysis of a gm game where a queen was purposefully sacked but the player still lost
It's highly unusual not only because of the somewhat intuitive "it's not worth to see a failing Queen sac" reason but because it is actually quite uncommon. No one sacs his Queen if they aren't truly damn sure they are going to get away with it. Also, a failing Queen sac might be worth analyzing to learn how to detect when it is wrong and what dangers it bears, 'cause correct qs's played by gm's just seem so natural and great since they only do them when they know they will win/get a great positional advantage after that. BTW: For failing crazy attacks look for Stofvlees recent games.
The beginning reminds me a lot of a short game where Greco played black and won in 13 moves
Great content, Levy. I really appreciate the PGN in the description; I immediately added this game to my collection.
This game was so insane I'm going to watch it again on agad's channel right now
OK I have to admit... Dubov just has the coolest sounding name.
Levy uses gangster a lot!😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Maybe top 10 in this century.