This is Why You Should Play The Marshall Attack || Anand vs Nunn (1990)

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  • Опубліковано 28 тра 2024
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    Viswanathan Anand vs John Nunn
    Hoogovens (1990), Wijk aan Zee NED, rd 2, Jan-13
    Spanish Game: Marshall Attack. Re3 variation (C89)
    1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bb5 a6 4. Ba4 Nf6 5. O-O Be7 6. Re1 b5 7. Bb3 O-O 8. c3 d5 9. ed5 Nd5 10. Ne5 Ne5 11. Re5 c6 12. Bd5 cd5 13. d4 Bd6 14. Re3 Qh4 15. h3 g5 16. b3 f5 17. Qf3 Bb7 18. Re6 Rae8 19. Re8 Re8 20. Kf1 g4 21. Qf5 gh3 22. Qh3 Qh3 23. gh3 Bc8 24. Be3 Bh3 25. Ke2 Bg4 26. Kd3 Bf5 27. Ke2 Bg4 28. Kd3 Bf5 29. Ke2 Rc8 30. f3 Kf7 31. Bd2 h5 32. c4 Re8 33. Kf2 Bd3 34. Be3 h4 35. f4 dc4 36. bc4 bc4 37. Nd2 Rb8 38. Kf3 c3 39. Ne4 Bb4 40. Rd1 Be4 41. Ke4 c2
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  • Розваги

КОМЕНТАРІ • 265

  • @ceciliaesazul
    @ceciliaesazul Рік тому +109

    The people who make comments here are simply the best. Awesome community

  • @PaulBrown-xq7ti
    @PaulBrown-xq7ti Рік тому +383

    John Nunn was my maths teacher at Maidstone Grammar in the mid 70s. He would pace from side to side at the front of the classroom throughout the lesson, and we would all sit there silently counting. Lovely guy.

    • @lionheart4552
      @lionheart4552 Рік тому +26

      John Nunn was my next door neighbour In Kent. His mother use to come to our house to borrow milk & sugar. Lovely guy.

    • @sami6911
      @sami6911 Рік тому +10

      He taught in Maidstone? I went there today to watch football, funny coincidence

    • @austinlittke5580
      @austinlittke5580 Рік тому +4

      John Nunn sat beside me at the derby one afternoon. He talked a lot about his love for horses and verdure and constantly had a nervous tick observing the tracks where hed tap his chin. Lovely Guy.

  • @sergisalvador4407
    @sergisalvador4407 Рік тому +252

    According to Magnus, Nunn was an example of how extreme intelligence could actually be a hindrance to one's chess career

    • @TheRovardotter
      @TheRovardotter Рік тому +79

      Interesting, did he say why? This is good news for my chess.

    • @blaze1148
      @blaze1148 Рік тому +6

      @@TheRovardotter 😆

    • @jx14aby
      @jx14aby Рік тому +41

      That was always my handicap when I played chess.

    • @deadeye4520
      @deadeye4520 Рік тому +121

      @@TheRovardotter Here is the quote from Magnus, "I am convinced that the reason the Englishman John Nunn never became world champion is that he is too clever for that. ... He has so incredibly much in his head. Simply too much. His enormous powers of understanding and his constant thirst for knowledge distracted him from chess."

    • @user-ss5lg4iw7m
      @user-ss5lg4iw7m Рік тому +2

      ​@@jx14abylol

  • @akibavar
    @akibavar Рік тому +121

    John Nunn is in fact the current World Champion. He won the World Senior Championship (65+) in Assisi, November 2022. I was there and John was very gracious.

    • @J.J.J.J.J.J.J
      @J.J.J.J.J.J.J Рік тому +3

      haha, nice one!

    • @FredPlanatia
      @FredPlanatia Рік тому +6

      since some doubt was voiced here about this earlier, here a few more details:
      Assisi 2022: GM John Nunn (ENG) emerged as the winner and Senior World Chess Champion in section Open 65+. Coming into the final round, a half point behind Jens Kristiansen (DEN) -- ChessBase
      He placed 3rd in 2014 in Katerina (+50), and 2nd in the European Senior Chess Championship (+50) 2015 Eretria. Possbily i'm missing some others? In any case he still plays competitively.

  • @o.abdullayev
    @o.abdullayev Рік тому +176

    John Nunn was the youngest student in Oxford and even UK for over 400 years. 15 years.

    • @TomJones-tx7pb
      @TomJones-tx7pb Рік тому +10

      He recruited me to play on his Oxford University 6 man team. I think he was 14 when he first went there, but even for 15 he was a really nice and mature person. He was always willing to analyze games together. Fond memories. My first OTB game against him in a slow game was a Marshall and I got a winning position which I lost on time.

    • @miyamoto900
      @miyamoto900 Рік тому +1

      @@TomJones-tx7pb what's the proof

    • @TomJones-tx7pb
      @TomJones-tx7pb Рік тому

      @@miyamoto900 Proof of what?

    • @miyamoto900
      @miyamoto900 Рік тому

      @@TomJones-tx7pb your claims

    • @Liara_I_Sorry
      @Liara_I_Sorry Рік тому

      @@TomJones-tx7pb Now that I read this, it does kind of sound like a writer's stab at conjuring a hypothetical with John Nunn. The minute details trying to add authenticity to a story but kind of paper thin. If it happened great, if you made it up, good for you.

  • @samsonpug
    @samsonpug Рік тому +22

    I had the pleasure of playing John Nunn’s son a few years ago. I’m a middle aged man rated 2000. He was aged around 11 at the time.
    He moved instantly while I struggled along. I cheered up as he “blundered” his queen
    I was soon checkmated; belatedly realising the queen sac was fully intended.
    His dad is a lovely guy. Very quiet and unassuming

  • @ryoung527
    @ryoung527 Рік тому +57

    TIL John Nunn won the World Chess Solving Championship three times, which led me to discover that Poland has absolutely dominated the team component of the WCS for 15 years and the last time a country other than Poland won more than one year in a row was 2005-2007, when Britain won three in a row...led by John Nunn.

  • @omarmustafa1608
    @omarmustafa1608 Рік тому +68

    One of the most fascinating facts about John Nunn is that he is one of only a handful of people in the world to have achieved both the title of Grandmaster in chess and a PhD in mathematics. In fact, he was awarded his PhD in 1978 at the age of just 23, making him one of the youngest people ever to earn a doctorate in mathematics from Oxford University.

    • @mikehall6e
      @mikehall6e Рік тому +1

      I spent a few days with John Nunn in Bahrain - He explained to me that he specialised in an obscure branch of mathematics - I asked how it would relate in a practical sense - He said it had no practical use at all. - He also mentioned that he was the youngest person since William Pitt the Younger to enter Oxford University. - He was rated World Number 6 on the Grandmaster List at the time I knew him.

  • @jro3213
    @jro3213 Рік тому +23

    Discovering John Nunn's contributions to chess increased my vast knowledge and improved my day, thanks for the video agad!

  • @ronjohnson9690
    @ronjohnson9690 Рік тому +49

    That is pretty cool to have a father-in-law that enjoys chess, and surely your videos are a proud spot in his own conversations.

  • @amirmn7
    @amirmn7 Рік тому +165

    from Wikipedia:
    In a 2010 interview, Magnus Carlsen explained that he thought extreme intelligence could actually be a hindrance to one's chess career. As an example of this, he cited Nunn:
    I am convinced that the reason the Englishman John Nunn never became world champion is that he is too clever for that. ... He has so incredibly much in his head. Simply too much. His enormous powers of understanding and his constant thirst for knowledge distracted him from chess.

    • @MultiAndAnd
      @MultiAndAnd Рік тому +6

      apparently not a good mathematician though...

    • @anotherpilgrim8313
      @anotherpilgrim8313 Рік тому +3

      ​@@MultiAndAnd How so?

    • @MultiAndAnd
      @MultiAndAnd Рік тому +4

      @@anotherpilgrim8313 I have not found a single article by him. Furthermore, if he had some some relevant work in some good journal it would appear in his wikipedia page. So, he is not a good mathematician.

    • @C.Riram123
      @C.Riram123 Рік тому +8

      @@MultiAndAnd Don't bark without proper knowledge.

    • @MultiAndAnd
      @MultiAndAnd Рік тому +5

      @@C.Riram123 I am a professional mathematician, so actually I do have proper knoweldge. Worked in italy, France, Switzerland and Spain. If you find some papers he authored we can discuss their level.

  • @achyutmadhavpasupuleti9657
    @achyutmadhavpasupuleti9657 Рік тому +108

    "Nunn was not a World Champion, but nonetheless......"
    Agad knew exactly what he was doing.

    • @user-uc7qb1su4e
      @user-uc7qb1su4e Рік тому +1

      @@amun1040 bruh…

    • @nyzrh
      @nyzrh Рік тому

      🗿

    • @J.J.J.J.J.J.J
      @J.J.J.J.J.J.J Рік тому +4

      Nonetheless, he is currently a world champion after apparently winning the 2022 senior championship (65+).

  • @nedmerrill5705
    @nedmerrill5705 Рік тому +29

    Nunn's book _Understanding Chess Move by Move_ is terrific.

  • @JaroslavVojkovsky
    @JaroslavVojkovsky Рік тому +8

    That "Nunn De Less" at the beginning got me.

  • @FilipSandecomposer
    @FilipSandecomposer Рік тому +16

    I have seen many chess chanels on YT, but your videos I actually watch all of them, every video you are posting. And it is because you are the best. It is actually all about chess, nothing else. Gotham chess could be entertaining with his hysterical and and overexaggerated videos, but I soon have enogh of it. You are the best!

    • @FloydMaxwell
      @FloydMaxwell Рік тому

      I agree. Jozarov is also all about the chess.

  • @Mathemagical55
    @Mathemagical55 Рік тому +17

    John Nunn was a brilliant mathematician and after completing his doctorate at Oxford he remained there as a lecturer and junior researcher for a few years while simultaneously pursuing a chess career. At this point the mathematics faculty gave him an ultimatum saying he had to devote himself full-time to academic research or leave if he wanted to play chess.

  • @gioelesnider9402
    @gioelesnider9402 Рік тому +19

    "Coincident with a reduction in his over-the-board chess, Nunn has developed a passion for astronomy, a hobby he shares with ex-world chess champion Viswanathan Anand."

  • @martynonions6268
    @martynonions6268 Рік тому +34

    Alexander Beliavsky vs John Nunn 1985, Wijk Aan Zee 1985, King's Indian, Samisch Variation, 0-1: this game is sometimes referred to as "Nunn's Immortal", and was included in the book The Mammoth Book Of The World's Greatest Chess Games (Robinson Publishing, 2010). In his book Winning Chess Brilliancies, Yasser Seirawan called this game the best of the 1980s.

  • @brettace
    @brettace Рік тому +55

    Wow, Nunn was a pretty strong player. I saw his FIDE rating according to Wikipedia. He is 2579. That's a pretty good rating.

    • @MrK623
      @MrK623 Рік тому +12

      Ratings have skewed higher, that rating today would be closer to 2700+.

    • @stevenrix7024
      @stevenrix7024 Рік тому +15

      He was ranked in the world top 10, at his peak. Note that 2579 is his current FIDE rating in year 2023, when he will turn 68. He was obviously a lot better when he was about 30, say.

    • @a.s.04
      @a.s.04 Рік тому +1

      And his peak rating was 2630

  • @aaronquadd3019
    @aaronquadd3019 Рік тому +7

    Although not world chess Champion, John Nunn was Junior Champion (1975), British Champion (1980), Won Gold in the Chess Olympiad, and 6th in the Chess World Cup (1989). In 1989 he was ranked no. 9 in the world with an elo of 2620 which he topped 6 years later in 1995 with a peak rating of 2630

  • @leeives9109
    @leeives9109 Рік тому +22

    Always a massive fan and have all his books. As a mathematician, some of his analysis is profound.

  • @Yebjic
    @Yebjic Рік тому +4

    Of course he was a legend, that's why we say everyone else was "second to Nunn"

  • @peterflom6878
    @peterflom6878 Рік тому +4

    There is a Yasser video about one of his games with Nunn
    Yasser lost.
    In the post mortem Yasser explained that he got distracted when a beautiful woman walked into the room. Nunn looked puzzled and Yasser said something like "You know, John. You get distracted. You start thinking about dinner, or your favorite team or whatever.
    And Nunn looked at him and said "No, I don't "

  • @markangus3252
    @markangus3252 Рік тому +2

    I remember John Nunn from the London Junior Chess Championship Under 12s back in the 1960s. We were about the same age. This event, as I recall, was an open Swiss tournament of either 9 or 11 rounds (can't remember which) and involved about 200 children. It took place in a school in Packington Street on the borders of Canonbury and Hoxton in North London. If I'm not mistaken, John won it three times in a row by a country mile. He was in London U-12 chess circles already a legend, and his winning this event every year was always a foregone conclusion. I don't think we ever met either over the board or to talk to, but others who had done always said that he was a very nice fellow, which certainly wasn't the case for all chess prodigies as I recall. I drifted out of chess as I approached teenage-hood to pursue girls and 1950s rock and roll records but coming back into chess later on, I wasn't surprised at all to learn that John had been one of the first wave of British Grandmasters who came out of the country's chess boom in the 70s. Before then, back in the 60s, Britain had only ever had International Masters with IM Jonathan Penrose generally recognised as our strongest player.

  • @russellscott1518
    @russellscott1518 Рік тому +5

    I had the pleasure of meeting John Nunn. He played a simul for our Chess Club at Lakenheath Air Force Base in the UK.

  • @larbiayoub4064
    @larbiayoub4064 Рік тому +3

    Chatgpt: John Nunn is a well-known British chess grandmaster, author, and mathematician. He was born on April 25, 1955, in London, England, and began playing chess at a young age. Nunn achieved the title of International Master in 1975 and became a Grandmaster in 1978.
    Nunn has won numerous chess tournaments throughout his career, including the British Chess Championship four times. He has also represented England in many international chess competitions, including the Chess Olympiad.
    In addition to his success as a chess player, Nunn is also a prolific writer and has written many books on chess, including "Understanding Chess Move by Move," "Secrets of Grandmaster Chess," and "John Nunn's Chess Course."
    Outside of chess, Nunn is a highly respected mathematician and has a Ph.D. in mathematics from Oxford University. He has also made significant contributions to the field of computer chess and was instrumental in developing some of the earliest chess-playing computer programs.

  • @coxscorner
    @coxscorner Рік тому +12

    The Marshall Attack is one of my favorite openings most players are so terrified of it they avoid it at all costs, at all levels.

  • @Mark-ow9le
    @Mark-ow9le Рік тому +14

    John Nunn plays in my local chess league. Hopefully one day I’ll have the chance to play against him!

  • @dvopzeeland
    @dvopzeeland Рік тому +4

    For those interested, Hoogovens is not a place but it used to be a steel company. It was the sponsor of the Hoogovens tournament. The company merged with British steel and is currently known as Tata Steel Europe. The Hoogovens tournament changed its name as well: it became the Tata steel tournament.

    • @rhinoclark
      @rhinoclark Рік тому

      Wow that is a great fact

    • @Prrrrrrrrrrrt
      @Prrrrrrrrrrrt Рік тому

      Hoogovens is dutch for high ovens (as in high temperature)

  • @ItachiUchiha-ns1il
    @ItachiUchiha-ns1il Рік тому +49

    John Nunn lost to David Howell when Howell was 8. Howell is still the youngest person to ever beat a GM.

  • @xethnyrrow
    @xethnyrrow Рік тому +8

    The way John man handled Vishy with those bishops was amazing.

  • @aayanansari700
    @aayanansari700 Рік тому +5

    #suggestion
    John's birthday is on 25th of April. Consider making a video on his birthday of his game. It is probably a rest day of the WCC

    • @howardcarter3362
      @howardcarter3362 Рік тому +1

      im glad Agad followed your suggestion with a cracker of an immortal game by Nunn!

  • @brendanward2991
    @brendanward2991 Рік тому +9

    Nunn's _Tactical Chess Endings_ is a classic.

  • @abuhamza1874
    @abuhamza1874 Рік тому +7

    A masterpiece from 1990!!!
    I remember those beautiful days when I was not even a sperm

  • @jdeck7803
    @jdeck7803 Рік тому +4

    At just 15 years of age, he proceeded to Oriel College, Oxford, to study mathematics. At the time, Nunn was Oxford's youngest undergraduate since Cardinal Wolsey in 1520.

  • @jineshgomai217
    @jineshgomai217 Рік тому +13

    "Nun the less" I see what you did there.👍

  • @kostasmanikis
    @kostasmanikis Рік тому +4

    When Nunn was asked what is more difficult: To get a PhD in Math or a GM title, he said: Are you serious? Of course the GM title!

  • @russellgooding7475
    @russellgooding7475 Рік тому +1

    John Nunn was around his best when I was sometimes playing weekend congresses in the UK in the late 1980s. He was always regarded as a huge talent. He had a calm and placid nature. Quite the opposite to his very aggressive chess style.
    The ordinary players like myself (ELO then 2060) would pretty reverentially wander from our games to watch his on the top boards.
    He was always gracious, and unlike Tony Miles ( his British contemporary). He exuded none of the forcefulness of his games in his dealings with us low lights.
    He reedited the 3 volumes of my favourite ever players best games (Paul Keres). In that series adding very respectfully to Keres own analysis great value. He also professed a great admiration for Keres and his skills.
    John always seemed a gentleman. Though in the UK, and sometimes World scene. He was always a killer on the board.
    Just my recollections.

  • @stephenpostle7779
    @stephenpostle7779 Рік тому +1

    I played John Nunn in a tournament ~55 years ago. As black, I prepared a variation of the Scheveningen Sicilian against him. He played 6 Bg5 and I ended up with my king defended behind a center of pawns and a queen radiating power on d5. John was impressed…..and then went on to crush me 😢. One of my fave players.

  • @jorymil
    @jorymil Рік тому +7

    Many of John Nunn's books are classics. His understanding of chess is as vast as anyone's.

  • @FortisConscius
    @FortisConscius Рік тому +1

    I recognise John Nunn from his prolific array of good chess books. When I was very young I ran out of chess books in the Children's section of the library and migrated to the main library to find more chess books - John Nunn taught me so much as a pre-teen.

  • @ftworthxxx
    @ftworthxxx Рік тому +1

    His chess books are always gold. His book on the Bg5 Najdorf is still the gold standard for this timeless variation, and his books on the endgame are excellent.

  • @jessejordache1869
    @jessejordache1869 Рік тому +6

    John Nunn has written the most deep endgame books available: Secrets of Rook Endings for example has whole chapters on positions that Averbakh considered marginal.
    Wasn't Nunn a candidate at some point?

  • @kb5019
    @kb5019 Рік тому +1

    Brilliant game by John thanks for sharing 🙂👏🏾

  • @jonathanbrewer7072
    @jonathanbrewer7072 Рік тому +4

    Great player, an absolute gentleman.

  • @alexanderstoyanov7464
    @alexanderstoyanov7464 Рік тому +3

    I cannot understand why wo many people praise Fisher as the most influential player for the 20th century when you have names like Capa, Alekhine, Tal, Botvinik, Kasparov, and at least a dozen more during the same century. Fisher is also definitely up there but saying he is the most unfluential is an overstatement

    • @FloydMaxwell
      @FloydMaxwell Рік тому +2

      No one popularized chess like Bobby Fischer. Whoever popularizes chess the most wins the "most influential player" game. End of story.

    • @alexanderstoyanov7464
      @alexanderstoyanov7464 Рік тому +1

      @@FloydMaxwell Maybe true for N America and W Europe, but for the rest of the world definitely not the case

    • @monstermagnet3150
      @monstermagnet3150 Рік тому

      He is the most influential, but not by a huge margin then

    • @gooddognigel9992
      @gooddognigel9992 Рік тому

      Bobby improved playing conditions for everyone. The increase in prize money and popularity in chess is attributed to Bobby, as well as time increments on chess clocks. He was an important figure in chess, not because he was American as some critics suggest. His is admired for his dedication to study, crystal clear understanding of chess, talent, and indomitable will to win. Many admire him for single-handedly dethroning the cheating Russians. I almost forgot to mention Fischer Random chess.
      R.J. Fischer’s name will stand alone at the top of all influential players for as long as chess is played and discussed.

  • @alahiri22
    @alahiri22 Рік тому +6

    #suggestion Agad should show the game featuring his favorite b4 move in Harikrishna vs. Vidit from 2022 Prague Masters

  • @TheJayman760
    @TheJayman760 Рік тому +3

    I have Nunn's Chess Openings. A classic work by a classy guy.

  • @strooomon
    @strooomon Рік тому

    What a brilliant attack. Thanks for sharing.

  • @alexalleman4756
    @alexalleman4756 Рік тому +1

    What a proud father-in-law you surely have.

  • @williebrooks2982
    @williebrooks2982 Рік тому

    Very Entertaining, Intriguing , fun Thanks Sir !

  • @howardcarter3362
    @howardcarter3362 Рік тому

    Happy birthday John: the nicest polymath I know!

  • @Eleuthero5
    @Eleuthero5 Рік тому

    I really enjoy John Nunn's analysis of the Taimanov Sicilian. He's such a theoretical beast that it's virtually impossible to take him by surprise in the opening.

  • @NormanMarks8896
    @NormanMarks8896 Рік тому

    I knew John when he was a young teen. He played my brother in London and British youth championships, and he and his father spent time with our father, my brother and I. Despite his genius, he was a normal kid. A nice guy.

  • @VaSavoir2007
    @VaSavoir2007 Рік тому +3

    John Nunn is one my twenty favourite chess players. His games and books receive less attention than they should.

  • @michael-grandpamoses2571
    @michael-grandpamoses2571 Рік тому

    Thank you for increasing my vast knowledge Antonio

  • @brianarlt1
    @brianarlt1 Рік тому

    "New at the time it was played." Nice, subtle addition.

  • @dj_grim
    @dj_grim Рік тому

    The problem is there wasn't much of a career in chess in the 1970s if you were English. He did appear in The Master Game a few times. He got to the final in series 2 but then made a blunder against John Hartston in the replay. His semi-final against Tony Miles in that tournament is online somewhere. So is another game he played against Nigel Short in 1987.

  • @nagendranayak3101
    @nagendranayak3101 Рік тому

    🙂one should have love passion towards their work like you 🙂

  • @davidmitchell3881
    @davidmitchell3881 Рік тому +1

    His book on R + P vs R claimed to be the first chess book without errors as it had been checked against a computer. Needless to say the computer wasnt perfect. Nonetheless there were some positions where everyone learned something about these endings. I think its a must for anyone serious about endings

  • @markritchie8874
    @markritchie8874 Рік тому

    A well deserved plug for John Nunn. Poor Vishy, I bet he hoped never to see that one again.

  • @HnHSiggi
    @HnHSiggi Рік тому +2

    Can you make a video about the Marshall line your father-in-law (..e5) suggested please? Awesome stuff!

  • @gb3cker
    @gb3cker Рік тому +4

    Is Alexander Beliavsky vs John Nunn (John Nunn's Immortal) next?

  • @hkannan2000
    @hkannan2000 Рік тому

    John Nunn was World Champion in Chess problem solving. That i think explains his mathematical prowess too.

  • @james10492
    @james10492 Рік тому

    Very fine play from John Nunn here

  • @IngieKerr
    @IngieKerr Рік тому

    aside: technical audio confirmation: aye, you've fixed it - tis now perfect to my pedantic headphoned ears :)

    • @agadmator
      @agadmator  Рік тому

      It was a silly mistake. I accidentally switched it from cardioid mode to omnidirectional. Thanks for pointing it out, I d probably do a 100 videos before noticing :)

  • @jx14aby
    @jx14aby Рік тому +2

    Is the Ruy Lopez also called the Spanish game?

  • @MG-hh8lb
    @MG-hh8lb Рік тому +4

    He once fought a bear with a whistle and a stick

    • @mizofan
      @mizofan Рік тому

      But what did the bear want a whistle for?

  • @Noah-eh7fz
    @Noah-eh7fz Рік тому

    john nunn‘s understanding chess middlegames is a great book!

  • @kohop9219
    @kohop9219 Рік тому +3

    A true legend of chess, nunntheless!

  • @abdelrhmandameen2215
    @abdelrhmandameen2215 Рік тому

    Anthony is the kind of man that has a great relationship with his father-in-law.

  • @huwhitecavebeast1972
    @huwhitecavebeast1972 Рік тому

    I like John Nunn's style! Not afraid to go for it.

  • @michaelmassaro4375
    @michaelmassaro4375 Рік тому

    Black on the offensive White on the defensive about sums it up Nice attack Thanks Antonio

  • @orionspur
    @orionspur Рік тому +3

    I keep forgetting the Sarah Marshall attack.

  • @Rspknlikeab0ssxd
    @Rspknlikeab0ssxd Рік тому

    Apparently Nunn "proceeded to Oriel College, Oxford, to study mathematics. At the time, it was said he was Oxford's youngest undergraduate since Cardinal Wolsey. Graduating in 1973, he went on to gain his doctorate in 1978 with a thesis on finite H-spaces, and remained at Oxford University as a mathematics lecturer until 1981, when he became a professional chess player."

  • @jds373
    @jds373 Рік тому

    #suggestion for another wonderful Marshall game there is Shirov v Aronian (2006) from the Tal Memorial which features the most savage zugzwang you've ever seen

  • @lalanprasadsaha2677
    @lalanprasadsaha2677 Рік тому

    Very nice

  • @samukis272
    @samukis272 Рік тому

    #suggestion Tigran Petrosian vs. Svetozar Gligorić, Zagreb, 16 April 1970. Very impressive knight sacrifice followed by a fully operational BPFH chokeholding the white queen and king in the kingside corner.

  • @jowbloe4700
    @jowbloe4700 Рік тому +1

    I love London with Queen-side Castle.

  • @nicbonsai7111
    @nicbonsai7111 Рік тому

    Nice one

  • @SaiKiran-km8fn
    @SaiKiran-km8fn Рік тому +2

    Another masterpiece in your videos list ... Thanks Agad !!! ❤

  • @laodicea3513
    @laodicea3513 Рік тому +3

    If you want to show an example game from the black's perspective , why you don't flip the board ?

  • @willarn1
    @willarn1 Рік тому

    Awesome

  • @akmd114379
    @akmd114379 Рік тому +1

    Marshall attack provides the most entertaining games.

  • @willbanks3793
    @willbanks3793 Рік тому

    I used his book, the Complete Pirc for years. Unfortunately I don't play at Nunns level.

  • @user-ss5lg4iw7m
    @user-ss5lg4iw7m Рік тому +1

    John's birthday is on April 25, next week!

  • @amoldivo
    @amoldivo Рік тому +1

    Btw, by tomorrow, April 25th 2023, Nunn's will be celebrating his 68th birthday!!
    Happy (early) birthday to John Nunn (the British chess legend), that's all I can say, I suppose... 😅

  • @rickharold7884
    @rickharold7884 Рік тому

    I love it

  • @mjahanzaib89
    @mjahanzaib89 Рік тому

    @agadmator do make a video about e4 after the Marshall. Let's see what it leads to.

  • @Eoin1
    @Eoin1 Рік тому +3

    If Nunn has bishops, say your prayers

  • @jamescrenshaw5097
    @jamescrenshaw5097 Рік тому

    Hi, we’re you going to comment further at the end about the tournament where this was played?

  • @jg-reis
    @jg-reis Рік тому

    A Nunn series #suggestion

  • @pannypant3759
    @pannypant3759 Рік тому

    #suggestion Rashid vs Timofeev 1970 spectacular game

  • @harjutapa
    @harjutapa Рік тому +1

    I heard: "Now, Nunn was not a world champion, but Nunn the less, like I said, a true legend"

  • @azorthegreat2112
    @azorthegreat2112 Рік тому

    thanks!

  • @erichoffmann8515
    @erichoffmann8515 Рік тому

    Liked Nunn's books

  • @mikemobbley4839
    @mikemobbley4839 Рік тому

    You asked us to look up John Nunn and I found a game that ain't as popular least I believe it's not as popular but it's a game against Tony miles in 69 I think it would be cool if you shared that on your channel the first English Grandmaster versus John Nunn chess Prodigy / Legend I watch the game I very much enjoyed it I think other people would enjoy the game from 69 as well love to see it on your channel bro

  • @manusrivastava2047
    @manusrivastava2047 Рік тому

    The English Grandmaster was the youngest Oxford University undergraduate in four centuries

  • @justskrobek803
    @justskrobek803 Рік тому

    great game

  • @kevino4372
    @kevino4372 Рік тому +1

    #suggestion Nigel short v Gary Kasparov 1993 tournament