At 6:44 white just checks the black by C4 unleashing the bishop and winning the queen . The king has to take the pawn. And at this situation the bishop is protecting the 2 pawns at D2 and E5. And it is obviously winning for white.
@silly7prawn The variation starts at 6:20 by 1- C3. The black king responds by 1-..... K X A5.then the continuation is : 2- B F6 .. A3. 3 - B D8+ .... And here in the video he played . 3 ... K B4 ?? Which is a bluder coz after 4- b B6 .. A2, 5- b D4 .. A1=Q it gives the white the opportunity to check by A4+ and winning the queen.
Hi. I don't agree with you at 6'.45" when the black pawn becomes a queen on a1: it's not too late for white because it's enough to push the pawn from c3 to c4 = check. The black king must move. But by moving the pawn, the passage is freed for the bishop on d4 who takes the queen on a1. Afterwards, the white king will attack the black pawns to let a white pass which will become a queen...
Oh, shit, you are right, sorry. I rushed the moves because it was clearly winning for black, but you are right, if he would promote in that position he would lose the queen. He should first move his king to C4 and promote afterward! My bad
Would you be able to found all the moves in a normal game?
At 6:44 white just checks the black by C4 unleashing the bishop and winning the queen . The king has to take the pawn. And at this situation the bishop is protecting the 2 pawns at D2 and E5. And it is obviously winning for white.
To be honest, this variation is still Not winning for white. Coz after bishop to D8 the black king could move down to A 4 instead.
@@AbouTaim-Lille What the hell is Bishop to D8??
@silly7prawn
The variation starts at 6:20 by 1- C3. The black king responds by
1-..... K X A5.then the continuation is :
2- B F6 .. A3.
3 - B D8+ .... And here in the video he played . 3 ... K B4 ?? Which is a bluder coz after
4- b B6 .. A2,
5- b D4 .. A1=Q
it gives the white the opportunity to check by A4+ and winning the queen.
Hi. I don't agree with you at 6'.45" when the black pawn becomes a queen on a1: it's not too late for white because it's enough to push the pawn from c3 to c4 = check. The black king must move. But by moving the pawn, the passage is freed for the bishop on d4 who takes the queen on a1.
Afterwards, the white king will attack the black pawns to let a white pass which will become a queen...
Oh, shit, you are right, sorry. I rushed the moves because it was clearly winning for black, but you are right, if he would promote in that position he would lose the queen.
He should first move his king to C4 and promote afterward! My bad
Guys we found magnus Carlsen
Truly amazing. Thanks for posting.
i am glad you liked it
Why does 1. c4 not work?
En passant… the answer is always en passant.