I'm sure Johner saw 27..., Bxb2 beforehand, and thought it to be a defensible threat. The true "killah move" was 28..., Rc3!!, driving away the queen and making the finish possible.
It was certainly worth sacrificing the c6 pawn if two pieces: the d6-rook and dark squared bishop, could be galvanized in one go. Even the move ...Rc3 (instead of ...Rc2+) was mind-boggling but, as it turns out, imperative for successful culmination of the queenside onslaught. How I wish my chess tutor was someone akin to the great Akiba or a tactical genius a la Adolf Anderssen.
Please make a video on alexy shirov(single greatest move game) vs vesline topalov 1998 it's available but I want you sir make a video on that game because your voice is magical please sir 💯
The chessboard is the world, the pieces are the phenomena of the Universe, the rules of the game are what we call the laws of Nature and the player on the other side is hidden from us.
It was certainly worth sacrificing the c6 pawn if two pieces: the d6-rook and dark squared bishop, could be galvanized in one go. Even the move ...Rc3 (instead of ...Rc2+) was mind-boggling but, as it turns out, imperative for successful culmination of the queenside onslaught. How I wish my chess tutor was someone akin to the great Akiba or a tactical genius a la Adolf Anderssen.
Agree 100%...it was an amazing attack. Beautiful gsme...thanks!
wow. It's amazing how Rubenstein turned the game in about 5 moves. I prefered white for much of the middle game.
Brilliancy in pure form!
Wow, the attack by black seemed so fast.
White was in good position initially but played passively when he should have gone for the kill.. Which allowed black to counter attack..
True, but his attacking imagination didn't work well so he decided to defend first
What a player...
So well, thanks mato.
Rubinstein looked deep...
thank you mato
Never a wasted move by Akiba, and always with the pieces in the right place.
I'm sure Johner saw 27..., Bxb2 beforehand, and thought it to be a defensible threat. The true "killah move" was 28..., Rc3!!, driving away the queen and making the finish possible.
I think c5 was a killer move. It turned the table.
@@MatoJelic Yes. That move simultaneously opened the b-file for the rook and the long diagonal for the bishop.
Lesson learned dont castle queen side for no reason
Mato, do you like mathematics? I think the kind of pleasure one feels in math is similar in lots of ways to that of chess
Rubinstein and Paul Morphy boht great player
hi mato, paul keres vrs rubinstein..request
Chess is what's keeping me alive in quarantine.
On the pozitive side: you will improve your chess. In Adelaide we are lucky so far. No lock down yet
@@MatoJelic Yes, that is a great point! :)) I hope you guys remain lucky in Adelaide.
Me too
It was certainly worth sacrificing the c6 pawn if two pieces: the d6-rook and dark squared bishop, could be galvanized in one go. Even the move ...Rc3 (instead of ...Rc2+) was mind-boggling but, as it turns out, imperative for successful culmination of the queenside onslaught. How I wish my chess tutor was someone akin to the great Akiba or a tactical genius a la Adolf Anderssen.
Please make a video on alexy shirov(single greatest move game) vs vesline topalov 1998 it's available but I want you sir make a video on that game because your voice is magical please sir 💯
I already made it
@@MatoJelic sir make full video of that game
You having killer smile 🥰
Thank you priya
Thank you Priya, you too lol
@@jacoboribilik3253 😂🤔
15 moves until black is fully developed and still pulls out a win.
Wow. Maybe Johner should have stayed with checkers, even if incorrectly played.
LOL
Nh4 actually wins the game for white
Maybe
If you are tired of watching Rubinstein winning,then have a look at some of the Alekhine vs Rubinstein games that Mato analysed a few years ago.
Good idea
The chessboard is the world, the pieces are the phenomena of the Universe, the rules of the game are what we call the laws of Nature and the player on the other side is hidden from us.
then my life must be driven by some noob low rated player
It was certainly worth sacrificing the c6 pawn if two pieces: the d6-rook and dark squared bishop, could be galvanized in one go. Even the move ...Rc3 (instead of ...Rc2+) was mind-boggling but, as it turns out, imperative for successful culmination of the queenside onslaught. How I wish my chess tutor was someone akin to the great Akiba or a tactical genius a la Adolf Anderssen.