Dude.. the postgame interview was released like 20 minutes ago and Agad already has this up. God bless, my friend. You are an EXCELLENT content creator!
14:56 the most impressive thing about this game is that Ju Wenjun foresaw this position and evaluated it as a win for white. Rook and pawn endgames where one side is up one pawn is more often than not a draw. Even more surprising is that white doesn’t have a pass pawn and white’s king is less active than black’s and it is actually cut off from moving up the board by black’s rook.
Even more so that she needed to see this 12 moves back and induce g6 because it isn't winning if Firouzja has a reserve tempo to force her king back to f2 and can now reach a pawn ending where the king is 1 tempo too slow so he holds a draw.
@@ndnd7614 She saw a winning position because of a 1 tempo difference about 15 moves in advance if she induced a pawn move and your response is Alireza's endgame is his weakness?
@@ndnd7614 I don't really care if it is true or not. It is just a dumb thing to say considering the situation. The only point of saying what you said is to try and downplay the accomplishment of the women's world champion beating the current number 6 player in the world, former number 3 not too long ago.
@@mikecroke6078 agad explained it during the video. Did you watch the whole thing? Just before time control she didn't make such optimal moves, fortunately for her Alireza didn't find the way to exploit them
it was so crazy seeing such strong players not trully understand the endgame even with the use of evaluation. Obviously i also couldn´t understand hahaha
The live breakdown analysis of the pawn g7 to g6 position was incredible by GM Hess with Irina. Highly recommend it to anyone as it's such a nuanced endgame change that loses Firouzja the game
I love their game because of the extreme sharpness in their moves, and also considering they did not end in a draw despite the amount of time invested in their game. Wonderful win by GM Ju Wenju! 🎉👏🏻
Nice game. I did say earlier I want to see the only woman in the tournament, and the underdog in the 2500s (I think her rating is too low for her) do well and win one or two games, send someone's rating crashing. It didn't take long. The game against Giri was a bit unfortunate when Ju could have won or drew. She is playing quite well.
#suggestion Salem's game from round five in the challengers. And perhaps take a look at the challengers' games in general because they're poorly covered this year by most channels and commentators unfortunately.
It's not that women are bad at chess. It's that there is a sexual dynamic being undermined to everyone's detriment. Speaking only in terms of archetypes and generalities, a man wants to defeat a woman to impress her. Women have the maturity to handle losing to men and are more hardwired to be impressed by it. When a female beats a male, he is not usually impressed, and the female does not give them a sense of "yeah you lost but you can depend on me." That's how I look at it. I want to win so that I'm seen as dependable. Strictly in terms of intersex competition. :p I have no delusions about taking on any female player ranked higher than 2000. I'm not going to win. I would like a girl who IS that smart, but how do you date someone like that? I would always feel like they would be unfulfilled without a partner who is stronger than them. Keeping in mind chess is just a game and doesn't speak on overall intellect or competence. But in terms of primitive, r-complex based psychology, it's just not a good time for someone like me to lose to a woman. Women are not lacking in intellect, but generally speaking they do not have the same level of competitive drive as men. When a man beats me I know there is competitive blood in both of us and that we can both always get better and rise to the challenge. But when a woman beats you, it feels as though you're losing to someone who isn't even fully trying. I also think the less competitive nature of women makes them more defensive and balanced players; they don't get tunnel vision quite as easily as men do. Of course this is all more true for some people and less true for others. I don't mind a chess prodigy gf as long as she's nice to me. :')
Hi Antonio! I highly suggest you to check the game Maurizzi - Latasa from the challenger section round 5. It's a 30 move game with 4 brilliances and 98+ accuracy. ^^
2nd: PLEASE agad it's been 4 months! 2023 USCC - Atousa almost beat Carissa Yip, the eventual winner! Carissa was losing most of the game. Atousa just blundered in the end. It's Hikaru's WIFE vs Wesley's GIRLFRIEND. #suggestion #womeninchess #uschesschamps #uschess #uschesschamp #uscc
Because in English that's how linguistics work, she is the subject of the game while he is the object. You can say she because she is in the driver's seat there's no disrespect by saying she
@@testingmysoup5678 ofc not suggesting agadmator is intentionally disrespecting. Just felt like a weird listening experience, hearing Alireza and then 'she', as if he forgot her name part way through the video
If youre alireza, are you gonna really take a draw with a 2560 player? He tried to push and messed up, and probablt didnt think much of her. Not cos shes a girl but again, hes 200 elo above her
no way ju Wenjun is 2550 rated. As Gotham said rating of women player are lesser than their normal strength because they mostly play in lower rating brackets. No random 2500 Gm can score 3 draws and 1 win and 1 almost draw out of 6 games where average rating of opponent is 2700. she is surely 2650 strength
Oh lord here we go. Just because a woman won a game we gotta powder her butt and sing her praises. Impressive game, props to her. But people gushing over her win just really seems condescending, honestly. It's the same energy as overly praising a child.
I like the titles of your videos but this one is kind of bad I know the meaning cause of how is spelled but a win as big as this deserves a much better one
Congrats to Ju Wenjun, nice win! WoMeN are not bAd At ChEsS (after the title), but if it is a sensation, when the women word champion wins a game, and she is still under 50% in the tournament, it means, that uplift the women chess is only possible in the way, what Polgar Judit chose, that she didn't play in the separate women tournaments, only on (in gender) open tournaments.
Judit polgar was gangster tbh, we never had another girl truly be "good" (At the 2700 level) Since then, honestly I wish they stopped having women tournaments and women titles
I forgot where I saw this but someone said that female chess players are probably underrated by their elo because they usually only play other, on average much lower rated, women after seeing Ju Wenjun play this tournament I definitely agree with that, no way she’s only 2550 or whatever she is now!
@@cygnustsp people don't "change" their gender identity, they just realize who they really are. No one would go through all the harassment and transphobia just to be a bit higher rated in chess.
Agadmator's commentary is good, but he missed a subtle endgame nuance that the commentators Robert Hess and Jovanka Houska picked up. Wenjun's 49. Re5! coercing g6 before playing 50. Re1 was necessary to converting the rook and pawn endgame to a win. The reason was that it allowed her to play 57. Kg2 producing zugzwang for black. If black had prevented her king from entering with 57. ... Ra3 58. Re5 Rd3 59. Rg5 Rxd4 60. Rxg6 Rd5 61. Rg5! forces a conversion to a winning pawn endgame 61. ... Rxg5 62. hxg5 Ke6 63. Kh3 Kf5 64. Kh4 Kg6 65. g4 If Wenjun had played 49. Re1 without coercing g6 first, the position after 49. ... Be4 50. Nc3 Rf8+ 51. Kg1 Rf3 52. Nxe4 dxe4 53. Kg2 Rxa3 54. Rxe4 Rd3 55. Kf2 c6 56. Kg2 g6 57. Kf2, (57. Kh2 fails to create zugwang for black's rook, because of Rf3!) which is identical to the game position after white's 57th move except with the king on f2 instead of g2 is only drawn. The reason is that 57. ... Ra3 58. Re5 Rd3 59. Rg5 Rxd4 60. Rxg6 Rd5 61. Rg5 no longer wins due to 61. ... Rxg5 62. hxg5 Ke6, black will win the g5 pawn, because white's king no longer has the h3-h4 route. Wenjun took a long think before 48. Nd1 and played most of the rest of these moves much more quickly. It is likely that she had already calculated the position after the 57th move when she played her 48th move, knowing that she had to waste a move with her rook from e3 to e5 back to e1 to induce g6 in order to get to the rook and pawn zugzwang position with her king on g2 instead of f2 in order to win the game.
I did watch their commentary. While very insightful, they were mistaken. 49. Re5 is imprecise and Alireza could get back into the game if he continued correctly (as I have shown in the video). He continued poorly and thus Re5 worked
Alireza played with lower rated opponents to get to candidates. This is what happens when you farm lower rated players. And when games are not fixed. You lose your sharpness and lose games. Karma at its finest.
You don't play "normally" Against a player 200 points below you, like if you just play respectfully like you will to someone your own level you're probably just gonna get a drawn position out of the opening. You play offbeat lines but without revealing your actually good prep to get a win, cos a draw is basically a loss
@@toSirius she evaluated the endgame for white really well. So basically, she moved R3e to R5e and then Ali defended the h5 pawn with pawn to g6. She then played rook to e1 and basically won the endgame with the white king being one less square away from the h5 pawn. This is like 13 moves ahead and pretty accurate since the king was one square less away and able to reach before black could.
Dude.. the postgame interview was released like 20 minutes ago and Agad already has this up. God bless, my friend. You are an EXCELLENT content creator!
Hmmm
14:56 the most impressive thing about this game is that Ju Wenjun foresaw this position and evaluated it as a win for white. Rook and pawn endgames where one side is up one pawn is more often than not a draw. Even more surprising is that white doesn’t have a pass pawn and white’s king is less active than black’s and it is actually cut off from moving up the board by black’s rook.
Even more so that she needed to see this 12 moves back and induce g6 because it isn't winning if Firouzja has a reserve tempo to force her king back to f2 and can now reach a pawn ending where the king is 1 tempo too slow so he holds a draw.
Alireza’s endgame has always been his weakness
@@ndnd7614 She saw a winning position because of a 1 tempo difference about 15 moves in advance if she induced a pawn move and your response is Alireza's endgame is his weakness?
@@Mantose262 is my statement not true? Magnus agrees as well.
@@ndnd7614 I don't really care if it is true or not. It is just a dumb thing to say considering the situation.
The only point of saying what you said is to try and downplay the accomplishment of the women's world champion beating the current number 6 player in the world, former number 3 not too long ago.
“An extra pawn always wins the endgame most of the time” 😂
60% of the time, it works every time
This end game was absolutely ridiculous. Congrats to Ju Wenjun on this masterpiece!
End game was not good
But obviously better than Alireza
@@swagatadhara4257 What makes you say the end game wasn’t good?
Indeed! Wenjun is very talented at grinding a win...
@@mikecroke6078 agad explained it during the video. Did you watch the whole thing? Just before time control she didn't make such optimal moves, fortunately for her Alireza didn't find the way to exploit them
@@FredPlanatia she didn’t make engine precise moves that humans don’t find. And yes I watched the video. And I watched the actual game in real time.
And another one: Eline Roebers, defeating Hans Niemann!
Yes please #suggestion
#suggestion +1
#suggestion!
beads malfunctioned
#suggestion
What an incredible game, I watched it live. Hess and Houska couldn't believe the endgame (and neither could I!)
it was so crazy seeing such strong players not trully understand the endgame even with the use of evaluation. Obviously i also couldn´t understand hahaha
her finding Kf2 and having the next 10 moves all figured out absolutely amazed me and the casters aswell
12:11 "an extra pawn ALWAYS wins the endgame... (most of th time)" 🤣
Agadmatorism
"60% of the time, works every time"
You're best chance of drawing a losing position is often a pawn-down rook ending.
The live breakdown analysis of the pawn g7 to g6 position was incredible by GM Hess with Irina. Highly recommend it to anyone as it's such a nuanced endgame change that loses Firouzja the game
Not Irina but Jovanka, right?
Could you please specify a time stamp for this discussion? Thank you. ( GM Hess & Irina's)
2380 rated and 0-4 Eline Roebers coming in and crushing Han's tounament chances.
Huge loss for Hans. Needed to beat the 0-4 player. Losing means he might not win Challenger's now.
@@gmnotyet
Are you the same guy in X?
@@nicbentulan No.
there's still a lot of rounds to go
I will never tire of the photo analysis.
Thanks!
I love their game because of the extreme sharpness in their moves, and also considering they did not end in a draw despite the amount of time invested in their game. Wonderful win by GM Ju Wenju! 🎉👏🏻
Caught the end of this game and Ju Wenjun's use of time to calculate this was impressive.
Great recap! Usually your lines are over my head but this one was explained cleanly.
I am now one of the newest fans of Ju Wenjun!
Go back and take a look at some of the games in the latest women's world championship match. There were some wild ones.
beta
#suggestion, of course from Tata Steel Challengers, and from these previous videos, please cover Eline Reobers vs Hans Nieman game. #WomenInChess
Of course
#suggestion Gukesh bounced back winning against Nepo in round 5
Of course, coming up next
No one cares about a random Gukesh except Gukeshes themselves.
@@water8773 Gukesh random? he is such a worldwide known GM
@@water8773you are literally inviting people to shit on your face by being so cocky.
@@jeffperez9563leave him bro. Let him blabber whatever he wants
Nice game. I did say earlier I want to see the only woman in the tournament, and the underdog in the 2500s (I think her rating is too low for her) do well and win one or two games, send someone's rating crashing. It didn't take long. The game against Giri was a bit unfortunate when Ju could have won or drew. She is playing quite well.
Why do you think it's too low? The rating system isn't fair or something?
Good lord. what a pleasure to watch. what a brilliancy and congratulations to ju wenjun
#suggestion Salem's game from round five in the challengers. And perhaps take a look at the challengers' games in general because they're poorly covered this year by most channels and commentators unfortunately.
Tata steel never covers the challengers section..this is not new
I'm glad I clicked that stream as soon as I got off work to see this masterclass live. Amazing game
She's a Fighter! She's doing great in this tournament considering rating gap.
omg your naming is a separate type of art ahhah i love it
Ju took Alireza not into a deep dark forest but all around the board, untill he fell off the edge. 😅
lol
I like the new photo that you use for Ju Wenjun :)
Wonderful game, brilliant endgame skills by ju wenjun, really enjoyed it.
The way Agadmator analyse & explain chess games is so inspiring !!
Alireza and Ju already knew a couple of moves before the end, but they agreed to finish it on a perfect chessboard move 8x8= 64 well done ☺
an extra pawn always wins the end game, most of the time 😂 love it
Ju Wenjun plays like an engine!!! 👋👋👋🌹🌷
Interesting!?
@@raylopez99yeah very !!
I wonder how thorough is the screening🙄
can you put the chessboard a bit higher? when i zoom in on my mobile the bottom pieces are cut off while there is still space above the top pieces.
Yeah he should really put the chess quote under the board
It's not that women are bad at chess. It's that there is a sexual dynamic being undermined to everyone's detriment. Speaking only in terms of archetypes and generalities, a man wants to defeat a woman to impress her. Women have the maturity to handle losing to men and are more hardwired to be impressed by it. When a female beats a male, he is not usually impressed, and the female does not give them a sense of "yeah you lost but you can depend on me." That's how I look at it. I want to win so that I'm seen as dependable. Strictly in terms of intersex competition. :p
I have no delusions about taking on any female player ranked higher than 2000. I'm not going to win. I would like a girl who IS that smart, but how do you date someone like that? I would always feel like they would be unfulfilled without a partner who is stronger than them. Keeping in mind chess is just a game and doesn't speak on overall intellect or competence. But in terms of primitive, r-complex based psychology, it's just not a good time for someone like me to lose to a woman.
Women are not lacking in intellect, but generally speaking they do not have the same level of competitive drive as men. When a man beats me I know there is competitive blood in both of us and that we can both always get better and rise to the challenge. But when a woman beats you, it feels as though you're losing to someone who isn't even fully trying.
I also think the less competitive nature of women makes them more defensive and balanced players; they don't get tunnel vision quite as easily as men do.
Of course this is all more true for some people and less true for others. I don't mind a chess prodigy gf as long as she's nice to me. :')
And you think she plays chess to date?
I appreciate the hidden layers of your personality that occasionally shine through your titles
Man add the eval bar it is useful
#Suggestion Please cover Santos Latasa, Jamie vs Maurizzi Marc Andria from Tata Steel (2024). It's an unbelievable game.
I concur
And it was in this position, on move 1, that Alizera's stylist resigned.....
great battle between two strong feminine players.
Hi Antonio! I highly suggest you to check the game Maurizzi - Latasa from the challenger section round 5. It's a 30 move game with 4 brilliances and 98+ accuracy. ^^
#suggestion
#suggestion you should make a video of every chess game ever played.
Ju Wenjun beats Mr. Hoodie Guy in a fantastic endgame!
2nd: PLEASE agad it's been 4 months! 2023 USCC - Atousa almost beat Carissa Yip, the eventual winner!
Carissa was losing most of the game. Atousa just blundered in the end.
It's Hikaru's WIFE vs Wesley's GIRLFRIEND.
#suggestion
#womeninchess
#uschesschamps
#uschess
#uschesschamp
#uscc
What’d I miss, Knight E7 at 6:38 ish w check doesn’t work? Might be obvious to everyone else
Just wondering why do you never say Ju Wenjuns name during the commentary, only 'she'? While you often say Alireza
focusing on the most important thing ever
Because in English that's how linguistics work, she is the subject of the game while he is the object. You can say she because she is in the driver's seat there's no disrespect by saying she
@amirhurwitz6186 it's just something that felt off. I noticed and commented on it. If it's not important to you or agadmator then so be it
@@testingmysoup5678 ofc not suggesting agadmator is intentionally disrespecting. Just felt like a weird listening experience, hearing Alireza and then 'she', as if he forgot her name part way through the video
If youre alireza, are you gonna really take a draw with a 2560 player? He tried to push and messed up, and probablt didnt think much of her. Not cos shes a girl but again, hes 200 elo above her
Yes, check out the Eline Roebers-Hans Nieman game, beautiful one🎉
Awesome. Always great to see Ju beating someone especially Alireza. She's such a nice woman. And a very dangerous player.
Putting the bishops on d3 and e3 like Morphy; that’s how you know it’s gonna be a good game.
I love it..."Always... most of the time." 12:09
It's easier when you don't feel the pressure of playing against Alireza, she thought she was playing Alireaza all along.
Where is the coverage of Gukesh vs Nepo? When Pragg wins you cover it within one hour. Why does he always get the spotlight and not others?
Epic game. Epic Win. Candidates tournament next?
no way ju Wenjun is 2550 rated. As Gotham said rating of women player are lesser than their normal strength because they mostly play in lower rating brackets. No random 2500 Gm can score 3 draws and 1 win and 1 almost draw out of 6 games where average rating of opponent is 2700. she is surely 2650 strength
How many women in the top 500
Yes, there was a spelling issue on the board. Black should be “علیرضا فیروزجا”, and white: “居文君”
Suggestion # Gukesh vs Nepo Round 5
Oh lord here we go. Just because a woman won a game we gotta powder her butt and sing her praises. Impressive game, props to her. But people gushing over her win just really seems condescending, honestly. It's the same energy as overly praising a child.
I like the titles of your videos but this one is kind of bad I know the meaning cause of how is spelled but a win as big as this deserves a much better one
Masterful. Great precise game
Congrats to Ju Wenjun, nice win!
WoMeN are not bAd At ChEsS (after the title), but if it is a sensation, when the women word champion wins a game, and she is still under 50% in the tournament, it means, that uplift the women chess is only possible in the way, what Polgar Judit chose, that she didn't play in the separate women tournaments, only on (in gender) open tournaments.
Judit polgar was gangster tbh, we never had another girl truly be "good" (At the 2700 level) Since then, honestly I wish they stopped having women tournaments and women titles
I forgot where I saw this but someone said that female chess players are probably underrated by their elo because they usually only play other, on average much lower rated, women
after seeing Ju Wenjun play this tournament I definitely agree with that, no way she’s only 2550 or whatever she is now!
Agreed. I'm waiting for a guy who's 2700 changing his gender identity and so would be the #1 rated "womens" player
hahahahhahahahaha
@@cygnustsp😂😂
@@cygnustsp people don't "change" their gender identity, they just realize who they really are. No one would go through all the harassment and transphobia just to be a bit higher rated in chess.
@@luxiyama I'm a hippopotamus
#suggestion Roebers vs Niemann - Tata Steel Chess 2024
#suggestion Can you cover Eline Roeber's game against Hans?
Agadmator's commentary is good, but he missed a subtle endgame nuance that the commentators Robert Hess and Jovanka Houska picked up.
Wenjun's 49. Re5! coercing g6 before playing 50. Re1 was necessary to converting the rook and pawn endgame to a win. The reason was that it allowed her to play 57. Kg2 producing zugzwang for black. If black had prevented her king from entering with 57. ... Ra3 58. Re5 Rd3 59. Rg5 Rxd4 60. Rxg6 Rd5 61. Rg5! forces a conversion to a winning pawn endgame 61. ... Rxg5 62. hxg5 Ke6 63. Kh3 Kf5 64. Kh4 Kg6 65. g4
If Wenjun had played 49. Re1 without coercing g6 first, the position after 49. ... Be4 50. Nc3 Rf8+ 51. Kg1 Rf3 52. Nxe4 dxe4 53. Kg2 Rxa3 54. Rxe4 Rd3 55. Kf2 c6 56. Kg2 g6 57. Kf2, (57. Kh2 fails to create zugwang for black's rook, because of Rf3!) which is identical to the game position after white's 57th move except with the king on f2 instead of g2 is only drawn.
The reason is that 57. ... Ra3 58. Re5 Rd3 59. Rg5 Rxd4 60. Rxg6 Rd5 61. Rg5 no longer wins due to 61. ... Rxg5 62. hxg5 Ke6, black will win the g5 pawn, because white's king no longer has the h3-h4 route.
Wenjun took a long think before 48. Nd1 and played most of the rest of these moves much more quickly. It is likely that she had already calculated the position after the 57th move when she played her 48th move, knowing that she had to waste a move with her rook from e3 to e5 back to e1 to induce g6 in order to get to the rook and pawn zugzwang position with her king on g2 instead of f2 in order to win the game.
I did watch their commentary. While very insightful, they were mistaken. 49. Re5 is imprecise and Alireza could get back into the game if he continued correctly (as I have shown in the video). He continued poorly and thus Re5 worked
Absolutely brilliant game.
You have a low bar for brilliant .
Being the one who only know about rules of chess, this game has a lot of permutations and combinations of winning than I ever thought.
It has a lot more which isn't explained in the video...
@@moon4tzuyupokeonce41 Being a Math Student, I agree. Possible Permutation of such number of pieces tends to millions of way on 8*8 square board
Is Agadmator a metal fan? I'd like to say yes for sure.
#suggestion Gukes vs Ian, where Gukesh played liked Ivanchuk, the great horse move
1:35 chess expert: 'rare, but not incredibly rare'
man, if this makes me 10 grand a
month, then i'm ready right now
I wonder how many top GMs watch your videos to catch up on the games they missed...
#suggestion bring medo into a video ❤
#Suggestion
ELINE AND HANS
ELINE AND HANS
PLEASE PLEASE
ELINE AND HANS
334th ranked player in the world and a so-called world champion. That says it all.
Yet she beat the 6th ranked player
it serves him right for playing the French defense.😄
Very good victory against one the best, egregious tournament for her at the moment.
You the best Antonio great recap 🫂🔥
Alireza played with lower rated opponents to get to candidates. This is what happens when you farm lower rated players. And when games are not fixed. You lose your sharpness and lose games. Karma at its finest.
blud acting as if Alireza didn't just win against 2 2740s and a 2700 at this very tournament.
Today's quite might have been "Women cant play chess" by R.J. Fischer!
I love her 😭
Sup, i love her first before you, you go love your kind, didi
How much rating Alireza lost?
Wow, such girl power. Now do Ju vs Van Foreest where she blunders mate.
#suggestion please show the clock time and evaluation bar while analysing
Clocks yes, eval bar please no
pLeAsE sHoW tHe EvAL bAr
Ohh Alireza always wanted to gain more points so he would get back to 2800, unfortunately old times are gone.
Why did Alireza use weird defenses? why looking for strange things?
Well that's what you do against much weaker players. Ali just butchered it
You don't play "normally" Against a player 200 points below you, like if you just play respectfully like you will to someone your own level you're probably just gonna get a drawn position out of the opening. You play offbeat lines but without revealing your actually good prep to get a win, cos a draw is basically a loss
@@starliaghtsz8400 He blundered in the middle game tho
@@tristan7720 middlegames an extension of the opening, the endgame is separate tho
@@starliaghtsz8400 whatever He blundered like crazy.
Nothing to be praising Ju about she didn't play great chess in that game.
12:29 is not double attack because bishop protect pown
This match is going down in history for sure.
why?
@@toSirius she evaluated the endgame for white really well. So basically, she moved R3e to R5e and then Ali defended the h5 pawn with pawn to g6. She then played rook to e1 and basically won the endgame with the white king being one less square away from the h5 pawn. This is like 13 moves ahead and pretty accurate since the king was one square less away and able to reach before black could.
I am oversimplifying it though, maybe watch like levy's video on the whole take or rewatch the entire video itself.
@@toSiriusit's very rare for a GM 2550 especially women beating super GM of 2770. Feat achieved only by Queen Polgar.
Yet she's currently ranked 12th out of 14. Great game or not, her performance isn't stellar.
if you lose as a grandmaster, you 'succumb'
if you lose as an online player, you just 'suck'
Sorry, "you put black in" what? 15:18
"Juwen Ju with a big glass of water that I believe she refilled over the course of the game "- Agadmator 2024
#suggestion.Gukesh-Nepo Round 5 Tata Steel
you spelled Alireza incorrectly!!!
Stop being unnecessarily edgy, nobody says women are bad at chess
So many people say that my guy
Nice game by Wenjun!
12:13 Agadmator 2024 "and an extra pawn always wins the endgame, most of the times "
12:10 it always wins, most of the time
Title had me rolling 😂😂
Very funny the way you describe moves recommended by the machine as being "elegant".
FIDE should ask women if they should stop organizing women's tournaments and stop awarding women's titles.
Make a video on ju wenjun blushing again ian nepo
This is why endgame study is as crucial as opening study.
She just converted a winning endgame, it's not like she outplayed him there, he blundered in the middle game.
Think bro, think
@@tristan7720 When you can do the same against Alireza, you can talk.
Finally a high level game where a woman comes out on top, brilliant.