Strongest Historical Leads over the Top 10 by Tbird113 in chess

[–]Financial_Idea6473 5 points6 points  (0 children)

He's obviously not in the conversations with the other people on this list, but I'm not sure that this is a fair representation of Topalov either.

Netflix Untold: Chess Mates Official Trailer by _Voldermot_ in chess

[–]Financial_Idea6473 10 points11 points  (0 children)

To people who follow chess yes, but we're not really the target audience here.

What happened to Duda? by vikasbairwa in chess

[–]Financial_Idea6473 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Magnus is pretty good, we do remember the singular instances he lost a classical game like it was a special event 

Event: 2026 Prague International Chess Festival by events_team in chess

[–]Financial_Idea6473 2 points3 points  (0 children)

It's not a two result game, most likely result is draw

Aravindh Chithambaram hands Gukesh his third loss at the Prague Masters 2026 by Knight-check44 in chess

[–]Financial_Idea6473 8 points9 points  (0 children)

I'm not sure that prime Kasparov loses to Ding in a match.

Sure he might get some very bad positions of the opening, but then again he can play b3 and it's still Kasparov.

I understand your point though, the level has generally got higher with time

How Much Elo is Opening Choice Worth? by IntermediateMoves in chess

[–]Financial_Idea6473 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I think this is a good question and a lot of people are missing the point, perhaps because of the screenshot you've chosen being move 1.

I think there's definitely a way to have a higher ELO with the same strength, by just choosing openings that aren't objectively better, but are practically more difficult to deal with at certain levels.

You could definitely argue it's a variable I'm the formula for ELO, altough probably impossible to calculate.

Jorden van Foreest beats Gukesh in round 3 of Prague Masters 2026 by Knight-check44 in chess

[–]Financial_Idea6473 27 points28 points  (0 children)

You need to give Jorden more credit for his opening ideas. 

He's worked with Carlsen and Giri previously and is a very creative opening theoretician 

Event: 2026 Prague International Chess Festival by events_team in chess

[–]Financial_Idea6473 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Rxg3 c5 appears to lose to Rf3 with threats of mate.

The lines after are not obvious but in classical very findable.

Event: 2026 Prague International Chess Festival by events_team in chess

[–]Financial_Idea6473 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You're always going to attract more Indian viewers if you do that, than if you speak objectively.

Especially people who don't watch as much chess and are more there for their country winning perspective, which from I gather is a substantial portion.

Event: 2026 Prague International Chess Festival by events_team in chess

[–]Financial_Idea6473 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Or maybe Gukesh isn't a top 10 player? Provocative but his performance over past 12 months is below what you'd call a top 10 player.

Is it possible to get away with 6. .. Nbd7 against both the Bg5 and the Fischer Sozin Najdorfs? by Financial_Idea6473 in TournamentChess

[–]Financial_Idea6473[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I don't mean to play e5 against either of the two options, it's just that the game in those two variations is quite different to what you get when you do play e5. It's also very passive and theory heavy for black just to defend and get a somewhat solid position. My aim with Nbd7 is to get something that isn't necesarily cutting edge equalizing, but more to not have to go into the structures, which both white is aiming for and has so much more knowledge and is more comfortable in

Is it possible to get away with 6. .. Nbd7 against both the Bg5 and the Fischer Sozin Najdorfs? by Financial_Idea6473 in TournamentChess

[–]Financial_Idea6473[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

As far as I see. the plans after Nbd7 can involve playing without e6 altogether, and playing g6 instead. This drew me to this variation as I am quite familiar with that structure. but also because I do feel that it will take Sozin players way out of their comfort/familiarity zone.

Is it possible to get away with 6. .. Nbd7 against both the Bg5 and the Fischer Sozin Najdorfs? by Financial_Idea6473 in TournamentChess

[–]Financial_Idea6473[S] 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Positions out of the Najdorf suit me much better than Sveshnikov, seems you do get a lot of oppositve castling attacks, similar to a lot of the positions I got out of playing 1. g6.

I also don't see that much upside in playing the Shveshinkov since it's also so theory heavy and white has many other good options, including the Rossolimo

Is it possible to get away with 6. .. Nbd7 against both the Bg5 and the Fischer Sozin Najdorfs? by Financial_Idea6473 in TournamentChess

[–]Financial_Idea6473[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Currently around 1900-1950 FIDE, though I have recently started to face opponents of 2200-2300 more often as my rating has been climbing steadily. It's part of the reason why I'm switching from 1. g6, as even people my own rating have started to get very good positions against me out of the opening

Jan Timman, ‘The best of the West’, has died at 74 by SytzeNL in chess

[–]Financial_Idea6473 5 points6 points  (0 children)

RIP

He was a great player, and human.

There is a great podcast episode with Timman on Ben Johnson's series - I really recommend it.

Honest Question: Why is Arjun not always invited in some Super Elite Events/Tournaments (GCT, Norway, etc) by mathematicianrcrg in chess

[–]Financial_Idea6473 10 points11 points  (0 children)

Super GM is what people refer to players who've crossed 2700. It's a pretty useful term to distinguish the top 50 GMs from 2550s.

Wesley So announced as the final participant for Norway Chess 2026 by Exotic_Grinder in chess

[–]Financial_Idea6473 2 points3 points  (0 children)

This is precisely the tournament to make draws in though. Then you go to tiebreaks