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RIP. My favourite Spassky game is this 24 move win against Petrosian and Petrosian was no patzer: https://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1106864



Love this game. It taught me to look for a move like g4.

Also it was probably not objectively the best move (and definitely not Spassky's best game) but Tim Krabbé made a list of 110 most fantastic moves ever played, and he put Spassky's 16...Nc6 against Averbakh as no. 1 (certainly an unorthodox choice):

https://timkr.home.xs4all.nl/chess/fant100.htm


I know this is a dumb question even before I ask but I cannot figure it out: why do only some of the games on chessgames.com end in a final move that is actually checkmate, while others don't? On this one for example the final move says "Black to move" and you can move them around to get to a checkmate yourself...did they just shake hands and not play the final couple moves out?


Yes, it is common for high level players to just shake hands and resign, when they know the position is lost and their opponents certainly will checkmate them


They also usually type "gg" into the game chat


gg


When you know you’re beat, it’s honorable to skip the formalities.


Unless your opponent has just executed such a brilliant set of moves that they deserve the satisfaction of actually finishing the sequence and delivering checkmate.


As others have mentioned, it is extremely rare for chess grandmasters to play until checkmate. In many cases, when the game is clearly lost, it can even be seen as disrespectful, and a waste of your opponent's time.


Very new to the game, so have mercy on me please, but can anyone explain what's going on with these 0-0-0 and 0-0 moves? I don't understand how or why two pieces can move simultaneously.


It's a special move in chess called "castling". See https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Castling


Ohh, that is lovely. I had not seen it. Black does seemingly nothing wrong and is just in a world of hurt by the 12th move.




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