lol I couldn't agree more about that it's already spoiled. But in my opinion maybe Agad want the player who he put in the thumbnail will be remarkable in that clip and also whoever he put in the thumbnail can be also win or lose
seeing those games Gukesh plays, I think he made me his fan, playing something that no one else did dare before is awesome, every game covered here by Agad is really interesting, oc Duda will stay my fav no. 1, but that's only because I'm polish and he beated Hikaru with double queen sacrifice 😂
Has Agad covered that game between Duda and Hikaru? If he has would you share the link and of course I will search on my own asking you as abundant caution.
Gukesh also beat Abdusattarov and Keymer before the olympiads. He is better than other popular Indian youngsters like Pragg, Arjun and Nihal. Despite being younger, he left them much behind in the rating list. He can be the youngest ever to reach 2800. He is just 16 years + 2 months old. Just like a planet needs to sweep all the dust around its neighbourhood to become the sole reigning power, he is dominating his generation not to leave a single doubt on the way to the very top. He will soon clash with AliReza and probably be tamed a few times by Magnus but then... Then we will see. Congratulations to Gukesh.
16 Year old Gukesh is currently at 2720 in Live Rating. He has surpassed Vidit to become India No. 3 & sniffing on the shoulders of Hari to become India No 2. I predict Gukesh will be India No.1 with in a year crossing Vishy's Current 2756 Rating. This kid is an epitome of Sincerity, Discipline, Dedication & Humility. While the world was focusing on Arjun, Nihal & Prag... He quietly kept doing his grind & now is centre of attraction in World Chess. 6/6 on Board 1 in Chess Olympiad is surreal. Take a Bow! 💐
Last three game gukesh play on 10th move its completely new game Need like this creative chess and opening preparation. 6/6 7019elo Ending this tournament he will reach below 20
Gukesh didn't use engines for a long period while becoming a GM. He learnt to trust his intuition and develop it. Now it is paying off. More and more non-engine moves are becoming popular because lot of GMs are not looking at alternate options.
Magnus and Fabi have also talked in the past about how playing the 2nd or 3rd engine move is good to unseat your opponent. They're also very good figuring out which positions are holdable for humans and which ones aren't
@@12jswilson Agree this is not just a Gukesh speciality or exclusivity. Just pointing out what Gukesh is doing succesfully. Magnus intuition is otherworldly his ratings are a proof.
#suggestion IM Horvath (AUT) - GM Jones (ENG). Horvath is one of the top european talents, still unbeaten in WCO22, already crushed GM Kollars and now GM Jones, securing Austria a draw against England.
@@fromfuture5519 You are right, Horvath is a typical Hungarian name. He was born in Austria, in the most eastern state (Burgenland), where a lot of Hungarians, Croatians and Austrians settled.
Gukesh is on fire. His all games are very instructive. He makes his victories seem effortless. This is not one night success. Lot of hardwork and dedication is given by Gukesh. Hats off to him
#Suggestion #Hari vs Abdusattorov game from today's 6th round PS:- you can put the title as *Hurricane gave a break to Nodi'break' wins* (I know that Nodirbek is correct spelling) Another title be *Like a Hurricane stopped Abdu Like Fischer play*
I couldn't calculate the whole "disgusting engine line" of course, but I saw Rc6 almost immediately by instinct, because then I thought of Bxe3 as a follow up. Yes the rook is unguarded, but the discovery attacks both white rooks on the g file. Just this gave me the idea... :)
The Capablanca quote made me think that contributions in chess are eventually used against you... Once trendsetters set the trend it is going to circle back to them..... Thank you for sharing! Awesome duel ;)
What a game! I believe once Gukesh went to Anand's place in Chennai and seemed not too aware of engines at that time....so really he is not an Engine man. He engineers his wins through his own ingenuity!
At 11:45 pawn captures f7, then queen or rook captures pawn. Then bishop C3 check, bishop C3 is captured, queen captures and it will be a checkmate too 🙄. I think so this move will also work very well
3:15 If Be2 is the 2nd recommendation of the engine in this position, then how is it possible that we have a completely new game here? I cannot imagine that no one ever played this move.
As Agadmator said, as far as the database is concerned, indeed nobody ever played Be2 in that position. Of course, throughout history there have been hundreds, thousands, if not hundreds of thousands of games that never ended up in the database, so it's entirely possible that someone somewhere did play that move, but we'll never know if that was the case.
it depends on the database you use. Lichess masters' database has one game in this position, although it was reached through a different move order which may be why agadmator didn't mention it
You spotted the "line" or the move? seeing a line is knowing the sequence of moves and some other sequences with sensible alternatives to the main response.
GM Gukesh D. on board 1 for team India 2 - his Rp after this round is 3329 (6/6 ELO 2684) average rating of opponents 2529 IM Conor E Murphy on board 2 for team Ireland - Rp 3144 (5/5 ELO 2404) average rating of opponents 2344 FM Lachezar Yordanov on board 3 for team Bulgaria - Rp 3071 (4/4 ELO 2316) average rating of opponents 2271 GM Hristos Banikas on board 4 for team Greece - Rp 3088 (4/4 ELO 2598) average rating of opponents 2288 Those are the only remaining players with performance rating in this olympiad over 3000
@@KnightToRemember if Gukesh does not lose, teacher Ramesh will let him play all 11 rounds. Moreover the other 3 need time outs after losing to recuperate.