TIEBREAK GAME 4 Ian Nepomniachtchi vs Ding Liren Final Game match World Championship 2023
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- čas přidán 6. 09. 2024
- 30 April 2023 DAY 15 FIDE World Championship 2023 | Ding Liren vs Ian Nepomniachtchi for match World Championship 2023 Title! Best games Chess World Cup Final 2023
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Originaly watch on chess24 channel twitch.tv/chess24
Love this game. Ding won because of his determination, courage, bravery and most importantly self belief.
Ding is beating Ian on the board, and beating the 3 world class commentator by playing for a win when no one even think about it
Ding did not have eval bar next to his chessboard.
1:01:56
He was like : why should I take the draw when I have 2 queenside passed pawns and my king is pretty safe here ? Noone wants to pin his rook, but from other side, white queen was very limited with its moves too to keep the pin. Ding knew queen must leave b1-h7 diagonal very soon and his rook is free again. It was exactly what happened.
After 48...Qd3 white queen had to leave the diagonal because queen trade would have been even worse.
1:04:12
I wonder what would commentators say about this game in pre-computer era ? Would they say it makes sense to play for win with Rg6 ?
@@stagna1959 You are a very very smart person, but now that we know the outcome everybody is very very smart.
Ding made a juke move there with a quick one-time repetition of moves. I think everyone inlcuding Ian thought he would do it again for the perpetual. But while Ian was thinking, i think ding decided to go for it... I think it was an in-the-moment decision.
It's hilarious to listen to the commentators declare the upcoming draw and blitz
Because you know the outcome.
The players believed that as well, including Ding. They made the 2 fold repetitions. Then Ding smartly took his time to think and saw that the pawn was too far away of the pin and he was on time. He had nothing to loose with a passer. It was still a draw from a computer perspective but not for a human, especially the emotional Ian.
@@cheya111 I don't think so. Ding made the repetitions to gain time for free. He knew beforehand that he would go for a win, that's why Bb4 happened.
@@cheya111 There's increment lol. Ding never intended to draw. Quite a lot of GMs actually do the repetitions to gain time.
@@damiester1 There are increments yes and he was wise to take them. However he did not chose to self-pin himself without thinking carefully. He definitely thought about the draw at that moment.
umpteenth time I'm watching this video and still can't get enough of this championship match. Long live King Ding, may you reign supreme!
I love Hess's "Bravery is grace under pressure", that's the stuff of world champions right there. Iconic game in chess history and it's only one year old. The rook self pin takes the glory but queen e2 and bishop b4 were brilliant moves too.
Brilliant game. Even grand masters analyzing the game could not anticipating one coming move by the rook.
I just watched this whole long ass chess game, all because I saw the last minute of the match in a short. Wtf am I doing here.
Same xD
Welcome to the rabbit hole...
Exactly wtf
1:00:24 "A draw here, this will be a perpetual you got blitz coming up that's what is going to happen" and Ding took that personally 😬
We have a blitz game, and Ding won.
I love how the girl and hess ridiculed rg6 then it turned out to be one of the greatest moves in the history of the game. what a bunch of engine clowns.
One could say that again, and again, Nepo blundered under pressure... But he was hugely in zeitnot (time trouble) though, and at any level, it's incredibly easy to make mistakes in such a position... :(
Congrats King Ding, the first Chinese men's WC !
Fabi was impressive, instantly grasping the ideas behind Ding's moves- not surprising he played for the world championship.
if you look at Hikaru's clip, you can see he found the moves faster than almost all the other commentators, shows the difference between a good gm and a master gm
@@audsunheatpumpgroup9812 was Hikaru's in real time?
@@audsunheatpumpgroup9812 Your right!!!
@@jonbaker2102 It also shows how Nepo miss Ding's QD3 play, multiple GMs who are watching the game live and not under pressure couldn't figure out Ding's play after RG6, but Ding saw the move and only someone at the level of Hikaru knew the moves Ding is going for.
is there any final match without commentator?
throughout the game 4, the commentators underestimated the importance of ding's passed pawn on the queenside (and later 2 passed pawns)... . but even so, how did it not end in a draw???
What a play from Ding, and also Ian good defense, insane match ggs
Concentration of Ding is amazing while Ian is drinking and looking at somewhere else.
i feel bad for Ian, he was so emotional...
“This is going to be a perpetual.” Lol.
Why do they let that "Tanya" commentate? She did this many times. It seems that she can't keep up at this level, just ruining the game.
@Blayd9 1:00:38 commented on live these 2 passed pawns look dangerous to me
Quietest tournament ever
Ding is a beast.
I like breasts.
No
@@mrbeau5387 i think he meant beast...
😂
There is always An "Asian" Level.... 😅
What he moves to win the white? explain please
Self pinning genius
Im not chess expert could someone explain to me how Ding won at 1:11:30 what happened
ian resigned because there is no way to stop the black pawn from promoting and the white king is so exposed
Commentator was siding Ian and they can't see it, makes them looks like amateur Commentators. Haha
Man that Tanya just calling out Bb1 in the start like an absolute noob made me sick
lmfao.. Caruana ... Play Qe2 and just pray @1:05:38
id call myself a pro because of lack of pros your pro drivers with ten cars on earth
@1:06:06, Ding missed ...c2. Completely winning.
Absolutely draw LOL two pawns till Queen Bingo 😂 why draw?
He was low on time, and he had to pin his rook to continue the game which was very risky.