Magnus Carlsen Sets a Trap and Then Blundered - Remote Chess Academy
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Let me remind you that the special offers we’re providing you with on our new course “Top 25 Middlegame Concepts” is EXPIRING TOMORROW (4 July). You get a massive 50% discount and the course “Calculate Till Mate” for FREE. Or, you may also get the combo: “Top 25 Middlegame Concepts” + “The GM Opening Lab” + “An Endgame Expert” for just $99 USD (instead of $260 USD). Connect the 3 phases of the chess game (opening, middlegame and endgame) like a PRO and save over $160 USD! This course serves as a guide for average players so that they can enrich themselves with the most essential concepts that occur in the middlegame. To become an expert chess player, you just need to learn these top 25 middlegame concepts/principles. << Grab the special offers now! >> Today we’ll see the game played between the world champion Magnus Carlsen and Ian Nepomniachtchi, where Carlsen used a deadly opening trap against ‘himself’. Well, he set a trap which Nepomniachtchi fell for, but later Carlsen forgot the continuation, blundered, and eventually lost the game. It is an interesting opening trap in the Sicilian Defense, the Open Sicilian to be precise. After the opening moves 1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 d6 3.d4 cxd4 4.Nxd4 Nf6, Carlsen played 5.Bc4 inviting Nepo to take the pawn on e4, which he did 5…Nxe4. But he forgot the follow-up to the trap after 6.Qh5. How did Carlsen miss it and blundered? What is the correct continuation to the trap? Watch the video and find out: You can find the PGN of this game below:
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Magnus Carlsen Sets a Trap and Then Blundered - Remote Chess Academy
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