Kasparov Gambit in the Sicilian Defense [FOOLED Karpov] 🔥

Kasparov Gambit in the Sicilian Defense [FOOLED Karpov] 🔥

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Kasparov Gambit in the Sicilian Defense [FOOLED Karpov] 🔥
Learn 3 Main Ways To Improve Your Chess Results Significantly FREE Masterclass ► https://chess-teacher.com/masterclass Take Your Chess Skills To The Next Level With High-Quality Courses Learn here ► https://online.chess-teacher.com/ 💰💲 Join the RCA Affiliate Program, promote our courses, and get 50% commission - https://chess-teacher.com/partnership/ 🔹 Kasparov Spent 83 MINUTES After Karpov's SHOCKING 9th Move 😱- https://youtu.be/dDfr-DoG5-o ♛ Find this complete game in this blog-post - https://chess-teacher.com/kasparov-gambit In this video lesson, GM Igor Smirnov shares with you a great chess opening gambit invented by the formed world chess champion Garry Kasparov in the Sicilian Defense, and how he used this gambit (and the octopus knight) to defeat Anatoly Karpov in the 16th game of the historic 1985 World Chess Championship Match. This is one of the best things you will ever see about chess. The reigning world champion Anatoly Karpov was facing a 22-year-old challenger Garry Kasparov. This was the 16th game and the scores were level 7.5 each. It was tense and the stakes were high. Karpov was the favourite to win, however Kasparov took the lead by winning this game and eventually won the World Chess Championship with the final score of 13-11. ▬▬▬▬▬▬ ► Chapters 00:00 Garry Kasparov's Gambit in the Sicilian Defense 00:10 World Chess Championship 1985: Karpov vs Kasparov 02:08 Kasparov's shocking gambit 05:25 Kasparov's positional brilliance 06:05 THE OCTOPUS KNIGHT!!! 08:24 Brilliant strategy by Kasparov to fool Karpov 10:35 Another brilliant positional move by Kasparov 12:09 Karpov gives up the pawn finally 14:04 Spectacular finish to the game 📗 Free chess courses - https://chess-teacher.com/rca-freebies/ #IgorNation #GarryKasparov #ChessGambit #AnatolyKarpov #Kasparov #Karpov #WorldChessChampionship #SicilianDefense Thumbnail Photo: Saint Louis Chess Center