#jorden van foreest
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Text
Chess Kings MBTI
Here are a few top thinking type men chess players by MBTI
NT
ENTJ Viswanathan Anand, Vladislav Artemiev, Laurent Fressinet, Daniel Naroditsky, David Navara, Nihal Sarin
INTJ David Anton Guijarro, Bai Jinshi, Leinier Dominguez, Mircea Parligras, Kenneth Rogoff, Adam Tukhaev
ENTP Nodirbek Abdusattorov, Daniil Dubov, Jan-Krzysztof Duda, Surya Shekhar Ganguly, Anish Giri, GN Gopal, Nils Grandelius, Vladimir Kramnik, Le Quang Liem, Peter Leko, Leon Luke Mendonca, Elshan Moradiabadi, Parimarjan Negi, Ni Hua, Ruslan Ponomariov, Teimour Radjabov, Kirill Shevchenko, Loek Van Wely
INTP Michael Adams, Ferenc Berkes, Gillian Bwalya, Fabiano Caruana, Bogdan-Daniel Deac, Kamil Dragun, Brewington Hardaway, Brandon Jacobson, Denis Lazavik, Marc’Andria Maurizzi, Jergus Pechac, Samuel Sevian, Dariusz Swiercz, Evgeny Tomashevsky, Veselin Topalov
ST
ESTJ Dmitry Andreikin, Maurice Ashley, Magnus Carlsen, Cristian Chirila, Jan Gustafsson, Aleksandar Indjic, Shakhriyar Mamedyarov, Karthikeyan Murali, Thai Dai Van Nguyen, Sam Shankland, Amin Tabatabaei
ISTJ Cemil Can (JJ) Ali Marandi, Sandipan Chanda, Lance Henderson de La Fuente, David Silva, Wesley So, Lucas Van Foreest
ESTP Bobby Fischer, Baadur Jobava, Garry Kasparov, Viktor Korchnoi, Igor-Alexandre Nataf, Hans Niemann, Praggnanandhaa Rameshbabu, Boris Spassky, Eugene Torre
ISTP Kirill Alekseenko, Juan Manuel Bellon Lopez, Bobby Cheng, Gukesh Dommaraju, Alexander Grischuk, Andrew Hong, Anatoly Karpov, Javokhir Sindarov, Andrew Tang, Maxime Vachier-Lagrave, Jorden Van Foreest, Nikita Vitiugov, Wei Yi
12 notes
·
View notes
Text
Praaggnandhaa and Gukesh in joint lead at Tata Steel Masters
Wijk Aan Zee (The Netherlands): World Champion D Gukesh played out a draw with Jorden van Foreest of Holland, while Grandmaster R Praggnanandhaa beat Alexey Sarana of Serbia as the two Indians shared the lead after a thrilling day at the Tata Steel Masters here. Praggnanandhaa notched up his third consecutive win to take his tally to a commendable 8.5 points, same as his compatriot Gukesh after…
0 notes
Text
Praaggnandhaa and Gukesh in Joint Lead at Tata Steel Masters
World Champion D Gukesh Played Out A Draw With Jorden Van Foreest of Holland, While Grandmaster RPragnandhaa Beat Alexey Sarana of Serbia as the two indines shared the lead aft afts Ters. Praggnanandhaa noted up his third culture win to take his tally to a commented 8.5 points, Same as his compatriot gukesh after the 12th and penultimate round. The two Indians are now poised for an exciting…
0 notes
Text
[ad_1] D Gukesh and Nodirbek Abdusattorov at the Tata Steel Chess (PC: Tata Steel Chess/X) The Indian contingent was expected to do well at the Tata Steel chess tournament in Wijk Aan Zee. The players have done that so far. After 11 rounds, D Gukesh is the sole leader with eight points. Uzbekistan’s Nodirbek Abdusattorov and R Praggnanandhaa are breathing down his neck just half-a-point behind. With two rounds to go, it’s a three-way race featuring two Indians. In the year’s first major tournament — five of the 14 participants are from the world’s top 10 — Arjun Erigaisi has been the biggest headline for India for the wrong reasons. World No. 4 when the event began, he is one of the two players without a win. Arjun has 3.5 points from seven draws and four defeats. Max Warmerdam, the World No. 82 who beat him, is at the bottom with the Indian. However, it has been a case of ‘if Gukesh doesn’t get you, Arjun will. If Arjun doesn’t, then Pragg will.’ Living up to the great expectations caused by the upheaval they made last year, this Indian youth brigade has shown that this is not about individuals. There are a number of them eager and able to do well at the elite level. So far in the quaint Dutch town, they have done that. Not a lot of people expected Gukesh to be at his sharpest, so soon after a physically and emotionally draining World Championship campaign. He hardly had time to prepare before landing in Wijk Aan Zee. Showing nerves of steel, the 18-year-old world champion has lived up to reputation. He fought tough situations to eke out draws and made the most of opportunities to nail wins. For the Latest Sports News: Click Here Praggnanandhaa at the Tata Steel Chess (PC: Tata Steel Chess/X) Playing against the host nation’s Jorden van Foreest — who is rated almost 100 points below him — in the 12th round and the out-of-form Arjun in the last round means Gukesh has a strong chance of winning the title. Nodirbek faces Arjun and Pentala Harikrishna, who has 5.5 points from three wins, five draws and three defeats. Harikrishna can be the party-spoiler. Pragg has bounced back from the defeat against Anish Giri in the ninth round. He has given a good account of himself in the year-opener after an up-and-down 2024. He took Vladimir Fedoseev of Slovenia out of the championship equation by beating him in the 10th round. The 19-year-old then jumped into the title race by beating World No. 2 Fabiano Caruana in the 11th. Pragg faces formidable opponents — Alexey Sarana of Serbia and Vincent Keymer of Germany — in the last two rounds. However, neither of them have made a mark in the competition so far. Sarana is ninth with five points and Keymer 10th with 4.5. Both are rated below the Indian, who in turn is ranked 14th in the world. Pragg will fancy his chances in a potentially nail-biting finish. Also Read: Barua feels urge to match Carlsen fuelling Gukesh’s Bull Run at Tata Steel chess The post Indians lead charge in nail-biting finish at Tata Steel Chess appeared first on Sports News Portal | Latest Sports Articles | Revsports. [ad_2] Source link
0 notes
Text
[ad_1] D Gukesh and Nodirbek Abdusattorov at the Tata Steel Chess (PC: Tata Steel Chess/X) The Indian contingent was expected to do well at the Tata Steel chess tournament in Wijk Aan Zee. The players have done that so far. After 11 rounds, D Gukesh is the sole leader with eight points. Uzbekistan’s Nodirbek Abdusattorov and R Praggnanandhaa are breathing down his neck just half-a-point behind. With two rounds to go, it’s a three-way race featuring two Indians. In the year’s first major tournament — five of the 14 participants are from the world’s top 10 — Arjun Erigaisi has been the biggest headline for India for the wrong reasons. World No. 4 when the event began, he is one of the two players without a win. Arjun has 3.5 points from seven draws and four defeats. Max Warmerdam, the World No. 82 who beat him, is at the bottom with the Indian. However, it has been a case of ‘if Gukesh doesn’t get you, Arjun will. If Arjun doesn’t, then Pragg will.’ Living up to the great expectations caused by the upheaval they made last year, this Indian youth brigade has shown that this is not about individuals. There are a number of them eager and able to do well at the elite level. So far in the quaint Dutch town, they have done that. Not a lot of people expected Gukesh to be at his sharpest, so soon after a physically and emotionally draining World Championship campaign. He hardly had time to prepare before landing in Wijk Aan Zee. Showing nerves of steel, the 18-year-old world champion has lived up to reputation. He fought tough situations to eke out draws and made the most of opportunities to nail wins. For the Latest Sports News: Click Here Praggnanandhaa at the Tata Steel Chess (PC: Tata Steel Chess/X) Playing against the host nation’s Jorden van Foreest — who is rated almost 100 points below him — in the 12th round and the out-of-form Arjun in the last round means Gukesh has a strong chance of winning the title. Nodirbek faces Arjun and Pentala Harikrishna, who has 5.5 points from three wins, five draws and three defeats. Harikrishna can be the party-spoiler. Pragg has bounced back from the defeat against Anish Giri in the ninth round. He has given a good account of himself in the year-opener after an up-and-down 2024. He took Vladimir Fedoseev of Slovenia out of the championship equation by beating him in the 10th round. The 19-year-old then jumped into the title race by beating World No. 2 Fabiano Caruana in the 11th. Pragg faces formidable opponents — Alexey Sarana of Serbia and Vincent Keymer of Germany — in the last two rounds. However, neither of them have made a mark in the competition so far. Sarana is ninth with five points and Keymer 10th with 4.5. Both are rated below the Indian, who in turn is ranked 14th in the world. Pragg will fancy his chances in a potentially nail-biting finish. Also Read: Barua feels urge to match Carlsen fuelling Gukesh’s Bull Run at Tata Steel chess The post Indians lead charge in nail-biting finish at Tata Steel Chess appeared first on Sports News Portal | Latest Sports Articles | Revsports. [ad_2] Source link
0 notes
Text

Jorden Van Foreest vs Daniil Dubov | Tata Steel Masters | Wijk Ann Zee 2020
Van Foreest takes Dubov into deep, dark forest
White: Jorden Van Foreest (Netherlands)
Black: Daniil Dubov (Russia)
Opening: Sicilian Defense
Tournament: Tata Steel Masters
Site: Wijk Ann Zee, Netherlands
Date: January 13, 2020
0 notes
Photo


Schaker Jorden van Foreest voor aanvang op het Tata Steel Chess toernooi. Hij eindigt uiteindelijk met 7 uit 13 op de vijfde plaats.
3 notes
·
View notes
Text
Jorden van Foreest Wins Tata Steel Chess Tournament 2021
GM Jorden van Foreest became the first Dutch player in 36 years to win the Tata Steel Chess Tournament. The 21-year-old grandmaster defeated his compatriot GM Anish Giri in a dramatic playoff after both had finished on 8.5/13.
"On top of the world," was Van Foreest's answer to the question of all questions—how he felt after winning the super-tournament in Wijk aan Zee.
The oldest brother from a large family of chess players won the "Wimbledon of chess," a tournament of 13 classical rounds over the course of 16 days by remaining undefeated, scoring plus four, and winning the blitz playoff in the armageddon game. He also broke 2700 for the first time as he won 30 rating points.
Meanwhile, it was a massive disappointment for Giri and his fans. The Dutch number-one seemed destined to finally win his first major tournament in which GM Magnus Carlsen participated, but instead he lost his second playoff in Wijk aan Zee, after the one in 2018 against Carlsen.
On the decisive moment, at the end of today's armageddon game, over 80,000 online viewers were watching the combined Chess.com broadcast streams (Twitch, YouTube, and international channels), and more than 700,000 watched over the course of the day. These are incredible numbers for over-the-board tournament play, normally only seen during world championships. The chess boom is real, and Wijk aan Zee profited from it.
The many online spectators witnessed a special moment in the history of Dutch chess. It has been mentioned many times, but van Foreest finally did what predecessors like Jeroen Piket and Loek van Wely couldn't: become the first Dutch winner since GM Jan Timman won it, 36 years ago, in 1985.
A big part of van Foreest's success was his final-round win against GM Nils Grandelius, and that win was largely based on his highly successful opening preparation.
"I have to give a big shoutout to my second, GM Max Warmerdam," said van Foreest. "We had this position on the board this morning. He said, '13...Bd7 is the human move.' We played around a bit, we got to this position with 16...Qb8, and he played 17.c4 and said it was slightly better for White according to the engines, but I didn't know the follow-up."
"In general, it's a very risky line for White," van Foreest added. "I believe Black is better if he knows it, but in this situation, the line is really very well-suited for this game."
Van Foreest continued playing the engine's preferred choices, including the wonderful 21.Nb5!. Grandelius initially defended well but got low on time and at one point collapsed. A nice final touch was van Foreest's king walking to h6, in the style of GM Nigel Short's win vs. 1985 winner Timman.
"It's crazy, it didn't really get through to me yet, I just finished the game. It was a really tough game, and I think happiness will come later," said van Foreest after this game, not realizing how prophetic these words would be.
By then, he knew that his win was going to be good for a tiebreak because it became clear that Giri was going to draw his game. Spanish GM David Anton was in control in this game but failed to convert his long-term advantage.
For a while, Giri's prospects did look rather grim. After two and a half hours, his wife IM Sopiko Guramishvili—on a short break from her own commentary—told an interviewer of the Dutch national broadcaster NOS: "I'm pretending not to be nervous!"
Giri himself was strolling confidently through the playing hall after almost every move he made and was out of trouble when he could play the thematic ...d5 pawn break.
GM Fabiano Caruana, who could still catch the leaders, had little chance for more than a draw against GM Aryan Tari, but that cannot be said about GM Alireza Firouzja. The Iranian teenager was doing rather well against GM Radoslaw Wojtaszek, and he had good chances to finish on the same number of points as Giri and van Foreest.
His Sonneborn-Berger (SB) tiebreak, however, was worse. During the round, it was already clear that a win wouldn't be enough for Firouzja to make it to a playoff, which according to the regulations would only be played by two players.
The all-Dutch playoff was scheduled to start at 18:10, two tables away from Firouzja-Wojtaszek, who were still playing. When these players reached the time control, the arbiters asked them to move to one of the tables farther away so that they would be less bothered by the moves of Giri and Van Foreest.
Firouzja was visibly disturbed (understandably so) and refused to leave the table. While the playoff was underway, he spoiled his promising position, and afterward, he was very angry at the arbiters and shouted at the main organizer. The whole affair was a stain on an otherwise wonderfully organized event in pandemic times.
The regular round saw two more decisive games. For starters, a win for the world champion, who at least managed to finish a bad tournament on a plus score as he outplayed GM Maxime Vachier-Lagrave in a Grunfeld.
"He went for a plan in the middlegame, which probably wasn't very good," explained Carlsen. "After he sac'ed the exchange, I think I was considerably better. 29.Nd2 was pretty nice, giving up another pawn but eventually winning based on domination."
"The overall performance was … shameful, to be honest," Carlsen reflected. "There were really very few moments of redemption in the tournament, it was really quite poor, and I have to do better in the future."
Besides van Foreest, another young grandmaster broke into the elite club of 2700 players for the first time in this tournament. GM Andrey Esipenko finished with a win against the luckless GM Alexander Donchenko.
The playoff consisted of two blitz games; the time control was 5|3. Giri missed a chance to take the lead.
Giri was also better in game two, where he won a pawn. However, too much had been traded by then, and van Foreest held it to a draw with accurate defense.
The match went down the wire with an all-decisive armageddon game. Van Foreest won the toss and chose to play with the black pieces.
Once again, it was Giri who took the upper hand, this time in a must-win game for him. He reached a winning position indeed but then blundered it all away in one move, missing an intermediate check, despite thinking for half a minute on that fateful 26.c6.
The Giri-Van Foreest armageddon game. Photo: Jurriaan Hoefsmit/Tata Steel Chess.
As the players got low on time, it was van Foreest's turn to blunder, first a pawn and then a full piece. Giri was winning again.
In a hectic final phase, the moves were made so fast that the digital chessboard stopped registering them after move 58. To the online viewers, it looked like Giri lost on time in a winning position.
In reality, four more moves were made, and Giri turned out to be the last to blunder. In the final position, he couldn't prevent his opponent from queening a pawn, and as he leaned back in disbelief, he resigned while letting his clock run down to zero.
"In these blitz games, it basically comes down to a lot of luck," said van Foreest. "He played the better chess, but maybe I played the faster chess in the end. Blitz is just a coin flip basically."
Some viewers must have felt uncomfortable with the fact that a 13-round classical tournament is decided in a time scramble like this—especially the ones who were rooting for Giri.
Van Foreest: "I felt bad for Anish, and I felt a bit bad about this game. There was a lot of throwing pieces around. You don't want to win this way but it happened like this, and I'm just really happy now."
The youngest of the two Dutchmen, who is a friend and has helped Giri as a second in the past, praised Giri: "Full credit to him, he played a really good tournament, really deserved to win it. I mean, he could have won both of his last games too, but that is just how it goes."
Giri (second), van Foreest (first), Esipenko (third). Photo: Jurriaan Hoefsmit/Tata Steel Chess.
Thank you all and have a nice day :)
1 note
·
View note
Photo

Happy Birthday. Today, April 30, 1999 – Jorden van Foreest, Dutch chess grandmaster was born. (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jorden_van_Foreest)
4 notes
·
View notes
Text
Chess Superstar GM Le Quang Liêm played a spectacular finish in route to his Round 7 victory over Dutch Grandmaster Jorden Van Foreest.
https://dailychessmusings.com/2022/04/30/winning-chess-moves-le-quang-liem-vs-jorden-van-foreest-4-28-22/
#chess #attackingchess #chesspuzzle
0 notes
Text
Carlsen Beats Praggnanandhaa to Grab Lead; Vidit Gujrathi Suffers 1st Loss
Carlsen Beats Praggnanandhaa to Grab Lead; Vidit Gujrathi Suffers 1st Loss
Indian Grandmaster Vidit Santhosh Gujrathi lost his seventh-round game to Jorden Van Foreest while world No.1 Magnus Carlsen got the better of R Praggnanandhaa to claim the lead position in the prestigious Tata Steel Masters chess tournament here. Van Foreest introduced an interesting novelty on the white side of Nimzo-Indian Defence against one of the leaders, Gujrathi and an error by the Indian…
View On WordPress
0 notes
Text

Jorden Van Foreest vs Daniil Dubov | Tata Steel Masters | Wijk Ann Zee 2020
Van Foreest takes Dubov into deep, dark forest
White: Jorden Van Foreest (Netherlands)
Black: Daniil Dubov (Russia)
Opening: Sicilian Defense
Tournament: Tata Steel Masters
Site: Wijk Ann Zee, Netherlands
Date: January 13, 2020
0 notes
Text
Viswanathan Anand Off To Mixed Start At Croatia Grand Chess Tour | Chess News
Viswanathan Anand Off To Mixed Start At Croatia Grand Chess Tour | Chess News
Viswanathan Anand (centre) was off to a mixed start at Croatia Grand Chess Tour© FIDE/Twitter Five-time world champion Viswanathan Anand defeated Dutch Grandmaster Jorden van Foreest on his return to competitive chess on Wednesday. Former world champion Anand, who was playing his first over-the-board game in almost 17 months, started off with a win in round one of the Croatia Grand Chess Tour…

View On WordPress
0 notes
Photo
wallpaper Jorden van Foreest All Device https://ift.tt/2Pwl8kJ
0 notes
Text
Jorden Van Foreest
Anonymous said to mbti-sorted:
Jorden Van Foreest - intp?

0 notes
Text
Indian Grandmaster Vidit Gujrathi Shoots Into Lead
Indian Grandmaster Vidit Gujrathi Shoots Into Lead
Indian Grandmaster Vidit Santhosh Gujrathi prevailed over Russia’s Daniil Dubov in the third round to become the sole leader with 2.5 points in the prestigious Tata Steel Masters chess tournament here. Gujrathi’s compatriot, 16-year old Rameshbabu Praggnanandhaa, however, suffered a defeat at the hands of Dutchman Jorden Van Foreest late on Monday night. Apart from Van Foreest, Andrey Esipenko…
View On WordPress
0 notes