White to move and draw (D. Lolly, 1763).

White to move and draw (D. Lolly, 1763).
White to move and draw (D. Lolly, 1763).
White to move and draw (D. Lolly, 1763).
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A remarkable position occurred after white played 47. Qxg3 in the game Samuel Sevian vs. Sergey Karjakin, FIDE World Cup 2019. Karjakin has only three legal responses as black and each would directly result in a different outcome (a win, a loss or a draw.)
Black to move and win, lose or draw! (Samuel Sevian – Sergey Karjakin, World Cup, Khanty-Mansiysk RUS, 2019.09.10.)
Tags:2019, chess, chess homework, chess position worth sharing, chess problems, chess puzzles, FIDE, fun chess, interesting chess, Karjakin, Khanty-Mansiysk, real game, remarkable chess, russian chess, Sam Sevian, Sergey Karjakin, Sevian, Sevian-Karjakin, World Cup
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