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Posted by ccmcacollister
uskidscompute.com

1/11/2008
17:37:54

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Subject: What have you learned recently?

Message:
This thread is to ask other players "What have you learned recently, about Chess"?
It would help if respondents would indicate their rating range, and I'll tell you why in a moment.
We might then throw in also ... What do you Not Know but think you should?

I had this GREAT IDEA (aka probably eccentric, possibly a bit weird?!) that wouldn't it be great to see a Chess Book that annotated games, that would be essentially three books in one. The game annotated for under 1400, 1400 to 1800, and over 1800. With a little doodad denoting which rating range the note is meant for ... the thought being It is Something that that range should know to advance, yet may not know.
IMO very many skills come at certain ranges, as a generality. As a specific, well there are 1200 players for eg who lose to an B or higher because they do not know as much. Then there are those who Know an awful lot! But will drop a piece at some point whether oversight, impatience or whatever. But in general I think there are certain things players should know at certain levels. You cannot be a master if you do not know forcible line opening an be able (and do) spot such points on the board when attacking for EG.
The thought occurred to me then, it might even be more appealing if the book had a person from those two lower note echelons help write it. Perhaps the 1400 has a question best answered by the 1700 for Eg, in an understandable way. Also what the 1700 Has learned since being 1400, is probably a lot of what Should be known to make that advancement.
What do you think? More importantly What do you Know NOW that you didn't awhile ago? Thanks all!

Posted by ccmcacollister
uskidscompute.com

1/11/2008
17:39:24

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What i learned.

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Recently I learned a neat bind position. Its shown in another thread ... Neat Positions or something like that ... }8-))

Posted by bhidragon
uskidscompute.com

1/12/2008
18:10:12

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Recent Learnings

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I'm not sure if this is what you're talking about, but here goes: Three things I've learned over the past three years (common chess sense that everybody probably already knows).

1. Premature attacks hardly ever work ... and always leave you in absolutely bad positions. Don't count on your opponent to make a mistake in order to successfully attack.

2. Don't just memorize opening moves ... study the strategy behind your favorite openings and how the rest of the game unfolds from those opening positions. If you're studying opening books that are simply lists of moves ... toss them and study general principles.

3. Play at your speed ... not your opponent's. I learned this the hard way in OTB tourneys. Your tendency is to speed up against a fast player. Stay calm and take the time to study the position.

Maybe this would be helpful for players in the 800 - 1200 range on GameKnot
———
Catching a chess champion when he’s distracted — Chess champions may be most vulnerable right before they defend their titles. Deep into the preparation for his 12-game match against challenger GM Boris Gelfand of Israel starting May 11 in Moscow, titleholder Viswanathan Anand of India took a little timeout this month to hold down first board for the Baden-Baden team in final rounds of the powerful German chess Bundesliga. Perhaps because his mind was elsewhere, or perhaps for fear of showing Gelfand too many of his ideas, Anand ran into a buzz saw in his game against veteran Dutch GM Sergei Tiviakov. Anand’s play on the Black side of this Rossolimo Sicilian is uncharacteristically passive, and by 11. a4 b6?! (a too-modest move Tiviakov later criticized) ...
Posted by doctor_knight
uskidscompute.com

1/12/2008
21:01:22

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Message:
well, this sounds very interesting. Right now I'm in the 1300 range. I think I've mainly learned:

1) if your position is solid enough, the opponent will very likely make a blunder at my level. That seems to be how I have made most of my wins. It seems that at my level, if I don't let my pieces hang and establish an effective coorination between my pieces, the opponent doesn't really seem to know what to do and eventually tries something wild which usually ends up in him/her losing a pawn, piece, control of squares, and etc. Though at my level, the advantage given up is usually material and usually substantial enough to win almost easily.

2) don't be scared to live on the edge some. If you don't try a risky counter attack now, then you'll never develop the skills necessary to do one later in a more important game. Of course don't be reckless, but don't be scared to dive into the pool. It will force you to raise your level of performance to exercise your brain to work through the position. It will also help you to develop a sense of what types of moves and positions tend to crash your position and which ones will strengthen it. It will help to develop your "intuition".

Now what I would like to know?

1) I haven't really though about this much, but I know one area where I need improvement is trading off the center pawns. This area of play seems a little mysterious to me. I would definately like some help with this (when to exchange, which pawns to exchange, which pawns to protect with what pieces, which pieces to recapture with, which pawns are really weak, how to identify an opponent's bad pawn capture, and how to punish it. Also to see which pawn captures are actually legitimate threats. The whole enchilada)

2) Time control. The root of most of my mistakes and failures in OTB play seems to be time control. Sometimes I have a really bad awareness of my time, especially while calculating combinations/exchanges. It's almost like I drift off into some fantasy world of board positions and pieces moving around capturing each other and become hardly aware that the clock is ticking down.
———
On Chess: Pressure still cooks at elite level — Researchers at Temple University found in 1971 that the pulse and respiratory rates of chess players during peak moments of a game were comparable to those of boxers and football players during competition. A clue to understanding these findings is the Russian notion that a chess game is a debate. Imagine an intense argument that lasts four or five hours without relief. Could not the equivalent in a chess competition wreak physical and psychological havoc — especially for those who are obliged to play day after day with only an occasional respite? Chess struggles can have a mind-boggling intensity. Each move by the opponent potentially introduces new threats and dangers. A surprise move or a material sacrifice can ...
Posted by wschmidt
uskidscompute.com

1/14/2008
11:57:21

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Interesting thoughts, Craig....

Message:
I've never seen a book with "multi-level" annotations like you describe, but I'm familiar with two books that touch on that approach. Both of them are by Jeremy Silman. The first was "The Amatuer's Mind" which contains a lot of positions, each commented on by players at different levels and each commentary followed by Silman's observations.

The second book is his latest, "Silman's Endgame Course" (or something similar). He doesn't set the book up by typical endgame book catagories like pawn endgames, rook endgames, etc. Rather, the chapters are divided into what he thinks a player needs to know as they increase their rating level. I don't own it, but it's gotten generally good reviews, I believe.

What have I learned recently? Wow, 2007 was quite a year in that regard.

I learned how to checkmate with the knight and bishop. I mean really learned it and practiced it, not just read about it and played through the moves once or twice.

I learned, for the umpteenth time, that while there is a difference between memorizing moves in the opening and playing according to good general opening principles, there is also a difference between playing according to good general opening principles and actually looking at the board! That difference actually lasts into the middle and endgame as well. Understanding the concrete position on the board trumps general principles everyday.

I learned (or developed) a method that works for me for analyzing/annotating my own games.

I learned that Purdy's method of "try to guess the master's move" way of reading over an annotated game really works and is really quite fun.

Over at the Chess Coaching Club, I've learned that some folks really are interested in being coached and others, well, not so much.

This would be a good thread to revisit at the end of 2008! ws


———
Chess Champions Come and Go Over 50 Years of Columns — In November 1934, Lester Markel, the Sunday editor of The New York Times, wrote to José Raúl Capablanca, a former world chess champion: “Dear Mr. Capablanca: After full consideration of the proposal, we have come to the conclusion that space conditions are such that we cannot consider the addition of another department at this time. We are grateful to you for making the suggestion and should there be a change in the situation I shall notify you of it without delay.” The proposal that Markel turned down was Capablanca’s offer to write a chess column for The Times. Twenty-eight years later, The Times hired Al Horowitz, an international master, to write the column that Capablanca, who died in 1942, had proposed. The first ...
Posted by marinvukusic
uskidscompute.com

1/14/2008
14:13:19

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Regarding Mr. Silman

Message:
www.jeremysilman.com

This is one of the best Web pages on the Internet for beginners and intermediate players. I recommended it to a lot of people.

Anyone who is willing to put some time into digging around it will be rewarded :)
———
Vishy Anand suffers heavy defeat four weeks before world title defence — The German and Russian chess leagues are the strongest in Europe, their top teams crammed with highly ranked chess grandmasters. Both played their final rounds last weekend when two individual performances, one impressive and the other dismal, stole the headlines. Baden-Baden, the holders and favourites, retained their Bundesliga crown ahead of Bremen. Both squads are global so that the England No1 Michael Adams played for B-B and the No2 Luke McShane for Bremen. But B-B's success was overshadowed by a bad defeat for Vishy Anand four weeks before the Indian defends his world title in Moscow. Sergey Tiviakov, ranked far below the chess champion, called it "an easy game" and claimed that Anand knew little about ...
Posted by cascadejames
uskidscompute.com

1/19/2008
00:07:54

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Giving up a pawn

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I have learned to be a little bolder in intentionally giving up a pawn or an exchange if I have a
clear purpose in mind. It doesn't always work, but sometimes the results can be gratifying when
the sacrifice works out. Of course this does not mean that the loss of a pawn is not important,
only that sometimes it is justified.
———
Sports Illustrated Features New Chess Queen in Town — Congrats to Susan Polgar, the incoming coach of Webster University's new chess team, for her sidebar article, "Winning Gambit," inside the current issue of Sports Illustrated (NFL Draft cover). We first introduced Polgar back in February. The Budapest native, former world chess champion and, until recently, coach of Texas Tech University's national championship squad, was prepping her eventual move to Webster, with nearly half of her Texas Tech players accompanying her. Polgar's strategic move to St. Louis has now captured the attention of a national audience. Writes SI: "Call it a grandmaster flash: After guiding Texas Tech to its second straight national collegiate chess title early this month, Knight Raiders coach Susan Polgar and ...
Posted by lighttotheright
uskidscompute.com

1/19/2008
06:21:01

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Message:
I'm known for my ability to absolutely control the center, which is good but not always necessary. So I've sharpened up my hyper-modern techniques.

Strac has shown me that I'm not quite as good as I once thought. As soon as he played 18. a5 for the control of the pivotal square on b6, I knew my latest game with him was over. He had a critical bind upon my Queen-side position; there was nothing that I could do about it once it was played. It was a small advantage for him that was unfortunately for me game winning.

I've known for a while, but it has never been so clear to me than now...about the difference between a strategic move and a positional one. A positional move is strategic; but a strategic move is not necessarily a positional one. A strategic move will maximize your chances, while a positional move will ELIMINATE your opponent's. Strac's move of 18. a5 shut down my entire position because it forced me to constantly adjust while he continued to advance. My chances were eliminated under best play.

Posted by alice02
uskidscompute.com

1/19/2008
08:51:58

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not describing moves to myself

Message:
Given that we were asked to say our rating , my rating is 1287 and I have been up to 1390.

I don't drop as many significant pieces - though I still occasionally do so. When I started dropping pieces I decided to check every individual piece for the moves it could make. There is a knight - it can move there and there etc. I have now learnt to look at a knight's potential moves as a clock face. I have also learnt to see that two important pieces separated by either 1 or 3 squares is a potentially dangerous situation when a knight is around.

I wonder if there is a chess developmental difference in thinking - this is a bishop's line vs a bishop can move to that or that or that square. A knight can move to that or that or that square vs a knight"s movement is like a clock face.

Maybe you have to think in terms of individual squares before you can think in terms of lines.

And I can only see lines when I am predicting one move. When I am trying to predict 2 or more moves I use square by square thinking. I think this type of thinking may be a stage in learning but also that it blocks me from seeing combinations.



Posted by doctor_knight
uskidscompute.com

1/19/2008
20:37:49

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I really liked what lighttotheright said about the difference between positional and strategical moves, and I think it applies to my number one thing I've learned. It seems that at my level if I mainly play good positional moves, my opponent usually will make a tactical mistake that I can then capitalize tactically. Maybe that was what I was trying to say: I'm learning how to play positionally. I suppose as I raise in level, I will have to start learning how to play strategically. So maybe another thing I can add to what I would like to learn is:

(3) How to make strategical moves as apposed to simply positional moves, though I'm thinking this may take a long long time.

Posted by ccmcacollister
uskidscompute.com

1/22/2008
08:11:43

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I learned

Message:
to build Rook and one-pawn fortresses on the second rank, vs a Queen!
Much more economical than the unweildy Rook and Two-Pawns-in-the-middle King havens of my past ... !