25:40 : "This happens so, so often, where you defend against something, and then forget what you defended against and end up allowing it." - Danya Naroditsky 27:02 : Danya forgets what he defended against and ends up allowing it. Thanks for the content, Danya! I love this "speedrun"!
That feeling: "As soon as you drop your piece and before it even hits the board you realize it's a blunder but can't stop it" captured on Daniel's face forever 😱
Very funny moment! I actually saw the mate before Danya realized it but only because the title of the video clued me in and I was watching for the moment to happen.
As always Danya's transparency about top GMs blundering mate is always good to see. It's happened with me so many times that I don't see the blunder until just after I make the move and by then it is too late. Great video as always, super instructive!
I have prayed for this situation for years. This is like having a winning lottery ticket and then losing it: It's that rare and would be the most wonderful thing to ever happen to an 'average' player. As it is, now you still have a 'fish that got away story' which is still pretty great given there's video proof. One thing is for sure: This person will NEVER miss that particular mating pattern again. Ever.
With regard to the cognitive science, it's very interesting that the moment you move the piece, you're much more likely to see the error. I'd guess that having made the move, the mind clears of distractions or other thoughts, like your teaching. Plus, you see the new position, with the bishop no longer blocking h8, which can make it a lot more obvious.
43:10 "So what I decided to do was actually get up from the board, shake hands with Fedoseev and pretend nothing was wrong" -- I love it. I saw tactic immediately as a 1700 since I knew it was there. For a 2700 not to see it is a miracle that requires they trust you not to allow a simple tactic.
Hey Danya, I feel I speak for a lot of people here when I say we watch you not just for the games, but also for your way of communication and more importantly, you good will. People who are so well put together are hard to come by, and also make it through my RUclips recommendations. Thanks and have a nice day 👍
Literally the last game I played before watching this video, I missed a mate in 1, realized it immediately after playing a different move, & then had 20-something more moves of nail-biting back & forth before finally winning on time. So I came over here to see if I could learn anything else besides just look harder at the board. The remark "after you realize you missed a blundered mate, you can't play chess anymore," is pure serendipity for me right now.
There's the Fabi blunder vs Anish, that's famous too, he just randomly blundered a piece, I think it was Wijk aan Zee 2022. Also, cool you mentioned Hikaru almost never blundering because he also blundered mate in 1 against Fabi in an online event recently, it was Rf8 I think and Fabi had a pawn on h5 blocking the king. Nepo blundered a bishop in that petroff against Magnus. It's actually pretty common.
@@RG001100 I know, but it's just a move that gave him a losing position. O tried focusing on more drastic things like blundering a piece or mate. but yeah, that f5 is a good example too
Oftentimes I tend to trust the opponent not to make obvious blunders because they play so well, and then I miss mate in 1 or 2 or 3, or just a hanging queen.
Man, I just had a game today where I positioned my rook on the open f-file, and when the opponent queen moves from f7 to f3+, I was flabbergasted because I thought I somehow blundered a fork And yes I did blunder the knight as a result
Me too lol. I have a way better record against better or much better players than against lower rated players, because better players play more logically.
@@victorkao1472 the most thoughtless mistake I've ever made was moving a pawn to threaten a queen, assuming my opponent would move the queen, and then not taking the queen the next move. D'oh. :o)
Several of us were in the comments in the game pointing out as Danya was describing Ne6 that it hung mate, expecting him to say "but of course, you can't play it because of mate in two." We were shocked when he went ahead.
@@musical_lolu4811 People do it all the time in the stream, and as is clear from the video, Danya ignored them here. In any case, he refunds all the rating points from the speedrun.
Wow, Danya is so deditcated to teaching he's willing to show the exact types of blunders players can make by doing it himself at 27:30. Can you name a more dedicated guy? 🤧😂
Great video as usual. Regarding the apostrophe in the title: I see this mistake everywhere and it is driving me crazy. So here's a short explanation on the difference: Plural: One grandmaster -> two grandmasters Posession: The video of the grandmaster -> the grandmaster's video
I want to let you know that I really love your videos. And even if this does not get the views that other channels might get. Don't let that affect you. I've been watching you for a few years now, and I'm always impressed and how you improve and every video and every speed run. There are other channels that just prioritize clicks and not education. Also Happy teacher appreciation week!
It's so fascinating how long you were discussing the position after Ke6 and didn't see it, but almost instantaneous after you played it you saw it. I think it speaks to how much harder visualizing a position not on the board is, even for a world class tactician
i can understand from the opponents perspective too. This has happened to me too. Its that you calculate so much that you know that in previous line that mate wasnt working cuz the queen was defending that square so you don't calcuate that mate again cuz you know it doesnt work but forget to take into account the new board.
Caruana once blundered a full rook to Anish Giri. It wasn't hard to see either, it was just plainly moving his rook to a square guarded by Anish's knight. That's a blunder I don't forget lol
44:34 Rossolimo did live in France from 1929 to 1952, but he was not originally from there, as he was a son of Russian painter Spiridon Ivanovich Rossolimo and a nephew of Russian and then Soviet neurologist Grigory Ivanovich Rossolimo.
Finally was able to get close to beating my roommate who’s around 1300 as a 900 myself thanks to these videos. Thank you! I surprised myself for remembering the moves up until move 7 which is a first..
But he lost to Hikaru today in Arena King. Danya was so mad about that. He was not able to recover and played poorly the rest of the tournament. Hikaru is good at destroying Danya
It was a great representation of the lesson of not forgetting previous ideas. You had just finished explaining not forgetting about Qf7 check and then showed it isn't so easy to remember lol
“I promise you it will be 500k views, it will be Levy type numbers” Its sad to hear that in retrospect not because you dont have those numbers but because you totally deserve those numbers and much more
I'm guessing that danya missed it just like he missed the mate in 2, but even worse since danya did not mention it at all even after he played d4. Danya would be just lost after Nxe6, can take blacks bishop but no need since you can take it anytime and instead just leave it and keep it as a monster knight on e6 and play Bh6 instead to trade it off, then maybe Qg5 and bring the e2 knight into the attack also, and after that white can also think about bringing the light square bishop in along with a rook lift, but black would probably be dead before that. The position plays itself for white after Nxe6, while blacks e7 pawn basically blocking his pieces from being able to help in the defense of his king. So whites e6 "sacrifice" turned out to be devastating. I hate letting opponent play this move since it's so hard to develop after. The attack would be devastating, danya has like zero counterplay at all. He can try attack whites queen side pawns but so what. I'll gladly trade them all but I'll take Danyas king instead. White can even defend the queen side lawns easily if he wanted to to make it absolutely zero counterplay if he wants to be mean. Lol.
I'm coming back to this video just to see its views, I really wish it gets a million views (as Daniel guessed). This is the only channel I watch for chess videos.
At 43:00 when he's talking about knight takes. What I don't see is why if bishop takes then rook takes bishop and rook takes back how can queen come in and fork when rook is on 6th rank
I always kick myself for ages when i make a blunder like that or even something more advanced especially in my rapid games. It's really nice to know it happens to everyone.
I blundered this along with him. I was calculating this exact line but I was like "I wouldn't play this because the knight defends back the queen from e6", missing the idea of playing Bxg5 and then queen takes rook on e6. This is an example of Finegold talks about sometimes, where by sheer luck seeing less is sometimes better/luckier than seeing more but not seeing everything.
In the game you were talking about how if the Knight had to it could drop back to B8 in order to reroute to the other side of the board. As soon as the Queen left D8 though I was thinking a good place for the Knight would be on the Queen's old spot, because it would cover the F7 square which unburdens the Queen you moved to defend the square.
Thanks for not only teaching us how to analyze and calculate, but also how to handle blunders mentally and emotionally. Next time I blunder Mate in 2, I'll definitely remember this lesson!
13:42 If you had actually played d4 here, white would have Bh6 forcing you to give your dark square bishop This is perhaps the first time I saw something that Danya missed, feeling proud
The funniest blunder i've seen is when Aronian left his queen to taken away by Carlson, it was so funny how fast carlson grabbed Aronian's Queen is the hilarious part
Danya: goes on about forgetting the defense of mate Also Danya: blunders the mate in the next move by blocking the queens vision with a sexy knight move
Bro for real too funny, i was wandering just few seconds earlier if some beginner/early intermediate player would play Ne6 blundering and when danya played i started laughing
Oof - the timing of you saying "it's so typical that you forget why you played a previous defensive move" just before hanging mate in 2 was priceless
proof is in the prophet's pudding
A good teacher always demonstrates with an example
@@delust430 talk about leading by example. That's why he's the best.
@@delust430 my man lol
@@KironKabir😮😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂uuhh huh hhhu😮😮
Like a chess poet of sorts, Danya explains his unfortunate mistake...." Oh shit i blundered mate!!"
Classy danya, even after a blunder he maintains his sophisticated GM demeanor.
With camera shake and all
“Like a chess poet
Danya explains his mistake
Shit I blundered mate!!”
25:40 : "This happens so, so often, where you defend against something, and then forget what you defended against and end up allowing it." - Danya Naroditsky
27:02 : Danya forgets what he defended against and ends up allowing it.
Thanks for the content, Danya! I love this "speedrun"!
and 25:46 : "yeah of course queen f7 check is is what we defended against by bringing the queen up to d5"
considering how often you say "shoot" and "heck", i replayed the "OH SHIT I BLUNDERED MATE" more times than i care to admit
Thanks! Really appreciate what you do.
Danya's empathy as a teacher is unmatched. I also blunder mate in 1, 2 and sometimes even 3
Blundering mate in 1 is my super power.
You blunder 1 mate in three. I blunder 3 mates in one. We are not the same.
@@frankjohnson123 🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
What about 4?
@@Andrew-yr6ig you can see that far ahead? Impressive!
I love the instant realization. Very relatable.
26:58 OH SHIT I BLUNDERED MATE
That feeling: "As soon as you drop your piece and before it even hits the board you realize it's a blunder but can't stop it" captured on Daniel's face forever
😱
It's true though I'll think for 2 minutes then as soon as I move I see why it's bad 😅
I bet the opponent threw a fit when he saw that "missed win" on the analysis
Especially given that he most likely knows it’s Danya
Cause he has his name on the account
Flipped a table you could say.
At least he didn't lose his queen, right? Right???
@@Botondar Yeah man I'd have to go for a run or something. Periodically shrieking "shit!" along the way
Thanks!
"Oh shit I blundered mate!!" said Danya calmly.
Lmaoo
It feels nice when a GM blunders mate also. Also Danya is one of the only people I don't skip ads on. Appreciate you boo.
27:02 for the big blunder hanging mate in 2!
Very funny moment! I actually saw the mate before Danya realized it but only because the title of the video clued me in and I was watching for the moment to happen.
Danya is so ahead of his time with his teaching skills that he basically describes his blunder in-depth before it even happening
As always Danya's transparency about top GMs blundering mate is always good to see. It's happened with me so many times that I don't see the blunder until just after I make the move and by then it is too late. Great video as always, super instructive!
Your analytical breakdown of these games is unparalleled. As is your contribution to educating the chess community. Tysm 🙏🏽
Amazing that you yourself predicted that it’s so easy to make such obvious mistakes sometimes. The lesson was really hammered home!
Thanks a lot for the lesson on blunders! I always get angry with myself when I do, you gave me the right prospective.
I have prayed for this situation for years. This is like having a winning lottery ticket and then losing it: It's that rare and would be the most wonderful thing to ever happen to an 'average' player. As it is, now you still have a 'fish that got away story' which is still pretty great given there's video proof. One thing is for sure: This person will NEVER miss that particular mating pattern again. Ever.
I love his emphasis when saying “take the STING out of ___”
I was dying laughing cause you just told us remember defending against old ideas and I was one who forgot and then you did that 😭😭😭
With regard to the cognitive science, it's very interesting that the moment you move the piece, you're much more likely to see the error. I'd guess that having made the move, the mind clears of distractions or other thoughts, like your teaching. Plus, you see the new position, with the bishop no longer blocking h8, which can make it a lot more obvious.
Finally a moment where the calmness and discipline of the sensei are broken.
"OH SH1T I BLUNDERED MATE"
We all have been there Danya sensei
It was very sad to see Danya was stuck inside of a freezer for the length of this video :(
43:10 "So what I decided to do was actually get up from the board, shake hands with Fedoseev and pretend nothing was wrong" -- I love it. I saw tactic immediately as a 1700 since I knew it was there. For a 2700 not to see it is a miracle that requires they trust you not to allow a simple tactic.
Fedoseev
@@ThePalmWoods Thanks!
Hey Danya, I feel I speak for a lot of people here when I say we watch you not just for the games, but also for your way of communication and more importantly, you good will. People who are so well put together are hard to come by, and also make it through my RUclips recommendations. Thanks and have a nice day 👍
Literally the last game I played before watching this video, I missed a mate in 1, realized it immediately after playing a different move, & then had 20-something more moves of nail-biting back & forth before finally winning on time. So I came over here to see if I could learn anything else besides just look harder at the board. The remark "after you realize you missed a blundered mate, you can't play chess anymore," is pure serendipity for me right now.
There's the Fabi blunder vs Anish, that's famous too, he just randomly blundered a piece, I think it was Wijk aan Zee 2022. Also, cool you mentioned Hikaru almost never blundering because he also blundered mate in 1 against Fabi in an online event recently, it was Rf8 I think and Fabi had a pawn on h5 blocking the king. Nepo blundered a bishop in that petroff against Magnus. It's actually pretty common.
Nepo’s had a more recent and more significant blunder. :(
@@RG001100 He always blunders. But he keeps a near 2800 rating which means he must beat top-rated players "always" too.
@@RG001100 One of the blunders of all time.
@@RG001100 I know, but it's just a move that gave him a losing position. O tried focusing on more drastic things like blundering a piece or mate. but yeah, that f5 is a good example too
Oftentimes I tend to trust the opponent not to make obvious blunders because they play so well, and then I miss mate in 1 or 2 or 3, or just a hanging queen.
Man, I just had a game today where I positioned my rook on the open f-file, and when the opponent queen moves from f7 to f3+, I was flabbergasted because I thought I somehow blundered a fork
And yes I did blunder the knight as a result
Me too lol. I have a way better record against better or much better players than against lower rated players, because better players play more logically.
Ahahhahah Iam that opponent. And when I blunder and you dont punish me I am like :tf is this guy blind, I just blundered my knight.. 😂😂😂😂
@@victorkao1472 the most thoughtless mistake I've ever made was moving a pawn to threaten a queen, assuming my opponent would move the queen, and then not taking the queen the next move. D'oh. :o)
@@RG001100 lol happens. Sometimes we do trust our opponents too much.
Let’s be fair, Magnus too, trusted his opponent, Inarkiev, to make legal moves
Several of us were in the comments in the game pointing out as Danya was describing Ne6 that it hung mate, expecting him to say "but of course, you can't play it because of mate in two." We were shocked when he went ahead.
oh wow that's so cool
Isn't it best not to do that though?
@@musical_lolu4811 People do it all the time in the stream, and as is clear from the video, Danya ignored them here. In any case, he refunds all the rating points from the speedrun.
@@jmensch1988 must be hard to play, give a commentary and look at chat at the same time anyway
Wow, Danya is so deditcated to teaching he's willing to show the exact types of blunders players can make by doing it himself at 27:30. Can you name a more dedicated guy? 🤧😂
Great video as usual.
Regarding the apostrophe in the title: I see this mistake everywhere and it is driving me crazy. So here's a short explanation on the difference:
Plural:
One grandmaster -> two grandmasters
Posession:
The video of the grandmaster -> the grandmaster's video
Danya is a wonderful teacher, spinning everything into a useful lesson
Watching this live was insane. I got up as if I was watching a football match when Danya hung mate lmao. A+ content as always
I want to let you know that I really love your videos. And even if this does not get the views that other channels might get. Don't let that affect you. I've been watching you for a few years now, and I'm always impressed and how you improve and every video and every speed run. There are other channels that just prioritize clicks and not education. Also Happy teacher appreciation week!
A great video (as always!): instructive, pleasant to watch and extra relatable this time due to the blunder, made me warm inside 😊
It's so fascinating how long you were discussing the position after Ke6 and didn't see it, but almost instantaneous after you played it you saw it. I think it speaks to how much harder visualizing a position not on the board is, even for a world class tactician
Ke6 means King e6 btw
Glad to m ow Danta’s human. I love how it happened right after he spoke on not forgetting old ideas in reference to f7.
i can understand from the opponents perspective too. This has happened to me too. Its that you calculate so much that you know that in previous line that mate wasnt working cuz the queen was defending that square so you don't calcuate that mate again cuz you know it doesnt work but forget to take into account the new board.
God it was so damn perfect and ironic that you called out the exact category of the blunder right before blundering
28.48 I think "well, at least we know our opponent isn't cheating." from Danya is the best compliment to a chess player.
Caruana once blundered a full rook to Anish Giri. It wasn't hard to see either, it was just plainly moving his rook to a square guarded by Anish's knight. That's a blunder I don't forget lol
Seeing you blunder that mate does so much for me tbh. Reminds me that it's normal to blunder from time to time.
44:34 Rossolimo did live in France from 1929 to 1952, but he was not originally from there, as he was a son of Russian painter Spiridon Ivanovich Rossolimo and a nephew of Russian and then Soviet neurologist Grigory Ivanovich Rossolimo.
Finally was able to get close to beating my roommate who’s around 1300 as a 900 myself thanks to these videos. Thank you!
I surprised myself for remembering the moves up until move 7 which is a first..
Thanks, Danya, very instructive
Saw title. Stopped everything. Did Danya finally lose a legitimate game in the speedrun?!
Same. 😂 Short answer though: no. No he did not.
Win or lose- he needs to fix the grammar lol
@@TehAdrenalinePickle ? the title doesn't mean they blunder mate in '2'. it means they blunder mate 'also'
But he lost to Hikaru today in Arena King. Danya was so mad about that. He was not able to recover and played poorly the rest of the tournament. Hikaru is good at destroying Danya
@@adamwolsey8589 Grandmasters should be sans an apostrophe in this context- referring to grandmasters, plural, blundering mate too, not two.
one of may favourites so far - so interesting
25:05 "Who can tell me why?" he's such a teacher :D
It was a great representation of the lesson of not forgetting previous ideas. You had just finished explaining not forgetting about Qf7 check and then showed it isn't so easy to remember lol
The real blunder here is spelling Grandmaster's instead of Grandmasters. Nailed it!
I love how your brain immediately screamed the mate-in-2 tactic at you as soon as it saw the position after you moved your knight.
27:07 lol drops the “teacher voice”
Great lesson.. I appreciate your honesty in addition to everything else in these games
Blundering is such a crushing feeling, but I like Danya's philosophy on getting over it. 💪
It could happen to everyone. Just usual stuff. The funniest part is the previous speech about process of forgetting about threats.
Great instruction! Nice explanation of rating anxiety. :-)
“I promise you it will be 500k views, it will be Levy type numbers”
Its sad to hear that in retrospect not because you dont have those numbers but because you totally deserve those numbers and much more
That reaction is soooo golden 😂
great game, very instructive
you inspiring i love looks your video never give up! im french guy sorry for my english
At 16:26 what's wrong with Nxe6? Isn't that free pawn, attacking queen and then move bishop after black moves the queen? What am I missing?
I'm guessing that danya missed it just like he missed the mate in 2, but even worse since danya did not mention it at all even after he played d4.
Danya would be just lost after Nxe6, can take blacks bishop but no need since you can take it anytime and instead just leave it and keep it as a monster knight on e6 and play Bh6 instead to trade it off, then maybe Qg5 and bring the e2 knight into the attack also, and after that white can also think about bringing the light square bishop in along with a rook lift, but black would probably be dead before that. The position plays itself for white after Nxe6, while blacks e7 pawn basically blocking his pieces from being able to help in the defense of his king. So whites e6 "sacrifice" turned out to be devastating. I hate letting opponent play this move since it's so hard to develop after.
The attack would be devastating, danya has like zero counterplay at all. He can try attack whites queen side pawns but so what. I'll gladly trade them all but I'll take Danyas king instead. White can even defend the queen side lawns easily if he wanted to to make it absolutely zero counterplay if he wants to be mean. Lol.
You just take the Bishop and counterattack enemy queen white loses a piece most likely
@@cosmic_looper oh yeh ur right
I'm coming back to this video just to see its views, I really wish it gets a million views (as Daniel guessed). This is the only channel I watch for chess videos.
At 43:00 when he's talking about knight takes. What I don't see is why if bishop takes then rook takes bishop and rook takes back how can queen come in and fork when rook is on 6th rank
Its reassuring to know I make the same sort of blunders as a grandmaster.
Everyone could learn from your attitude. You are an inspiration
TableFlippers has an adequate name. Imagine how they'll feel after they see the eval
Great - so cool. Thank you for all your lessons!
Great entertainment, education , and humor (on this one)!
I always kick myself for ages when i make a blunder like that or even something more advanced especially in my rapid games. It's really nice to know it happens to everyone.
So, what’s the chance the opponent also saw it after releasing the mouse for Qg4?
likely
Great video! Thank you so much! ❤
Danya's so good he can blunder mate and still win
Realmente me parecen super instructivos tus videos. Muchas gracias!
Amazing 😂 good to know Danya has human moments like everyone else!
Omg!! So good!! 😂 Great video. Best ever!!
Danya should blunder mate more often in order to get more views
19:40 what is the problem with Nh5? It is guarded by the queen and I was thinking play for c4 in the future
Loved how you saw the blunder as soon as you dropped the knight ❤❤😂 happens to me all the time
The reaction to the ... inaccuracy ... was priceless.
Fantastic video!
This is amazing.. Best channel on youtube
I blundered this along with him. I was calculating this exact line but I was like "I wouldn't play this because the knight defends back the queen from e6", missing the idea of playing Bxg5 and then queen takes rook on e6. This is an example of Finegold talks about sometimes, where by sheer luck seeing less is sometimes better/luckier than seeing more but not seeing everything.
In the game you were talking about how if the Knight had to it could drop back to B8 in order to reroute to the other side of the board. As soon as the Queen left D8 though I was thinking a good place for the Knight would be on the Queen's old spot, because it would cover the F7 square which unburdens the Queen you moved to defend the square.
Thanks for not only teaching us how to analyze and calculate, but also how to handle blunders mentally and emotionally. Next time I blunder Mate in 2, I'll definitely remember this lesson!
13:42 If you had actually played d4 here, white would have Bh6 forcing you to give your dark square bishop
This is perhaps the first time I saw something that Danya missed, feeling proud
The funniest blunder i've seen is when Aronian left his queen to taken away by Carlson, it was so funny how fast carlson grabbed Aronian's Queen is the hilarious part
Danya: goes on about forgetting the defense of mate
Also Danya: blunders the mate in the next move by blocking the queens vision with a sexy knight move
Bro for real too funny, i was wandering just few seconds earlier if some beginner/early intermediate player would play Ne6 blundering and when danya played i started laughing
Danya: It's important to remember what you defended against, in this case Qf7+, and then forgets immediately with Ne6. It's been a long day.
Danya: „a lot of people forget what they were defending against“
Also danya: forgets what he was defending against 1 move later and hangs mate in 2
I'm waiting for the 500k views.
Love you and your content:)
LMAOO!
Amazing video as always! :)
Danya finally feels relatable!🤣
i replayed the missed mate like 5 times, gonna come back here each time i blunder :P
Danya is the goat
I find this strangely inspiring. I also think missing mate is more frustrating than blundering mate.
This was so funny, how he warned us about not forgeting the role of the queen to protect and he than forgot :D