Hello, at 32:42: after White has played Bxa8, could it be better for Black to reply by ... Knight c2 (instead of ... Rxa8 taking the white bishop) ? Thanks a lot to Mrs. Krush for her time and inspiring explanations.
Time, space and harmony are very important elements in this game! It was emphasized very good in this video with Irina. I never thought the one element as harmony that way before in such a powerful way but looked at it simply as time and/or tempo. With harmony now in the light I can focus on that discerning time and harmony...I plan on buying the Master Method series...thank you!
I call it Whole Board Vision. I am starting to expand my tunnel vision from the local situation. At this stage my goal is to make fewer bad moves and, with luck, no blunders that lose a piece. Irina Krush emphasizes managing a clean workspace with everything in its place and working together. This easily compensates when the opponent makes a brilliant sacrifice but you mop it up and carry on with your work.
Grandmaster Krush reminds me so much in her Lecture Style of Dr. Kristen Ross and Dr. Ronell, of the French and German Departments, respectively, at NYU. I wonder if we'll soon see a Lecteur who recalls the style of Derrida or Lacan? You know, Professor Kripke should teach Chess....
Although I have severe hearing loss and don't understand American accents at all well, I can hear you perfectly thanks to your clear voice and excellent diction. Whenever the opponent presents me with a sticky choice, I think back on your principles, instead of trying something brave that Judit Polgar or Irina Krush might get away with, but I won't!
Each move was explained from different angles and related to the 3 themes. The material takes a while to utilize. This instruction is better than the standard lecture where a move is made and given surface level explanation. It may seem a bit much for players who don't examine what each move means for space, tempo, attack/defense, position, and yet each move impacts all of this.
Dear Grand Master Irina Krush please reintroduce this video to the Chess online community...I found it while searching for your videos on the four things to look at on each move...Thank you for your videos...they are Awesome
A rule of thumb is that you can almost never go for ...Bxf3 tricks before castling. Something almost always goes wrong when you do lol. One exception is 1.e4 Nf6 2.e5 Nd5 3.d4 d6 4.Nf3 dxe5 5.dxe5 Bg4 6.h3 Bxf3 7.Qxf3 but even here Black has to be ready for some complications.
This is actually one of the best I've ever seen a chess and funny enough one player I've played actually played what are the same openings presented here I know I was able to get a really strong position out of the opening
This video is very helpful. I learned about the element of space, time and harmony from other experience players, but after watching this video, I understand it better. Thank you for explaining the game strategy.
Alekhine 1.e4-Nf6 2.e5-Ne4!? I always use this line when using the Alekhine Defense but I most use this than the modern Alekhine .... I most often use this when Blitz 3m+2 mostly white has a cramp position
This first chapter summarizes a lot of the key points about time space and harmony that are explained in much more detail in the full 9 hour course, its impossible to fit it all in 1 hour. All our courses including this one are aimed for club players 1400-1900 level unless specifically mentioned as "beginner" or "advanced" in the title. Our youtube channel and shop cater more towards club level and advanced players.
I am not impressed by this. Everyone is quite aware of principles but they need guidance on how to to find the right moves and to improve calculation. This is not I was looking for, I liked the ones by Anna Rudolf and Daniel Naroditsky.
Hello, at 32:42: after White has played Bxa8, could it be better for Black to reply by ... Knight c2 (instead of ... Rxa8 taking the white bishop) ?
Thanks a lot to Mrs. Krush for her time and inspiring explanations.
Time, space, piece coordination (harmony) to be specific.
Time, space and harmony are very important elements in this game! It was emphasized very good in this video with Irina. I never thought the one element as harmony that way before in such a powerful way but looked at it simply as time and/or tempo. With harmony now in the light I can focus on that discerning time and harmony...I plan on buying the Master Method series...thank you!
daniel andrzejewski Thank you for your comment. It's always a pleasure to receive good reviews. I am happy to see you enjoyed the course.
I call it Whole Board Vision. I am starting to expand my tunnel vision from the local situation. At this stage my goal is to make fewer bad moves and, with luck, no blunders that lose a piece. Irina Krush emphasizes managing a clean workspace with everything in its place and working together. This easily compensates when the opponent makes a brilliant sacrifice but you mop it up and carry on with your work.
Precise,to the point,extraordinary analysis by GM Krush.Thanks for improving my chess.
Loved her commentary on one of the last tournaments I saw. Looking forward to this video
Thanks for this post. You have given me inspiration for my next RUclips video. Please, keep posting.
You're welcome!
Outstanding. Who could dislike this ?!
Grandmaster Krush reminds me so much in her Lecture Style of Dr. Kristen Ross and Dr. Ronell, of the French and German Departments, respectively, at NYU.
I wonder if we'll soon see a Lecteur who recalls the style of Derrida or Lacan?
You know, Professor Kripke should teach Chess....
Although I have severe hearing loss and don't understand American accents at all well, I can hear you perfectly thanks to your clear voice and excellent diction. Whenever the opponent presents me with a sticky choice, I think back on your principles, instead of trying something brave that Judit Polgar or Irina Krush might get away with, but I won't!
Excellent ! Hope to see more like this in the future
Sure, Thanks!
Each move was explained from different angles and related to the 3 themes. The material takes a while to utilize. This instruction is better than the standard lecture where a move is made and given surface level explanation. It may seem a bit much for players who don't examine what each move means for space, tempo, attack/defense, position, and yet each move impacts all of this.
Thanks for your words, we certainly try to do well-explained and diactic courses so that players can learn in the right way.
It is a unique chess principle, and a very good lesson by Irina ..
Dear Grand Master Irina Krush please reintroduce this video to the Chess online community...I found it while searching for your videos on the four things to look at on each move...Thank you for your videos...they are Awesome
Very good lesson and presentation.
Thank you for your words, we are glad you liked it.
Her video in the O'Kelly is great as well
Thanks for this wonderful chess lesson!
its talk about alekhhine defence? so Bxf3 is good or not?
Yes is Alekhine Defence, in waht minute? normally is not good play Bxf3 in the game.
A rule of thumb is that you can almost never go for ...Bxf3 tricks before castling. Something almost always goes wrong when you do lol. One exception is 1.e4 Nf6 2.e5 Nd5 3.d4 d6 4.Nf3 dxe5 5.dxe5 Bg4 6.h3 Bxf3 7.Qxf3 but even here Black has to be ready for some complications.
1. Time: efficient moves that may give tempo
This is actually one of the best I've ever seen a chess and funny enough one player I've played actually played what are the same openings presented here I know I was able to get a really strong position out of the opening
Plz make next time pin chess game videos
Check out this one: ruclips.net/video/Y742aaF4B_4/видео.html 🤓
Irina Krush makes me feel like a blind man who can suddenly see.
Nice
great, thanks
This video is very helpful. I learned about the element of space, time and harmony from other experience players, but after watching this video, I understand it better. Thank you for explaining the game strategy.
Glad you liked it and we hope to hear from you soon! ✌
Alekhine 1.e4-Nf6 2.e5-Ne4!? I always use this line when using the Alekhine Defense but I most use this than the modern Alekhine .... I most often use this when Blitz 3m+2 mostly white has a cramp position
keep it simple bobby fisher was right when he said chess isn't fun anymore. now fisher random is fun gets rid of a lot of the openings.
What is chess? It is a contest where one player tries to show they can outwit the opponent in a 2 dimensional plane.
I know it's hard to maintain eye contact with a camera lens, but it's worth the effort.
first five minutes "skippable"
I wonder if she gets a lot of marriage-offers after this.......
What is the target audience for such a video? Too conversational, and dropping concepts as givens to explain a much more basic concept seems odd.
Feel like this is advanced players, in the range of 1500-1800. I can be wrong though.
This first chapter summarizes a lot of the key points about time space and harmony that are explained in much more detail in the full 9 hour course, its impossible to fit it all in 1 hour. All our courses including this one are aimed for club players 1400-1900 level unless specifically mentioned as "beginner" or "advanced" in the title. Our youtube channel and shop cater more towards club level and advanced players.
I am not impressed by this. Everyone is quite aware of principles but they need guidance on how to to find the right moves and to improve calculation. This is not I was looking for, I liked the ones by Anna Rudolf and Daniel Naroditsky.