Nihal Sarin’s Pillsbury Attack wins in 24 moves
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- Опубликовано: 16 окт 2024
- Featured in this analysis is the chess game between Nihal Sarin and Pawel Teclaf from the 2023 World Rapid Team Championship. Pay special attention to how Sarin’s kingside minor pieces and queen exert pressure on Teclaf’s kingside. Sarin’s knight on e5, bishop on d3, and queen on f3 eyeing h3 are the key piece ingredients in the Pillsbury Attack, leading him to a quick 24-move victory.
Image of Nihal Sarin courtesy of Lennart Ootes
Lennartootes.com
I'm a self-taught National Master in chess out of Pennsylvania, USA who was introduced to the game by my father in 1988 at the age of 8. The purpose of this channel is to share my knowledge of chess to help others improve their game. I enjoy continuing to improve my understanding of this great game, albeit slowly. Consider subscribing here on RUclips for frequent content, and/or connecting via any or all the below social medias. Your support is greatly appreciated. Take care, bye. :)
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Jerry you are spoiling us with all this content! These keep my love of chess strong and I also like to believe my ability to play stronger too.
💪
Hey Jerry, I have never left a comment before but I have to say I find your videos so instructive and entertaining. Your analysis is simple and easy to understand. I enjoy watching your old and new videos a few times a day. Cheers
Nice to hear from you, and thank you for the compliment. 👍
I play 5/5 normally to improve my sight. I average 87-92% accuracy. Today I played a 10 min game. My first opponent was 1976 Elo. I will admit I struggled during the opening and part of the middle game….however the rook pair series was KEY!!! Sacrificed 1 rook for an active knight….20 secs left on the clock…22 pre-moves into a checkmate. Thank you, my game has become sooo much better with your videos. Maybe in 2 years or so I will find you on Chess Network and give you a real game.
So glad to see you uploading more often. You’re keeping me motivated. 🙂
Awesome analysis!👏👍 a pleasure to follow when you explain such gems.
He is the best.
@@Elo-hv3fw there is, however, Daniel King also😄
@@sheldonkupa9120 You are right !!!!!!
Thank you !!!!!
'S been awesome seeing you post videos a bit more regularly, Jerry, thank you!
Awesome attack and analysis!
Great stuff, as always! Thanks Jerry!
It is so infuriating that I can’t convince anyone else I know personally to appreciate the sublime beauty of a masterfully played game of chess. Thank goodness I found Jerry’s channel and his online community of chess fans. Thanks for the content, Jerry!
Well Done! Great analysis.
Gotta love it when fierce counter play has mate in one lingering just a single tempo away, only it never materializes as the opponents attack is faster.
Thx Jerry for the work😊
Nice video! What software are you using to display the games?
Thank you. It’s Blitzin.
Good game!
Good battle indeed!
Hi Jerry!
Nihal is master of tactics,,,
A great win by Sarin fine analysis, thanks Jerry.
Started to play like a year ago and want become a master at chess. Really wish Jerry could be my trainer.
thank you :)
Love these razor 🪒 thin games
I guess the king was "too good for his home" at 8:10 🤣
My thought at 8:17 was to allow the rook in h1 to defend more squares close to the king. Ke1 has only one defender to d1 and Kc1 has the rook defending d1 too.
TY GM
1:31 Queen a fork!
All your games are instructive, but I wonder if you would show us a game between an 1800 player and a 2500 player? My guess is that most here are somewhere not-quite-GM and I for one would like to see how a GM makes it all look so easy. CFN channel did a video of Pinkamena (a six year old girl(?) rated 1600+ at the time) playing a gentleman (GM Hummer) rated around 2600. It was pretty amazing to see the BIG difference (he "missed" a #1, and "blundered" a Q) and she was all giggles about winning (I'm sure she knew what happened). Still, the precision of a 2600 GM really stood out. Watching two GM's play,. the level is not quite so obvious because they are closely matched.
The difference between 1800 and 2500 is still light years apart to be instructive. 1800s still make some fundamental error in judgement but this is not so obvious for 2000+ rated players.
@@faznaz7455 ---- The idea is to show the errors made by 1600's, and how a GM 2600 will play, showing how they are errors (i.e "small but fatal blunders"). The game between Pinkamen and Hummer was a Danish Gambit (I think), giving up two pawns for ideal placement of two bishops in an open position. The game was lost for black very early on - apparently - but a 1600 player probably would not see that, and would not know how, to proceed as white. That's why the game was instructive.
The game proceeded after the "blundered" white queen, still with an advantage to white. I think GM Hummar wanted to see if he could draw or win even with several points of material down, and his play was pretty amazing. The difference in level of play is what I would like to see explained, for instructive purposes, i.e. what a GM strategizes and sees that a 1600 player does not see.
Another example is a game in which Bobby Fisher performed a king walk - in the early development stage of the game - against some guy who did not see how to take advantage of the wasted tempi, I think four or five moves to transfer his king to the other side of the board. Fisher's opponent kept developing pieces, bewildered. Fisher showing off what being a top GM means. Fisher of course won, but Caruana, Carlsen, Nakamura, and a slew of top GM's today (and of Fisher's time) would have spotted weaknesses that we mortals do not see, laughed, and won. What Fisher played may be in some opening books today, but I'm pretty sure it was not, then, so it wasn't learned theory that his opponent failed to follow, that led to his demise, it was his failure to understand the strategy.
Oh yeah I got c1 and f7 right!
Nice attack that's how you do it.
Hi Jerry.
Ya buddy let's go
You’re the Master Jerry, literally, so I defer to you. That said, the Opening to me appears to land in a very precarious structure for Black. It would seem to me that, without the Pawns on c4 and d5, it’s *like* many other openings - a Colle, a London - but a QGD probably least of the three.
In other words Black looks from the beginning like he’s built his house of sticks!
All Hail the mighty London System attack!
Yay 😊
King Jerry ❤
Third
first
Pillsbury dough boy Jerry
I think you mean stockfish wins in 24 moves.
4th
%98 accuracy with 7 avg centipawn loss is outstanding