10 years I've been watching, since the 2014 World Chess Championship. Many a meal have I spent with you, and to me you are an old friend. Your love for chess bleeds into your work, and you teach much more than just chess. Have a meal on me, here's to many more years.
Love how Jerry is able to explain both the "big picture situation", eg: That "strategy should be to exchange one piece, but ideally not both, and then push the 1 pawn advantage", as well as the tactical considerations, like "Not move x, which would allow the opponent king to get opposition, but move y, which retains the opposition and outflanks the enemy king". The enjoyment of the game increases multi-fold when you can understand not only what is happening and why, but also WHY something is NOT happening. eg: "move x", which seems natural, is NOT a good idea, either because of tactical or strategic consideration. LOVE IT!
@umarhasan8580 he has published multiple. "How to reassess your chess" is a positional masterpiece buy it in paper if you only buy 1 chess book in your life, this is the one.
You alluded to it, I think part of the problem for Ding is it just felt he was trying to speed things along until tiebreaks and to me it felt as though he was frustrated that there was no easy way of forcing a draw. Patience has been rewarded!
Ding was not playing for draws the whole match. It may look like that on the surface, but there were so many tricky ideas in the way he was playing. Gukesh was playing at an impressive level of accuracy.
I've been following Jerry since 2014. He's always been my resource for the best chess content on this platform. Once again, he has proved that with this world chess championship. Thank you, Jerry.
Jerry, you did a great job of not revealing what was coming up. Not easy. I was totally caught off guard when Ding blundered. Really good coverage of the match.
I find it quite poetic that Gukesh won in the end by pushing every game to its end and forcing his opponent to answer every question correctly. It is reminiscent of how Ding himself won against Nepo, refusing the draw and forcing Ian to defend accurately which in the end he failed to do.
Gukesh after the Rf2 move very much looked as if in disbelief. Closed his eyes for a minute. And as he opened the eyes, his face forcefully broke out in a smile. It is true! It is over. He can now finally relax his weeks long regime of disciplined focus.
I'd just like to say "Thank You" for covering the series. Due to the time difference I was unable to watch the games live (so your decision to not cover them live like you did in prior years didn't affect me) but still got to see the games with your always excellent commentary attached.
Great videos, great series. Love your work Jerry! I rarely comment but I'm always watching. Thank you for bringing out these videos so quickly. And no spoilers! Much appreciated 👍
One more point of interest. When you live by the sword, you will die by the sword. Ding Liren won the World Chess Championship in 2022 with the move Rg6 against Nepo who was playing for a draw. Ding played Rf2 playing for a draw.
@@sagov9 But it felt like he was playing for a draw the whole match. He was consistently going a pawn down just to get exchanges in and go into a draw-ish endgame.
Also: in 2023, the first decisive game was Nepo winning with black, and the last decisive game was Ding winning with black. In 2024: first decisive game is Ding winning with black, last decisive game is Gukesh winning with black
Thank you Jerry, loved your videos / brilliant insight of the World Championships, superb analysis throughout the games, the best by far. Well done Gukesh 🎉 and commerastions to Ding, you'll bounce back. (12/12/2024)
Thank you for your hard work covering this, I did not follow this other than from your coverage, so it was fresh and I was surprised by the end. Great Job.
I have always wanted to learn to play chess. I’m too old now. But I thoroughly enjoyed your step by step explanation. It was simplified enough for us to understand and engaging enough to keep us interested. Thank you
Thank you Jerry. Your detailed analysis of the World Chess Championship was outstanding. Ding must be disappointed with the blunder at the end. Congratulations Gukesh!
Jerry nailed it. With 12 minutes remaining after time extension, Ding took three minutes to play Bishop to A8, and I think that was the silent move that lost the game.
Thank you very much for the coverage Jerry. I would love to see the matches live but, living in Europe, being at work during most of the matches does not make it possible to watch it. Coming home and knowing your recap of the match was waiting for me has been someting I have looked forward to every day. Thank you!
This shows how great chess players can win wars of attrition. Just keep playing and pressing until the opponent cracks and then capitalize. I remember when Magnus beat Vishy in 2014 in a what the analyzers were calling a drawn game in a similar fashion. Actually that game was even longer.
Gukesh’s attacking chess was richly rewarded. Worth remembering that out of the millions of players, Ding was a world champion. Only 17 players can match that brilliant achievement.
Ding giving away the a pawn for nothing when there was no need to was when he lost the game. It indicates he was trying to get Gukesh into the mindset of agreeing to a draw. But he should have realised Gukesh would be at a disadvantage in the tie breaks so would fight for everything in classical. There were several very passive Ding-like moves earlier in the game, but this was the beginning of the end. The Bishop blunder was the end point.
Hey Jerry, You did a great job with the recaps, wonderful explanations and insights as ever. I really appreciate you finding a format that includes the time display, especially since it played a big role in this match. You also did a great job as always of not showing any bias, but regardless of who you were rooting for, I am sure that everyone, myself included, when watching the livestream and seeing Rf2 on board when we were all so sure it would go into tie breaks were so shook and in disbelief. I personally was devastated for ding. I wanted to ask you - how did seeing that move make you feel, at least initially? Did you celebrate Gukesh's victory, or were you more sad knowing that Ding threw it all away, or were you sad that we will not be seeing the players playing the next day?
Gukesh went in as the favorite, but Ding didn't go down easily. Both players performed really well. It was a very interesting match. Congratulations to Gukesh.
Another game covered so well. Thanks for making it very interesting and covering all the different lines. "There is no such thing as chance. For whichever way you choose, right or left, it must lead to an end and that end is our destiny." ---Master Po
This series, for as fun as it was, makes me heavily appreciate Magnus existing in the World Championship match. Too many blunders in this match, mainly by Ding. Ba8 is a horrible move, not because it loses on its own because it's not, but because WHY NOT Bc6?? So many blunders, so many uninspiring positions that had potential. Carlsen was a different beast, his games especially against Caruana felt special.
@@trevorrogers95 Of course. Even Gukesh deep down knows this. The thing is, it will be massive for the chess world if Magnus announces that he gets back into the competition pool and will go into candidates.
Oh that's a capture en passant. Immediately after a pawn has moved 2 quares on its first move, an adjacent enemy pawn can capture it "in passing", as if it had moved only 1 square. This capture is valid only in the very next move after a pawn moves 2 squares, and it can only be done by a pawn. Along with castling and promoting, it is another case of an exception in chess (i.e. kings only move 1 square except in castling, pieces don't transform into others except in promotion, pieces occupy the square of pieces they've captured except en passant).
Thank you! The level of analysis you give, and at the end your move-by-move explanation of Gukesh's ability to force victory, is very helpful. The study you give of alternate lines is, for my level, great. A hard-fought match. Gukesh earned the Championship, and should enjoy it - but I am sure he wishes it had not come from a single blunder. Grateful for your excellent presentation!
It's tactics along with game knowledge made gukesh winner he never came in to the brain game of liren never accepted easy draw. it made liren tired. He was mentally down in crucial moves he was not to champion level. I appreciate gukesh for the achievement
Just some suggestions: Kindly show in different colours, your analysis (it is very important), say graying out the chess board, so when you return to the actual game played, it is back to the initial colours. Also kindly insert text mentioning the move number and whose move it is. This will make it most enjoyable. Thanks anyway.
Absolute masterpiece. Game is explaining a big lesson that at the end only pawn helps ! Don't underestimate the power of the smallest aid available in the life ! Big big happiness is just to show off to others, the real one is within you, beside you. Admire it and win the game of life !!
I think Ding is an incredible player, definately worthy of being a champion but he was not suited for it. He seemed almost relieved during his press conference. His worst year in chess is the year he was titled champion. Congratz to Gukesh and I hope to see Ding return to his old form.
Jerry, man. I almost quit watching this vid at the end because it's obviously a draw. Crazy wild how Ding lost on position. Gukesh is the winner because Win-vs-Draw is always a solid bet! You taught me this by your blitz arenas. Always Always Play for The Win! E
Great job breaking all the games down Jerry! I watched them all. Congratulation Gukesh D! Both players very evenly matched. One blunder is all it took. Maybe a poor nights sleep or outside stress cost Ding the championship.
I watched this whole thing and the only game I enjoyed was game 12. Overall - this world championship was a chore to watch. No wonder Magnus got out when he did.
I was certain the way you that were analyzing this game it was going to be an easy draw and then BAM you hit us with that surprise. To be honest I am glad Gukesh won. I have nothing against Ding but I don't think he was strictly speaking a good World Champion and I did not like his overly passive approach to this match.
World Chess Championship 2024 (Ding Liren vs Gukesh D)
ruclips.net/p/PLQsLDm9Rq9bGj5EHpnnc4yN_dFHJ4Zn5X
The "Tale of the Tape" graph is missing at the end of the video.
@@johnanderson8548dead even the whole game until the blunder which is completely winning
Loosing move,big mistake-lost the game
Props to Gukesh. His fighting spirit won me over.
Ding seemed to always go for the draw.
10 years I've been watching, since the 2014 World Chess Championship. Many a meal have I spent with you, and to me you are an old friend. Your love for chess bleeds into your work, and you teach much more than just chess. Have a meal on me, here's to many more years.
Thank you for sharing part of your story with me. I appreciate the $20 Matthew. Super Thanks! ❤️
Love how Jerry is able to explain both the "big picture situation", eg: That "strategy should be to exchange one piece, but ideally not both, and then push the 1 pawn advantage", as well as the tactical considerations, like "Not move x, which would allow the opponent king to get opposition, but move y, which retains the opposition and outflanks the enemy king". The enjoyment of the game increases multi-fold when you can understand not only what is happening and why, but also WHY something is NOT happening. eg: "move x", which seems natural, is NOT a good idea, either because of tactical or strategic consideration. LOVE IT!
❤️
This is why this channel is my favorite one!
Nobody in the game does it better than Jerry!
Yes 100% agree, Jerry should have been published a book about chess
@umarhasan8580 he has published multiple. "How to reassess your chess" is a positional masterpiece buy it in paper if you only buy 1 chess book in your life, this is the one.
Thank you for posting this series Jerry.
Can we upvote a non spoiler comment like this one!
You alluded to it, I think part of the problem for Ding is it just felt he was trying to speed things along until tiebreaks and to me it felt as though he was frustrated that there was no easy way of forcing a draw.
Patience has been rewarded!
But the draw was arguably easy. It was a simple fortress. But he rushed it and lost.
He played not well today
This is a fitting end to what felt like Ding playing for draws the whole match and Gukesh playing for wins.
Ding was not playing for draws the whole match. It may look like that on the surface, but there were so many tricky ideas in the way he was playing. Gukesh was playing at an impressive level of accuracy.
watched it live and couldn't believe the ending. Congrats to Gukesh. I dont think Ding will ever get over this one.
Nepo did after Ding forced him to blunder in that world championship.
I thought for absolute certain it was a draw, right up until you pointed us to Ding’s subtle blunder. Good “poker face”, Jerry.
Sadly I couldn't avoid seeing titles on RUclips with spoilers myself
Gukesh being youngest champ ever AND being so humble while thanking his opponent and God after winning. Remarkable.
The only problem is that god doesn't exist 😞
@@AlintraxAika this is just unproven rumor
@@AlintraxAikaWe don't know anything for certain. Humility is a great trait to have.
Thank you for your great coverage Jerry! Still the best on RUclips for casual players trying to learn the game
Jerry you're the best
Thank you.
- Tom
I've been following Jerry since 2014. He's always been my resource for the best chess content on this platform. Once again, he has proved that with this world chess championship. Thank you, Jerry.
Jerry, you did a great job of not revealing what was coming up. Not easy. I was totally caught off guard when Ding blundered. Really good coverage of the match.
I find it quite poetic that Gukesh won in the end by pushing every game to its end and forcing his opponent to answer every question correctly. It is reminiscent of how Ding himself won against Nepo, refusing the draw and forcing Ian to defend accurately which in the end he failed to do.
Don’t upvote spoiler comments!
Love when i open a video and instantly see someone spoil the full thing 😂
@@buchnejf don't look at comments if you don't know the result lol
@@raymendez3403On mobile the comments appear as soon as u click on the video
@@raymendez3403on mobile the first comment is shown automatically before you even open comments
Gukesh after the Rf2 move very much looked as if in disbelief. Closed his eyes for a minute. And as he opened the eyes, his face forcefully broke out in a smile. It is true! It is over. He can now finally relax his weeks long regime of disciplined focus.
I'd just like to say "Thank You" for covering the series. Due to the time difference I was unable to watch the games live (so your decision to not cover them live like you did in prior years didn't affect me) but still got to see the games with your always excellent commentary attached.
👍😎
Thanks
I appreciate the ₹40 chesstime. Super Thanks! ❤️
Great videos, great series. Love your work Jerry! I rarely comment but I'm always watching. Thank you for bringing out these videos so quickly. And no spoilers! Much appreciated 👍
Thank you Slynk. 👍😎
One more point of interest. When you live by the sword, you will die by the sword. Ding Liren won the World Chess Championship in 2022 with the move Rg6 against Nepo who was playing for a draw. Ding played Rf2 playing for a draw.
Obviously Ding was playing for a draw when he played Rf2. In that position there is really nothing else to play for. But I understand what you mean.
@@sagov9 But it felt like he was playing for a draw the whole match. He was consistently going a pawn down just to get exchanges in and go into a draw-ish endgame.
@@ArcaneTricksterRS yes I agree
Also: in 2023, the first decisive game was Nepo winning with black, and the last decisive game was Ding winning with black.
In 2024: first decisive game is Ding winning with black, last decisive game is Gukesh winning with black
@ good point
Hugely missed your live commentary on the games this year Jerry, but super glad we still get the recaps. Thanks for your work, friend!
Thank you Jerry, loved your videos / brilliant insight of the World Championships, superb analysis throughout the games, the best by far.
Well done Gukesh 🎉 and commerastions to Ding, you'll bounce back.
(12/12/2024)
Thank you for your hard work covering this, I did not follow this other than from your coverage, so it was fresh and I was surprised by the end. Great Job.
👍
endgames can be so unforgiving
I have always wanted to learn to play chess. I’m too old now. But I thoroughly enjoyed your step by step explanation. It was simplified enough for us to understand and engaging enough to keep us interested. Thank you
👍 Never too old. 😎
“Playing for a draw with the white pieces is in some sense a crime against all of chess”
Best commentary/analysis this match. Thank you, Jerry!
Thank you Jerry. Your detailed analysis of the World Chess Championship was outstanding. Ding must be disappointed with the blunder at the end. Congratulations Gukesh!
Thank you for the compliment and for watching. 👍
@@ChessNetwork You're welcome, greetings from Australia.
Congratulations to Gukesh and India winning the world championship ❤❤❤
What an amazing ending! Thanks for analysing all the games Jerry!
Thanks Ryan. 👍
Jerry nailed it. With 12 minutes remaining after time extension, Ding took three minutes to play Bishop to A8, and I think that was the silent move that lost the game.
Thank you very much for the coverage Jerry. I would love to see the matches live but, living in Europe, being at work during most of the matches does not make it possible to watch it. Coming home and knowing your recap of the match was waiting for me has been someting I have looked forward to every day. Thank you!
Thans so much for covering all 14 games - very illuminating with your analysis.
👍
Thanks, Jerry, the best way to experience the games is right here.
This shows how great chess players can win wars of attrition. Just keep playing and pressing until the opponent cracks and then capitalize. I remember when Magnus beat Vishy in 2014 in a what the analyzers were calling a drawn game in a similar fashion. Actually that game was even longer.
Thanks for your work, Jerry 🖖
Gukesh’s attacking chess was richly rewarded. Worth remembering that out of the millions of players, Ding was a world champion. Only 17 players can match that brilliant achievement.
World champion in name only. Everyone knows who the King is.
@@threethrushesdemeaning others and insulting these humble and nice people is not good. It just reveals your own character. Reflect on your thinking
Thank you Jerry for your wonderful coverage, your vids are always a delight!
What a finish.
What a blunder!
@@FurkanKahraman.WC is high pressure match, sometimes blunders happen. Ding and Gukesh are top players and really nice people.
Thx Jerry 😊
Ding giving away the a pawn for nothing when there was no need to was when he lost the game. It indicates he was trying to get Gukesh into the mindset of agreeing to a draw. But he should have realised Gukesh would be at a disadvantage in the tie breaks so would fight for everything in classical. There were several very passive Ding-like moves earlier in the game, but this was the beginning of the end. The Bishop blunder was the end point.
Why would Gukesh be at a disadvantage in the faster tie-break games? He is the one who plays faster. Ding was consistently up against the clock.
@exposfan94movies true in classical. Apparently some are saying Ding is better at rapid and blitz though
@@John-p7i5ghe was the highest rated blitz player some time ago and the highest rated rapid player in 2023. Thats why
Hey Jerry, You did a great job with the recaps, wonderful explanations and insights as ever. I really appreciate you finding a format that includes the time display, especially since it played a big role in this match. You also did a great job as always of not showing any bias, but regardless of who you were rooting for, I am sure that everyone, myself included, when watching the livestream and seeing Rf2 on board when we were all so sure it would go into tie breaks were so shook and in disbelief. I personally was devastated for ding. I wanted to ask you - how did seeing that move make you feel, at least initially? Did you celebrate Gukesh's victory, or were you more sad knowing that Ding threw it all away, or were you sad that we will not be seeing the players playing the next day?
Thanks for your coverage Jerry. Sad way to go out for Ding. :(
Thanks!
I appreciate the $2. Super Thanks! ❤️
@@ChessNetwork You are very welcome. Keep up the good work.
Excellent coverage as always. Thank you Jerry!
Sad ending for Ding.
He never really tried to win. It was either forcing draws or capitalizing on blunders.
Fitting end.
Ding seemed relieved in the interviews after.
Gukesh went in as the favorite, but Ding didn't go down easily. Both players performed really well. It was a very interesting match.
Congratulations to Gukesh.
Great analysis!
Another game covered so well. Thanks for making it very interesting and covering all the different lines. "There is no such thing as chance. For whichever way you choose, right or left, it must lead to an end and that end is our destiny." ---Master Po
Great narration and explanations.
Thank you Charles.
Thank you Jerry for your effort. We really appreciate it 🙏
Good explanation, Thanks.
Thanks for coverage!
❤🇮🇳 🎉
Many thanks Jerry! My favorite youtube channel, and I don't even play chess. 😎
4:55
What if ... a6
Kicks white's knight from b5 and black can follow it up with Nd4?
What is white's plan in that variation?
This series, for as fun as it was, makes me heavily appreciate Magnus existing in the World Championship match. Too many blunders in this match, mainly by Ding. Ba8 is a horrible move, not because it loses on its own because it's not, but because WHY NOT Bc6?? So many blunders, so many uninspiring positions that had potential. Carlsen was a different beast, his games especially against Caruana felt special.
Carlsen is still the World Champ in my head. These other guys are good, but not as good as Magnus.
@@trevorrogers95 Of course. Even Gukesh deep down knows this. The thing is, it will be massive for the chess world if Magnus announces that he gets back into the competition pool and will go into candidates.
Please explain the move at 10:36
Oh that's a capture en passant. Immediately after a pawn has moved 2 quares on its first move, an adjacent enemy pawn can capture it "in passing", as if it had moved only 1 square. This capture is valid only in the very next move after a pawn moves 2 squares, and it can only be done by a pawn. Along with castling and promoting, it is another case of an exception in chess (i.e. kings only move 1 square except in castling, pieces don't transform into others except in promotion, pieces occupy the square of pieces they've captured except en passant).
Ding self pinned with rook to beat Ian, then blundered rook to be beaten by Gukesh
Man what a terrible slip up by Ding. At the worst possible moment too.
Thank you Jerry. Great coverage as always. Great job by you.
Thank you! The level of analysis you give, and at the end your move-by-move explanation of Gukesh's ability to force victory, is very helpful. The study you give of alternate lines is, for my level, great. A hard-fought match. Gukesh earned the Championship, and should enjoy it - but I am sure he wishes it had not come from a single blunder. Grateful for your excellent presentation!
is Rf2 a mistake /he has to move?
Let's go Guki🎉🎉🎉🎉❤
Nice job, Jerry, getting us through these games.
It's tactics along with game knowledge made gukesh winner he never came in to the brain game of liren never accepted easy draw. it made liren tired. He was mentally down in crucial moves he was not to champion level. I appreciate gukesh for the achievement
Well done Jerry...still the best WC coverage by far 😊
Unbelievable
Wacthing ChessNetwork since 2009 ❤️
Thanks Jerry, great stuff!
Congrats Gukesh, you fully deserve it.
Thank you Jerry as well, great commentary!
That was an unlucky mouse slip by Ding
Thank you jerry for covering another world chess championship for us.
Jerry, thanks for your coverage 🙏
Thanks for the terrific coverage! What an ending!
Bonjour Jerry. A sincere thank you for the coverage of 2024 WCC. Well done. Félicitations !
Thank you Jerry
Just some suggestions: Kindly show in different colours, your analysis (it is very important), say graying out the chess board, so when you return to the actual game played, it is back to the initial colours. Also kindly insert text mentioning the move number and whose move it is. This will make it most enjoyable. Thanks anyway.
🎉well presented game
Absolute masterpiece. Game is explaining a big lesson that at the end only pawn helps ! Don't underestimate the power of the smallest aid available in the life ! Big big happiness is just to show off to others, the real one is within you, beside you. Admire it and win the game of life !!
You are the best!
thank you Jerry for a nice video
I think Ding is an incredible player, definately worthy of being a champion but he was not suited for it. He seemed almost relieved during his press conference. His worst year in chess is the year he was titled champion. Congratz to Gukesh and I hope to see Ding return to his old form.
a fun wc to watch. congrats Gukesh! thank you for the great coverage jerry!
Thank you Jerry for these analyses!
Jerry❤
Jerry can you please add the "Tale of the Tape" at the end of this video?
Nope. Evenish throughout until blunder. Pic of Gukesh D a better ending to the match than a graph.
Jerry, man. I almost quit watching this vid at the end because it's obviously a draw. Crazy wild how Ding lost on position. Gukesh is the winner because Win-vs-Draw is always a solid bet! You taught me this by your blitz arenas. Always Always Play for The Win!
E
Great job breaking all the games down Jerry! I watched them all. Congratulation Gukesh D! Both players very evenly matched. One blunder is all it took. Maybe a poor nights sleep or outside stress cost Ding the championship.
Good job, many thanks. Congratulations Gukesh 🎉
For whom the Bell Dings 😂
Thanks last move u made it more clear.
Can anyone explain? Bishop B7 to
A8. May be the most fatal move which decided the match.
Brilliant: succinct and sympathetic.
I watched this whole thing and the only game I enjoyed was game 12. Overall - this world championship was a chore to watch. No wonder Magnus got out when he did.
Has anyone lost a World Champion title in the last game with a blunder like that? Brutal.
Once again, wonderful analysis, Jerry.
Thank you Jerry always aiming at excellence in your work. Wish you the best.
thanks Jerry!
I was certain the way you that were analyzing this game it was going to be an easy draw and then BAM you hit us with that surprise.
To be honest I am glad Gukesh won. I have nothing against Ding but I don't think he was strictly speaking a good World Champion and I did not like his overly passive approach to this match.
Congratulations!
Love you Jerry❤