Let's face it guys, This is the most psychologically healthy chess player on the planet today! Thank you Dr Can for finding all the top topics that us intermediates struggle with and addressing them. We all admire your work!
What can I say to such a humbling comment? I am very happy that you find the videos useful. I am really doing my best to increase the instructional value.
Homework : seems OK but prematurely cause the bishop and queen battery will cause trouble for white in a few moves later.. When I am attempting my pawn breaks I usually look for the bishop on that respected color and activity, I don't want to open any unwanted diagonals
Thank you. Once again you created an outstanding lesson. Homework. Yes play f4. You open the f4 and will be in great position attack the King side if he ever castles (he can't OOO). The only thing that I don't like is giving up a good Bishop for the Nh5. I would love to get the Nb3 to e2. Its only is to task is keep the Q and Nd7 from going Q side.
Thanks for the feedback! What are the cons of playing f4? Are we awakening any black pieces? Their minor pieces are terrible right now, would they feel better after f3-f4?
Is the 'homework' position pawn Carlsbad Structure, as may be found in King's Indian Defenense' middle game, et al? The usual way to play such pawn structure is to minority-attack on the Queen side, no? Puah the A file pawn and B file pawn.... Do not give Black what it wants with Pawn f3 to f4. 29:07
Wow, as 1100 I got almost every one wrong.. I don’t know that the why was all that clear on them. What’s the thought process to get to finding the correct one rather than justifying the magically correct answer.
i am new to chess and i’ve been stuck at 400-500 elo for so long. I’ve watched your videos for about 3 days and i have gained almost +300 rating points. Sitting around 700 now and climbing fast. No one taught me chess so learning these deeper concepts is extremely helpful. Gonna purchase one of your courses this weekend👍🏼
This is one of the most motivating and encouraging feedback I can ever receive as a chess teacher/author. I am extremely happy to have potentially contributed to your breakthrough. Please keep on giving me feedback on your future progress, after studying my courses ☺️
there are many great courses that can help beginners get up to 1200 fairly quickly (6-12 months) after some diligent practice, play, and 2-3 tournaments.
Another great video. For the homework position, this is a bad idea to play f4 for multiple reasons. Black will gain the e5 square and sit like a sumo wrestler on white by controlling the center. Further, it may result in white having to trade their dark bishop for the sidewall knight. No good. White would be left with an unhappy light bishop and a weak, backward and blockaded pawn on e4. A better plan is to use the open c file, which white can control.
Also, helps Black make an overwhelming blitzkrieg or pin and take our rook. 1. f4 exf4 2. Bxf4 Nxf4 3. Rxf4 Bg5! Pinning our rook to the Queen. Also: 1. f4 exf4 2. Bxf4 Nxf4 3. Rxf4 g5 4. Rf1 g6 And the lines are open for Black, the knight blocking the attack is gone and the pawns are at the doorstep. And more dark square weaknesses mean Black can exploit it with moves like Bg5. Also, the knight can join the attack with Ne5.
Re the f4 pawn break: White should look to play on the Q-side and defend on the K-side. Trading the dark-square Bishop for Knight doesn't look good. And it gives Black an outpost on e5, which the Knight can occupy immediately, defending f7. White gets pressure on the f-file, but I'm not sure that can be exploited fully.
I talk to my pieces,but they never talk back....Recommend a good book,Sam shanklands small steps to giant improvements,really good book and as a chessable as well.Also a physical book called Chess Structures a grandmasters guide by mauricio Flores Rios also as a chessable as well...Buy the book though,real books are better.
@@Dr.CansClinic lol oh if only they could! i have many many books the best you can buy really so to speak that are good....Silmans end game course book is a very good any level book,because it starts you off very simple and gets harder as you go aong so you can judge your playing strength wherre as you go in with divoretskys its a bit much to the novice...but,yeah loads of good books all on my desk that get used daily...silmans how to reaccess your chess is a bible! brilliant book,and the jacob Aagard series is a must have,loads of good books out there.Sam shanklands calculation book is very good as is GM micky adams how to think like a grand master...Anyway,back to writing my private chessable.And reading more books...
Thank you for another great video! Todays topic was much harder than usual. Looking at the homework position: I see that White has more space in the centre and more pieces on the queen side. Material is equal, but White has the bishop pair. Black's dark square complex is weak on the queen side and the c-file is open. This together with the fact that the pawn chain points towards the queen side for White, suggests that White should play on the queen side. Therefore, I think 1.f4 is not a good move on strategical grounds. After 1..exf4 2.Bxf4 Nxf4 3.Qxf4 Bg5, Black has total control over the dark squares on the king side and the black knight on d7 has awaken with the prospect of a beautiful outpost on e5. Here, I think, Black is much better and maybe already winning. In the starting position, I prefer 1.Qc3 with the idéas of 2.Na5 and 3.Rc1. The white knight has a nice potential outpost square on c6 and a white rook on c7 will be devastating after a queen trade.
This aligns well with my offensive thoughts. Possibly this will serve to be powerful and timely enough to blunt counterplay. That said l, what thoughts did you mull over with respect to the h pawn attacking our pawn chain...and any potential initiative that might afford black?
@@jaybingham3711 I didn't think much of it. Black cant open any lines. For instance, if 1.Qc3 h3 2.g3 and the pawn on h3 blocks the rook. Sacrificing the knight on g3 isn't a thing because Black doesn't have any follow up. The play on the kingside will resemble the play in the Mar de Plata variation of the king's indian and there the Black's light squared bishop is crucial for succes. That the bishop is on e7 instead of g7 isn't relevant in my opinion. By the way, I think Dr.Cahn's suggestion 1.Rf2 is more precise than my 1.Qc3 because for once the black bishop is denied the square g5, and also that 2.Rc2 with the threat of 3.Rc8 forces Black to castle and black's counter play loses some of its force. Finally, the move 3..Bg5 which I ended the variation starting with 1.f4 is a losing blunder. 4.Qxf7 is mate. Black should of course play 3..Ne5 instead
@@Dr.CansClinic Thanks alot for replying but not sure I followed. So, here is the scenario as shown at timeline @26:04 on the board: Black pawns are on b6 and d6. The white bishop is on a4 and the white rook is 'already' on a3. White to break the pawn chain with the c5 push in the hopes that black pawn on b6 or d6 takes back. This is where I am asking what if the b6 black pawn declines taking and instead pushes his pawn to b5? The white bishop has to retreat but doesnt have enough space anymore. Looking like a bad white bishop now 🤔
@@tivmego He did answer at 28:45. This was my exact question I was going to ask as well. It seems like every pawn break you have to ask what if they take and what if they push.
My thoughts: Black has a kingside majority, we have a broken queenside majority and open g file. Black can play b4 or a5 right now so I think a5 is my first move to slow that down. White’s bishop on f5 is blocking our pawn majority and our light squared B is blocked and bad so Bc8 to possibly exchange but at least to mobilize our f pawns. Then move rooks to the g file then advance the f pawn. After all that I’m wondering if c6 is just simpler and better.
I really like these videos. Sometimes though I think there would be merit in also looking at the next best or other move most likely to have been considered, e.g. at 10:42 black is looking to advance the g-pawn, so why is there no comment on the efficacy (or not) of playing h3? I also like the use of rarely-used terms. Not heard "isolani" before.
Thank you! My chessable courses contain plenty of alternatives and explanations - as there are usually multiple approaches to such quiet positions. I am doing my best to show key alternatives on YT too.
@18:23, in my world of minority attacking chances, after a3 Black would play ...b5. When I learned of the Minority Attack, every time I recognized it and had a chance to play it, the opponent easily shut me down.
Thanks for the feedback - indeed ...b5 is a standard response, but it usually hinges on whether Black can quickly establish a knight on c4 with ...Nb6-c4.
Thank you Dr. Can for another great video! Re: Homework, what I see: I think it's a bad pawn-break because after all the trades on f4 with the white rook left standing on f4 and white's dark-squared bishop traded off, black moves Ne5 gaining central control of beautiful outpost square and blockading e4 pawn, and furthermore white's remaining light-squared bishop becomes "bad bishop" and can never hit this knight...
f4 seems like a poor break to me. if Black takes the pawn, then Bf4, Nf4, Rf4, black has eliminated white's good bishop for his misplaced N. More importantly, now e5 is a great square for his Knight and Black's dark bishop will find wonderful play on the dark squares starting from f6.
Hello Dr., I enjoy all of your videos and they help me tremendously. Do you have/could you make a course on developing your bishops and knights and what squares are best in what positions? For example, there are many openings where Nd7 and Ne7 or Nbd2, etc. Some positions where Na6 is best. Some caro positions where the bishops go on d6, etc. This is something I struggle with in some openings. Not just because of where the pieces go, but why- the plans that follow and why if you don’t make these subtle development moves, you can be in trouble. A specific opening that has confused me is the Karpov variation in the caro kann. It is a very weird structure. There are a million ideas and positions to simply develop your major pieces! Thank you again.
Thank you so much for your kind comment! That is a very interesting question indeed, but I don't know of a course that covers that topic. It is structure specific as well. Generally, we do not want to block our c-pawns with early knight moves with Nc3 or Nc6. I am planning to make a course on feeling for the pieces, and in that one I will talk about such ideas of knowing on which square your pieces would feel happier ☺️
Que bueno! Muy excellente! 1. 28:45 That's all we ask for...the ability to suss out a c pawn push in such a position so as to enjoy a zugswang a half dozen moves later. Would be great if we could get this totally buttoned up and locked down by say...middle of next week. Por favor. 😊 2. Position 3: Previously we chatted about a comment I had made about space and that so often I find it to be remarkably 'overrated'...for the lack of a better, more precise word. This is a quintessential example. I get that in general having more space is better than being cramped...for obvious reasons. I guess from my sub expert level experience it might not be surprising it often doesn't translate...whether as a material benefit or a hindrance. Sometimes, yes. No doubt. But most of the time, it's nothing to get overly excited about... whether wielding it or coveting it. Maybe that's a topic worth considering doing a video on. No doubt there are some things I have yet to fully appreciate/understand on the matter. Keep up the great work. 👍
Thank you so much for your extremely kind comment! I think it is a good idea to make a video on space advantage and its relevance in casual player games. Pros and cons as you have mentioned.
I am still not very good. So can anyone help me with my answer??: For the homework, I don't think F4 is a good move, because after pawn takes, bishop takes, knight takes, queen takes, black can activate their other knight on E5. White now has the open file with their queen and rook and attacks F7, but the knight is defending F7, and black can put their rook on F8 and there is no threat. I think black is happier in this position.
It is a great pawn break because is suffocated and by opening up the f file gives attacking oppertunities though it does give black some threats white can activate both the queen and the f rook which are suffocating in this position!
So far I'm up to puzzle 6 and I had the right idea each time around... I knew there was going to be a backwards pawn but I didn't know it was going to be on the C file ... I thought it was still going to be on the B file ... nevertheless I was 80% right
I think it is a bad pawn break because it will lead to the loss of the good bishop the black bishop. Better would be organising an attack on the queen side by repositionning the knight.
I believe the f4 break is bad because the trades on f4 will cost white its best bishop while giving the e5 square to the nd7. Yes the black king has yet to castle but the bd3 and nb3 can't join an attack. Not sure however what a good plan for white could be, i would like to put a piece on b6 and control c7. It will be slow.
Thank you for this feedback. Now I am going to add "chess" in my channel's name, and I hope it helps! Please do not hesitate sharing the channel with your chess friends, so we can reach more people :)
Another great video, you really are helping my game and understanding, I don't always get everything correct but I'm seeing so much more now, thank you, looking forward to the next episode 👍👍👍
Thank you so much for your kind feedback. It would not be good for learning if you always got them right ☺️ Please check out my courses for more exercises!
That is so amazing to hear, thank you so much for studying my courses! ☺️🙏 Please ask me anything along the way! I am very responsive on Chessable too.
homework spoiler - no engine At first glance, white is fully developed and black's king is in the center ready to castle. If white attacks before black can castle, it may prove decisive. f4 Nxf4 Bxf4 exf4 Qxf4 Qb6+ Kh1 Ne5 Be2 This line allows black to improve it's two knights and does not punish black for delaying castling. It's not even clear black needs to castle. Black's e5 knight controls the center of the board and can't be dislodged easily. It also leaves white with both a weak bishop and knight. Qc3 0-0 Na5 b6 Nc6 Qe8 Rc1 is a better line for white as it gains control of the c-file and allows for play on the queen side. Qc3 0-0 Na5 Qb8 Qb4 is also quite solid. I am not sure Qc3 is the strongest improvement to white's position, but it seems to avoid black's refutation of f4, which is questionable.
Thank you! f4? is a poor move, mostly because it awakens several black pieces and exchanges off a good bishop for a terrible knight. The f-file and the d4-square do not compensate for those. The best plan is probably Rf2-c2, taking over the only open file and invading the 7th rank later.
In position number 6 (carlsbad structure pawn), after white pawn break b4-b5, I think best black respon is Bc8-d7 so that if white capture black pawn on c6, black can re-capture with his bishop. Is this right (Bd7 is stronger resistent for black) ?
Good pawn break. White's queen side play is defended by black Queen, but Black's king side is only defended by those two middle pawns. If black takes the breaking pawn, bishop takes pawn, maybe Knight takes bishop, then castle takes night and is well positioned in the centre on that king side of black, with Black's queen stuck defending the opposite side. Middle is dominated by white. Castle defends the outside pawn also. Good place to build more attacks on the king side.
Thank you! There are definitely those positive aspects to that pawn break, but there are also plenty bad ones: we are trading off our good bishop for the bad knight and creating the juicy e5-outpost for the black knight. From there, they will also guard f7. There is also ...Bf6 ideas now for Black...
@@Dr.CansClinic that makes sense. The knight was on the rim, so not that powerful, whereas the bishop (along with the other bishop) was on an open rank doing a good job of controlling the central and strategic a7-g1 diagonal. And just having the rook left there with little else supporting probably isn't enough to create an advantage (they still have bishop and rook kingside). Thanks - these questions (and the feedback you gave) are very good for unravelling the 'knot' of tactical play.
Looking at this game, it doesn't look like either black or white has an obvious attack route. Maybe a battery on the c file with queen and rook, with the knight positioned where it is could lead to something.
VERY good and VERY informative video. Just followed you at chessable. I honestly feel you just made my game better in about 11 minutes. I am, of course, aware of pawn breaks but I rarely really look at them this clinically and rationally. I will from now on.
That is so motivating to hear, thank you so much! ☺️ That is my main mission as a teacher, and such feedback is very valuable. Please check out my courses to consolidate these lessons :)
This lesson feeds right into my weakness. Thanks. Pawn breaks is a good device to approach the subject of middle game planning. I'll be checking you channels for more.
@@Dr.CansClinic It's also your approach, turning the board around, etc. I am even considering your chessables. It will take a while for me to prioritize these protocols.
Great video 👏💯 gives clarity of purpose of pawn breaks👍 sometimes pawn breaks come about as a move of desperation, without having meaningful purpose, just something ppl do when they run out of ideas🎉
I think it's bad because we'd be willingly giving up our healthy pawn chain and trading off our great centralized bishop for a poor knight on the edge of the board. Also the pawn on e4 becomes vulnerable without the d or f pawn supporting it. Contrary to many examples in the video where a pawn break was necessary, white here has no space isusses that require such a pawn break for more activity right now Edit: wrong notation
"e5 takes f4" - but black doesn't have to take right? I don't see why it's good if black ignores our pawn (if white later takes on e5, then black takes back with the d pawn to again get pawn on e5)
That was a bad knight on h5 indeed... How about Black's other bad pieces, like their dark squared bishop and the d7-knight? Do they like seeing the f4 break?
you have the best chess lessons on RUclips...very clear and well explained. hands down!!!
That is so amazing to hear, thank you so much 🙏
Let's face it guys,
This is the most psychologically healthy chess player on the planet today! Thank you Dr Can for finding all the top topics that us intermediates struggle with and addressing them. We all admire your work!
What can I say to such a humbling comment? I am very happy that you find the videos useful. I am really doing my best to increase the instructional value.
I like this channel because it makes me feel like "a great chess player!"
I'm craving your (new) videos!
So motivating, thank you! Will keep them coming!
Homework : seems OK but prematurely cause the bishop and queen battery will cause trouble for white in a few moves later..
When I am attempting my pawn breaks I usually look for the bishop on that respected color and activity, I don't want to open any unwanted diagonals
Thanks for the answer! f4 is wrong indeed, as it also gives the poor d7-knight a juicy home on e5...
Thank you. Once again you created an outstanding lesson. Homework. Yes play f4. You open the f4 and will be in great position attack the King side if he ever castles (he can't OOO). The only thing that I don't like is giving up a good Bishop for the Nh5. I would love to get the Nb3 to e2. Its only is to task is keep the Q and Nd7 from going Q side.
Thanks for the feedback! What are the cons of playing f4? Are we awakening any black pieces? Their minor pieces are terrible right now, would they feel better after f3-f4?
Very useful.. thank u very much..
So nice of you, thanks!
Excellent!
Many thanks!
Home work ,
1.f4 ,exf4
2.Bxf4,Nxf4
3.Qxf4 ,0-0
I Think f4 is good for white in this position
Thank you! But how about Black's minor pieces awakening after f4?
Is the 'homework' position pawn Carlsbad Structure, as may be found in King's Indian Defenense' middle game, et al? The usual way to play such pawn structure is to minority-attack on the Queen side, no?
Puah the A file pawn and B file pawn.... Do not give Black what it wants with Pawn f3 to f4. 29:07
Wow, as 1100 I got almost every one wrong.. I don’t know that the why was all that clear on them. What’s the thought process to get to finding the correct one rather than justifying the magically correct answer.
I thought I clarified the thought process behind the right moves...
I am new to chess terminology. What is meant by PAWN BREAK?
It is when as a result of a pawn move, two enemy pawns 'contact' each other.
haha I got to stop blitzing moves out so fast I saw c3 as the break in position 3.. I have ACTUAL brain rot or something XD
.
That happens :) Thanks for your feedback.
Great video, your position examples are among the most instructive on RUclips.
So motivating to hear, thank you so much! My mission is to help you improve the game, and those examples were picked after several years of coaching.
i am new to chess and i’ve been stuck at 400-500 elo for so long. I’ve watched your videos for about 3 days and i have gained almost +300 rating points. Sitting around 700 now and climbing fast. No one taught me chess so learning these deeper concepts is extremely helpful. Gonna purchase one of your courses this weekend👍🏼
This is one of the most motivating and encouraging feedback I can ever receive as a chess teacher/author. I am extremely happy to have potentially contributed to your breakthrough. Please keep on giving me feedback on your future progress, after studying my courses ☺️
there are many great courses that can help beginners get up to 1200 fairly quickly (6-12 months) after some diligent practice, play, and 2-3 tournaments.
@@nomoreblitzfor free?
Another great video. For the homework position, this is a bad idea to play f4 for multiple reasons. Black will gain the e5 square and sit like a sumo wrestler on white by controlling the center. Further, it may result in white having to trade their dark bishop for the sidewall knight. No good. White would be left with an unhappy light bishop and a weak, backward and blockaded pawn on e4. A better plan is to use the open c file, which white can control.
Excellent, with great analogies to sumo wrestling! 😅
Have you read the book, "Pawn Power?"
@@chessassassin2813 no. Is it awesome?
Also, helps Black make an overwhelming blitzkrieg or pin and take our rook.
1. f4 exf4
2. Bxf4 Nxf4
3. Rxf4 Bg5!
Pinning our rook to the Queen.
Also:
1. f4 exf4
2. Bxf4 Nxf4
3. Rxf4 g5
4. Rf1 g6
And the lines are open for Black, the knight blocking the attack is gone and the pawns are at the doorstep. And more dark square weaknesses mean Black can exploit it with moves like Bg5. Also, the knight can join the attack with Ne5.
What is the correct move
Thank you for such phenomenal content. I look forward to each one because it is the perfect length for me to watch on my lunch break.
So motivating, thank you 🙏☺️
Love your training videos. I have now identified some key weaknesses in my games. Excellent! 😊
Thank you soo much! That is the function of this training: to get to know ourselves better and with growth mindset, we will fix them.
Great Video
Thank you! ☺️
Re the f4 pawn break: White should look to play on the Q-side and defend on the K-side. Trading the dark-square Bishop for Knight doesn't look good. And it gives Black an outpost on e5, which the Knight can occupy immediately, defending f7. White gets pressure on the f-file, but I'm not sure that can be exploited fully.
Such excellent answer, thank you!
Hell nah dont push f4, stack on the c file
Nice one! Rc2-f2!
I talk to my pieces,but they never talk back....Recommend a good book,Sam shanklands small steps to giant improvements,really good book and as a chessable as well.Also a physical book called Chess Structures a grandmasters guide by mauricio Flores Rios also as a chessable as well...Buy the book though,real books are better.
Those are good books! I am considering to make a course where you learn to speak to your pieces and hear back from them!
@@Dr.CansClinic lol oh if only they could! i have many many books the best you can buy really so to speak that are good....Silmans end game course book is a very good any level book,because it starts you off very simple and gets harder as you go aong so you can judge your playing strength wherre as you go in with divoretskys its a bit much to the novice...but,yeah loads of good books all on my desk that get used daily...silmans how to reaccess your chess is a bible! brilliant book,and the jacob Aagard series is a must have,loads of good books out there.Sam shanklands calculation book is very good as is GM micky adams how to think like a grand master...Anyway,back to writing my private chessable.And reading more books...
How can you be contacted for private lessons, please?
Thank you for your interest! You can contact me on cankabadayi85@gmail.com
Thank you for another great video! Todays topic was much harder than usual. Looking at the homework position: I see that White has more space in the centre and more pieces on the queen side. Material is equal, but White has the bishop pair. Black's dark square complex is weak on the queen side and the c-file is open. This together with the fact that the pawn chain points towards the queen side for White, suggests that White should play on the queen side. Therefore, I think 1.f4 is not a good move on strategical grounds. After 1..exf4 2.Bxf4 Nxf4 3.Qxf4 Bg5, Black has total control over the dark squares on the king side and the black knight on d7 has awaken with the prospect of a beautiful outpost on e5. Here, I think, Black is much better and maybe already winning. In the starting position, I prefer 1.Qc3 with the idéas of 2.Na5 and 3.Rc1. The white knight has a nice potential outpost square on c6 and a white rook on c7 will be devastating after a queen trade.
Excellent thought process and answer! Thank you so much! Rf2-c2 is also a great positional move, playing on the queenside.
This aligns well with my offensive thoughts. Possibly this will serve to be powerful and timely enough to blunt counterplay. That said l, what thoughts did you mull over with respect to the h pawn attacking our pawn chain...and any potential initiative that might afford black?
@@jaybingham3711 I didn't think much of it. Black cant open any lines. For instance, if 1.Qc3 h3 2.g3 and the pawn on h3 blocks the rook. Sacrificing the knight on g3 isn't a thing because Black doesn't have any follow up. The play on the kingside will resemble the play in the Mar de Plata variation of the king's indian and there the Black's light squared bishop is crucial for succes. That the bishop is on e7 instead of g7 isn't relevant in my opinion. By the way, I think Dr.Cahn's suggestion 1.Rf2 is more precise than my 1.Qc3 because for once the black bishop is denied the square g5, and also that 2.Rc2 with the threat of 3.Rc8 forces Black to castle and black's counter play loses some of its force. Finally, the move 3..Bg5 which I ended the variation starting with 1.f4 is a losing blunder. 4.Qxf7 is mate. Black should of course play 3..Ne5 instead
whites king is on a safe color because black has a dark bishop and the pawn on g7 blocks the g file pretty hard so whites king is totally safe.
@26:06 what if black goes ..b5? The white bishop on a4 gets crammed?
I believe I showed that line in the video. Ra5 followed by a4 gives White a winning edge.
@@Dr.CansClinic
Thanks alot for replying but not sure I followed.
So, here is the scenario as shown at timeline @26:04 on the board:
Black pawns are on b6 and d6. The white bishop is on a4 and the white rook is 'already' on a3. White to break the pawn chain with the c5 push in the hopes that black pawn on b6 or d6 takes back. This is where I am asking what if the b6 black pawn declines taking and instead pushes his pawn to b5?
The white bishop has to retreat but doesnt have enough space anymore.
Looking like a bad white bishop now 🤔
@@tivmego He did answer at 28:45. This was my exact question I was going to ask as well. It seems like every pawn break you have to ask what if they take and what if they push.
Pawn breaks, nice!
Thanks! ☺️
I think the pawn break in the homework is bad because exf4 Bxf4 Nxf4 Rxf4 Bg5 winning the exchange
It is a bad pawn break indeed! Activates the black pieces. Rf2-c2 is the correct plan.
My thoughts:
Black has a kingside majority, we have a broken queenside majority and open g file. Black can play b4 or a5 right now so I think a5 is my first move to slow that down.
White’s bishop on f5 is blocking our pawn majority and our light squared B is blocked and bad so Bc8 to possibly exchange but at least to mobilize our f pawns. Then move rooks to the g file then advance the f pawn.
After all that I’m wondering if c6 is just simpler and better.
...c6! is the best as it awakens two black pieces!
Bad idea: bishops have plenty of range on the queenside. f4 activates the stranded black knight, AND rook. Very bad ju-ju!
Excellent!
"You need to talk to your pieces" What a beautiful chess principle!
I love that one too!
HalleluYAH! Thank you so much for an excellent lesson. Love the horse but not when used against me haha...
❤️
I really like these videos. Sometimes though I think there would be merit in also looking at the next best or other move most likely to have been considered, e.g. at 10:42 black is looking to advance the g-pawn, so why is there no comment on the efficacy (or not) of playing h3?
I also like the use of rarely-used terms. Not heard "isolani" before.
Thank you! My chessable courses contain plenty of alternatives and explanations - as there are usually multiple approaches to such quiet positions. I am doing my best to show key alternatives on YT too.
I subbed as you clearly explain the why's and the why not's.
That is so motivating to hear. That is the main ethos of this channel. A warm welcome!
@18:23, in my world of minority attacking chances, after a3 Black would play ...b5. When I learned of the Minority Attack, every time I recognized it and had a chance to play it, the opponent easily shut me down.
Thanks for the feedback - indeed ...b5 is a standard response, but it usually hinges on whether Black can quickly establish a knight on c4 with ...Nb6-c4.
Thank you Dr. Can for another great video!
Re: Homework, what I see: I think it's a bad pawn-break because after all the trades on f4 with the white rook left standing on f4 and white's dark-squared bishop traded off, black moves Ne5 gaining central control of beautiful outpost square and blockading e4 pawn, and furthermore white's remaining light-squared bishop becomes "bad bishop" and can never hit this knight...
Thank you! Excellent judgement again!
f4 seems like a poor break to me. if Black takes the pawn, then Bf4, Nf4, Rf4, black has eliminated white's good bishop for his misplaced N. More importantly, now e5 is a great square for his Knight and Black's dark bishop will find wonderful play on the dark squares starting from f6.
Absolutely. Thanks for the answer.
Hello Dr., I enjoy all of your videos and they help me tremendously. Do you have/could you make a course on developing your bishops and knights and what squares are best in what positions? For example, there are many openings where Nd7 and Ne7 or Nbd2, etc. Some positions where Na6 is best. Some caro positions where the bishops go on d6, etc. This is something I struggle with in some openings. Not just because of where the pieces go, but why- the plans that follow and why if you don’t make these subtle development moves, you can be in trouble. A specific opening that has confused me is the Karpov variation in the caro kann. It is a very weird structure. There are a million ideas and positions to simply develop your major pieces! Thank you again.
Thank you so much for your kind comment! That is a very interesting question indeed, but I don't know of a course that covers that topic. It is structure specific as well. Generally, we do not want to block our c-pawns with early knight moves with Nc3 or Nc6. I am planning to make a course on feeling for the pieces, and in that one I will talk about such ideas of knowing on which square your pieces would feel happier ☺️
Que bueno! Muy excellente!
1. 28:45 That's all we ask for...the ability to suss out a c pawn push in such a position so as to enjoy a zugswang a half dozen moves later. Would be great if we could get this totally buttoned up and locked down by say...middle of next week. Por favor. 😊
2. Position 3: Previously we chatted about a comment I had made about space and that so often I find it to be remarkably 'overrated'...for the lack of a better, more precise word. This is a quintessential example. I get that in general having more space is better than being cramped...for obvious reasons. I guess from my sub expert level experience it might not be surprising it often doesn't translate...whether as a material benefit or a hindrance. Sometimes, yes. No doubt. But most of the time, it's nothing to get overly excited about... whether wielding it or coveting it. Maybe that's a topic worth considering doing a video on. No doubt there are some things I have yet to fully appreciate/understand on the matter.
Keep up the great work. 👍
Thank you so much for your extremely kind comment! I think it is a good idea to make a video on space advantage and its relevance in casual player games. Pros and cons as you have mentioned.
I am still not very good. So can anyone help me with my answer??:
For the homework, I don't think F4 is a good move, because after pawn takes, bishop takes, knight takes, queen takes, black can activate their other knight on E5. White now has the open file with their queen and rook and attacks F7, but the knight is defending F7, and black can put their rook on F8 and there is no threat. I think black is happier in this position.
Excellent answer and approach!
It is a great pawn break because is suffocated and by opening up the f file gives attacking oppertunities though it does give black some threats white can activate both the queen and the f rook which are suffocating in this position!
---Ne5 will stop the threat of f7 and ...Bf6 or g5 will activate the bishop too.
So far I'm up to puzzle 6 and I had the right idea each time around... I knew there was going to be a backwards pawn but I didn't know it was going to be on the C file ... I thought it was still going to be on the B file ... nevertheless I was 80% right
Thank you, well done!
I think it is a bad pawn break because it will lead to the loss of the good bishop the black bishop. Better would be organising an attack on the queen side by repositionning the knight.
Thank you!
I believe the f4 break is bad because the trades on f4 will cost white its best bishop while giving the e5 square to the nd7. Yes the black king has yet to castle but the bd3 and nb3 can't join an attack. Not sure however what a good plan for white could be, i would like to put a piece on b6 and control c7. It will be slow.
Excellent answer, thanks! Rf2! Rc2 is a very strong plan for White.
On RUclips I searched chess but your channel was not in results. RUclips algorithm sucks, stock should go down.
Thank you for this feedback. Now I am going to add "chess" in my channel's name, and I hope it helps! Please do not hesitate sharing the channel with your chess friends, so we can reach more people :)
Another great video, you really are helping my game and understanding, I don't always get everything correct but I'm seeing so much more now, thank you, looking forward to the next episode 👍👍👍
Thank you so much for your kind feedback. It would not be good for learning if you always got them right ☺️ Please check out my courses for more exercises!
Reminds me of the book entitled, 'PAWN POWER.'
Absolutely!
Pawn breaks are so over looked. Thank you for all this great info! :)
You are so welcome!
Great Video as always. Meanwhile I own almost all of your Chessable courses. Great work!
That is so amazing to hear, thank you so much for studying my courses! ☺️🙏 Please ask me anything along the way! I am very responsive on Chessable too.
How.can I access your chessable courses? You are a great coach indeed. Thank you for these great videos
Thank you so much for your motivating comment ☺ Here is my Chessable author profile with all courses: www.chessable.com/author/Can_Kabadayi/
Excellent lesson. Subscribed.
Excellent news! A very warm welcome! 🙏
Another great lesson. Thank you.
My pleasure! Thank you.
In position 5 minute 12.48 if white
1. Re1 ,e5
2.dxe5,Nd7
3.Bf4,Bxc5
4.Qc2,h6
How about that line Master ,white have outpost in d6
Thanks! After Re1, Black should not play ...e5 I think. But ...e5 was not a dangerous break for us, as shown in the video :)
Ok master thanks@@Dr.CansClinic
I got puzzle 8 wrong... I thought it was A3 then b4..
Thanks for the feedback. Did you understand why ...e5 was better and multi-purpose?
Pawn f4 is the right move. It opens up the f file and also helps Nc3 a good square in the centre.
But how about the black pieces? Did they like seeing the f4 break?
f4 is a Bad Pawn Break. Just making e5 a good Outpost for d7 Knight. Thank You for the Great Lesson.
Thank you so much, excellent!
Very inspiring thank you
You are so welcome!
Excellent video again, Dr. Can 😊
It is a pleasure to hear this from you, Maurits! 😊
homework spoiler - no engine
At first glance, white is fully developed and black's king is in the center ready to castle. If white attacks before black can castle, it may prove decisive.
f4 Nxf4 Bxf4 exf4 Qxf4 Qb6+ Kh1 Ne5 Be2
This line allows black to improve it's two knights and does not punish black for delaying castling. It's not even clear black needs to castle. Black's e5 knight controls the center of the board and can't be dislodged easily. It also leaves white with both a weak bishop and knight.
Qc3 0-0 Na5 b6 Nc6 Qe8 Rc1 is a better line for white as it gains control of the c-file and allows for play on the queen side.
Qc3 0-0 Na5 Qb8 Qb4 is also quite solid.
I am not sure Qc3 is the strongest improvement to white's position, but it seems to avoid black's refutation of f4, which is questionable.
Thank you! f4? is a poor move, mostly because it awakens several black pieces and exchanges off a good bishop for a terrible knight. The f-file and the d4-square do not compensate for those. The best plan is probably Rf2-c2, taking over the only open file and invading the 7th rank later.
@@Dr.CansClinic Rf2 is a very interesting move for sure.
Bishop b3 is insane
Fischer game?
In position number 6 (carlsbad structure pawn), after white pawn break b4-b5, I think best black respon is Bc8-d7 so that if white capture black pawn on c6, black can re-capture with his bishop.
Is this right (Bd7 is stronger resistent for black) ?
Thanks for the input. But even in that case, the b7 and d5 pawns would be weak, and the bishop would be tied down in guarding those weak pawns...
@@Dr.CansClinicthanks for respon my comment 👍
@@mohammadnaufal1027 My pleasure, please keep on asking!
These hidden concepts are what keeps me around 1000. Now I'm on my way to to climb up on the rating ladder. Thank you!
So happy to hear it! Be sure to check out the Chess Elevator on Chessable 🙏
Good pawn break. White's queen side play is defended by black Queen, but Black's king side is only defended by those two middle pawns. If black takes the breaking pawn, bishop takes pawn, maybe Knight takes bishop, then castle takes night and is well positioned in the centre on that king side of black, with Black's queen stuck defending the opposite side. Middle is dominated by white. Castle defends the outside pawn also. Good place to build more attacks on the king side.
Thank you! There are definitely those positive aspects to that pawn break, but there are also plenty bad ones: we are trading off our good bishop for the bad knight and creating the juicy e5-outpost for the black knight. From there, they will also guard f7. There is also ...Bf6 ideas now for Black...
@@Dr.CansClinic that makes sense. The knight was on the rim, so not that powerful, whereas the bishop (along with the other bishop) was on an open rank doing a good job of controlling the central and strategic a7-g1 diagonal. And just having the rook left there with little else supporting probably isn't enough to create an advantage (they still have bishop and rook kingside).
Thanks - these questions (and the feedback you gave) are very good for unravelling the 'knot' of tactical play.
Looking at this game, it doesn't look like either black or white has an obvious attack route. Maybe a battery on the c file with queen and rook, with the knight positioned where it is could lead to something.
@@512Squared Excellent! Rf2-c2 is the plan!
white has to push that f3 pawn!
Thanks for the answer. But it leads to the good bishop being traded off for the bad knight, and the black knight gaining the juicy e5-square.
The course on this is named?
The Art of Awakening Pieces
Got puzzle 9 right
Nice!
Great vd ❤️❤️
Thank you ❤️
thank you sir
My pleasure! 🙏
F5😮
At which moment? :)
11:29 losses rook to Bh6
No, there is ...Ng7 there.
Thx, I blundered @@Dr.CansClinic
This was very needed.
Thank you so much!
VERY good and VERY informative video. Just followed you at chessable. I honestly feel you just made my game better in about 11 minutes. I am, of course, aware of pawn breaks but I rarely really look at them this clinically and rationally. I will from now on.
That is so motivating to hear, thank you so much! ☺️ That is my main mission as a teacher, and such feedback is very valuable. Please check out my courses to consolidate these lessons :)
This lesson feeds right into my weakness. Thanks. Pawn breaks is a good device to approach the subject of middle game planning. I'll be checking you channels for more.
Great to hear that, thanks! The channel contains several similar lessons.
@@Dr.CansClinic It's also your approach, turning the board around, etc. I am even considering your chessables. It will take a while for me to prioritize these protocols.
@@Malcolm.YThat would make me really happy 😊
I think you're one of the best! If not THE BEST RUclipsrs!!! 🎉
Tak so mycket 😊 🙏, grazie, ty!!!
What can I say to such an amazing comment? Tack så mycket, grazie!! ☺️❤️
Great video 👏💯 gives clarity of purpose of pawn breaks👍 sometimes pawn breaks come about as a move of desperation, without having meaningful purpose, just something ppl do when they run out of ideas🎉
Thank you so much ☺️ Yes, we should avoid blindly engaging in pawn breaks, and I hope this video will be useful for that!
Great lesson. I have put one of your courses on my Chessable wishlist!
Thank you so much!!
Of course one of the best chess lesson which I've seen on Utube and anywhere so far..Thx..
I am very humbled to hear your kind feedback, thank you so much!
Excellent, insightful lesson.
Glad you enjoyed it! Thanks!
Very nice. thank you very much.
So nice of you, thanks.
Great video!!
Thank you so much ☺️
f4 , e5 takes f4 , bishop takes f4. Knight takes bishop , queen takes bishop , looks like a good pawn break
But i think his bad knight gets traded for a good bishop , but our knight can jump to d4
I think it's bad because we'd be willingly giving up our healthy pawn chain and trading off our great centralized bishop for a poor knight on the edge of the board. Also the pawn on e4 becomes vulnerable without the d or f pawn supporting it. Contrary to many examples in the video where a pawn break was necessary, white here has no space isusses that require such a pawn break for more activity right now
Edit: wrong notation
"e5 takes f4" - but black doesn't have to take right? I don't see why it's good if black ignores our pawn (if white later takes on e5, then black takes back with the d pawn to again get pawn on e5)
Thank you, excellent!
That was a bad knight on h5 indeed... How about Black's other bad pieces, like their dark squared bishop and the d7-knight? Do they like seeing the f4 break?