1 Key Rule to Prevent 50% of Your Chess Mistakes

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  • Опубликовано: 3 фев 2025

Комментарии • 720

  • @GMIgorSmirnov
    @GMIgorSmirnov  9 месяцев назад +46

    💡Get The Crystal-Clear Guide To Reach 2000+ ELO Rating Faster
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    • @richardzaborsky1439
      @richardzaborsky1439 9 месяцев назад +2

      Why are u so fking smart you predict my every move

    • @farouqbaiti4315
      @farouqbaiti4315 9 месяцев назад

      😎😏😉

    • @connorskudlarek8598
      @connorskudlarek8598 9 месяцев назад

      At 6:12 asking about our moves.
      For white, I originally thought pawn to g4 looked good. Blocks the queen's attack, and opens white queen to protect pawn on h3. If knight takes, pawn takes back. If queen takes, knight g1 to protect h3 check. Then play chess from there. If knight doesn't take, it's
      For black's move in the puzzle, I think the best move is knight h2 check. Opens queen to come down into the position, and knight f3 also looks unpleasant for white.

    • @KazufumiHodunan
      @KazufumiHodunan Месяц назад

      2 question , do you have any idea why ı play bad against bad player and good against good players also how can ı fix the problem and play good at both.

  • @josephsalmonte4995
    @josephsalmonte4995 9 месяцев назад +1484

    My biggest problem is the instant move. I start slow & methodical, get into a winning position, then Insta-move & lose on the spot 😭

    • @saadshah4799
      @saadshah4799 9 месяцев назад +40

      sammmmmmmmmme

    • @stevelenores5637
      @stevelenores5637 9 месяцев назад +29

      Try taking up something more your speed like "Chutes and Ladders".

    • @MADDOXXXbr
      @MADDOXXXbr 9 месяцев назад +3

      history of my life

    • @BrokenTiki
      @BrokenTiki 9 месяцев назад +66

      Im this in reverse. I play instant, too fast , blunder and then start to focus. Then im playing from a defensive/losing position for the rest of the game

    • @danielcortez2499
      @danielcortez2499 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@stevelenores5637says the d-bag with probably a 600 ELO. STFU 🤣

  • @TheSuperhoden
    @TheSuperhoden 9 месяцев назад +372

    Your first 1 minute 50 sums up my whole chess career

    • @charlesh6096
      @charlesh6096 9 месяцев назад +5

      I swear

    • @natalie9185
      @natalie9185 8 месяцев назад +24

      Me too. From “you hope that the knight will just go away” to “you pray your opponent will not notice this move*

  • @psyched1639
    @psyched1639 21 день назад +12

    This reminds me of some parenting advice: If you lose sight of your child, you don't start by looking in the places they're likely to be; you look in the places they shouldn't be. If they're in their room, great. If they're climbing the stove, you'll want to have checked there quickly. So calculate the dangerous moves before you look into the ones that seem likely.

  • @Maurya-ml3jl
    @Maurya-ml3jl 9 месяцев назад +361

    Answer to last question:
    Ne3 ,
    if bxe3, Kh1
    1) if e2xf1 and promote to queen with check , then white Qxf1
    2) Calculate for other lines.

    • @LarryLikesChess
      @LarryLikesChess 9 месяцев назад +4

      What about Qxe3?

    • @LawsonBrown-kr6vv
      @LawsonBrown-kr6vv 9 месяцев назад +27

      @@LarryLikesChess where

    • @JeffMoche
      @JeffMoche 9 месяцев назад +4

      I saw this too.

    • @MattrickBT
      @MattrickBT 9 месяцев назад +31

      You you sac the knight to open up the line for the queen to nullify the promotion threat.

    • @rwefree9469
      @rwefree9469 9 месяцев назад +14

      It would be helpful if you put the time on your reply if there are multiple questions asked. I was at this point 5:59 and your answer made no sense.

  • @stevenwheeler4198
    @stevenwheeler4198 9 месяцев назад +160

    I made a different blunder on the first question that may be instructive to others. I saw that the knight was threatening the pawn on h3 and immediately decided on Ng1 to "protect" it. It was only after I started the video again and Igor pointed out that the Queen was also attacking h3 that I realised my mistake. I think the lesson I should learn from this is that when I see one threat I shouldn't react until I've finished the process of scanning the board for other threats.

    • @bryanshawcpasc
      @bryanshawcpasc 9 месяцев назад +2

      Is Ng1 a blunder? It stops the Knight and the Queen is she sails in?! I thought it was the proper solution.

    • @pauventuraalsina5566
      @pauventuraalsina5566 9 месяцев назад +3

      @@bryanshawcpasc it's not extremely bad, but you blunder the pawn. Ng1 Nxh3 and if Nxh3 Qxh3+ , so you have to move the Knight from g1

    • @stevenwheeler4198
      @stevenwheeler4198 9 месяцев назад +4

      @@bryanshawcpasc Yes, i think so, because they will take with the knight anyway and when you recapture with your knight they take it with the Queen leaving you a pawn down and in check.

    • @AaqibIbnAatif
      @AaqibIbnAatif 5 месяцев назад

      Yeah, but you can't play anything else other than Ng1. I think my move [Kg2] was a more accurate way of illustrating your point, because it is an actual blunder.
      To back this up, Stockfish suggests Ng1 and says that the position is equal after that.

    • @PaddyMacDaddy101
      @PaddyMacDaddy101 5 месяцев назад +1

      lol...I used the king on G2 to prevent same

  • @FredPlanatia
    @FredPlanatia 9 месяцев назад +94

    summary: evaluate forward-moving moves. that is those moves which move into the opponents half of the board (both your own, and those of your opponent). Usually these are the one's you need to worry about.
    This fits in with a main theme in Igor's lessons which is: the best moves are forward-moving, attacking moves. These moves challenge your opponent and further your plans.

    • @jama211
      @jama211 Месяц назад

      Thank you

  • @carlhopkinson
    @carlhopkinson 2 месяца назад +7

    You have the BEST instructional chess channel on RUclips. You teach the mental ALGORITHMS that apply to any positions and also teach economy of calculation....which nobody else does that I know of. 5 Stars !!!!!!!!!

  • @GMIgorSmirnov
    @GMIgorSmirnov  8 месяцев назад +4

    ▶ GM Smirnov is on Instagram! Follow now for engaging, bite-sized chess content - instagram.com/gm.igorsmirnov/

  • @GMIgorSmirnov
    @GMIgorSmirnov  9 месяцев назад +2

    📲 Follow RCA on TikTok for short and engaging chess content (tips, traps, and more) - www.tiktok.com/@gmigorsmirnov

  • @zaxapitsa
    @zaxapitsa Месяц назад +2

    this is the best chess advice I've heard so far. totally changed my game from extremely poor to just very poor. thanks.

  • @PrakharRSingh
    @PrakharRSingh 9 месяцев назад +22

    Block check with Knight.
    Bishop takes, Check - Kh1
    Can't take Rook and promote since Queen snipes it from a6.
    Can't promote to queen on e1 because of the Rook. And now, the Rook is under attack as well.

    • @neomeo1045
      @neomeo1045 8 месяцев назад +1

      Yep same thing. And not only do you save yourself but you are in a fairly good position :D

  • @p.jeffreyungar4908
    @p.jeffreyungar4908 9 месяцев назад +30

    These short videos are very helpful! You really do provide ways to think that can be applied without major mysteries.

  • @ReflectionOcean
    @ReflectionOcean 9 месяцев назад +11

    By YouSum Live
    00:02:20 Blunders are common, especially below 1600 rating.
    00:04:57 Focus on opponent's forward moves to prevent blunders.
    00:08:22 Enhance positional understanding to reduce blunders significantly.
    00:10:52 Avoid tunnel vision by considering the entire board.
    00:12:36 Playing on after blunders can lead to opponent mistakes.
    00:12:50 Remember Guk's advice: "Nothing to lose, something to gain."
    00:13:59 Stay resilient and capitalize on opponent errors post-blunder.
    By YouSum Live

  • @imaaron93
    @imaaron93 9 месяцев назад +8

    This is one of your best videos. Love the honesty.

    • @cikonianiggra1415
      @cikonianiggra1415 9 месяцев назад

      I think it is very good video - my ELO 1600. Maybe for somebody having bigger ELO than me it is not good video, I can admit.

  • @vagabundo8450
    @vagabundo8450 9 месяцев назад +14

    Trying to solve the daily puzzle @5:59
    First I opted for the move Qa7 to put pressure on f2 with the threat of mate: 1. ... Qa7 2. Nd4 exd4 3. Bd1 Nxe4 4. Bxg4 d3, but 5. Qf4!
    Now I've realized that I didn't calculate the line after 1. ... Nh2+ when I saw that the king could get out of check. But it's mate in 3: 2. Kg1 Nhf3 (Ke1 Ngf3#) 3. Kg2 Qh3#

  • @robmo6505
    @robmo6505 9 месяцев назад +27

    These lessons are great. Informative yet straight to the point without waffling on. 👍👍👍

  • @JCC05
    @JCC05 9 месяцев назад +9

    Got this notification at the end of watching a video or yours on positional chess. Love the videos keep it up!

  • @eschiedler
    @eschiedler 9 месяцев назад +32

    The 2nd puzzle is Ne3 clearing path for queen to defend Bxe3+ Kh1 exf1=Q+ Qxf1

    • @andrewcrane5105
      @andrewcrane5105 9 месяцев назад +5

      Well done you open my eyes to a new world 🥹

    • @reicoree
      @reicoree 9 месяцев назад

      right! i also found that move

    • @andrewcrane5105
      @andrewcrane5105 9 месяцев назад

      @reicoree wow good for you! What a good, good boy you are 😁

    • @alphadoughnut2651
      @alphadoughnut2651 9 месяцев назад

      @@reicoreenice. I only solved it because I remember it from one of Ben finegolds lectures.

    • @BobChicken40
      @BobChicken40 7 месяцев назад +1

      I am new at this game. How the white bishop capture e3 if it is as black spot

  • @Sangejzer
    @Sangejzer 9 месяцев назад +2

    When you present me with a position or a puzzle I know it is somehow significant and that makes it way easier for me to properly evaluate the situation. My problem is recognizing on which positions I should think a bit longer in the first place.

  • @trombonemunroe
    @trombonemunroe 9 месяцев назад +3

    The move I picked at 0:29 after careful consideration was g4 to doubly protect h3, since I saw it was being attacked twice, once by Ng5, and once by Qd7. I haven't finished watching the video yet, but the move seems sound from what I can see. I'm thinking Ng1 as a follow-up move since my primary concern right now is king safety.

  • @hordechess7629
    @hordechess7629 9 месяцев назад +2

    Great video! One observation I have from watching Magnus Carlsen banter blitz videos is he spends quite some time on positions where there are so many obvious moves. In those positions I would have spent like 2 seconds deciding if I did not watch how Carlsen decides moves

  • @IdleGamer-zf9pi
    @IdleGamer-zf9pi 4 месяца назад +1

    14:22 Ke3 , Be2+ Check
    Rf2 , e1 promotes to queen
    Qf1 which then leads u to a promoted Pawn which turn
    into a queen and then itsjust winning for white
    It took me like 10-15 seconds to realise theres not a forced mate if theres Ke3 which stops check

  • @mishabs
    @mishabs 9 месяцев назад +70

    Alright ill just watch this video twice

    • @Chill_Gates
      @Chill_Gates 8 месяцев назад +6

      Underrated comment😊

    • @aryansingh7270
      @aryansingh7270 8 месяцев назад +1

      🙀 blud thinks he him

    • @Vader4499
      @Vader4499 4 месяца назад +3

      That would still only be 75% even if it worked

  • @amusik7
    @amusik7 Месяц назад

    Amazing video! For the final puzzle I was thinking you can defend with the knight to e3 - and then if the bishop takes the knight you can move the king out of the way into the corner. And at that point you can prevent the pawn from promoting with either the rook or the queen - most likely with the queen. And you should still have good chances because you have a pawn about to promote and you will have a queen against a rook and a bishop.

  • @mariogilligan841
    @mariogilligan841 2 месяца назад

    Another interesting video. In the first puzzle, I didn’t see the Queen on d7… talk about tunnel vision… this is the struggle in my game right now to avoid this tunnel vision. Learning chess seems to me to be like peeling an onion. There is no point in going very deep into my knowledge of chess. Play games, look for the most recurring mistake; the first peel; look for how to correct it best, play games, when it is relatively corrected, look for the new skin and apply the same principles. This allowed me to go from 900 to 1500 in rapid games in the last 2 years. Of course, it also takes many hours of studying theory and principles to get there. Igor has been the one who has helped me the most in my learning. I don’t know how far I will go with my 62 years old, but I will continue to play this game until the day, perhaps, when I realize that I can’t go any further. Reaching 1800 in rapid games would be a very good achievement for me. Thank you Mr. Igor!

  • @Lmb10021
    @Lmb10021 9 месяцев назад +42

    We want a rating climb... Appreciate the content 👏

    • @mrnelgin
      @mrnelgin 9 месяцев назад +3

      I don't think Igor has anything to prove by doing a ratings climb. You're not going to learn much from a GM beating a

    • @Lmb10021
      @Lmb10021 9 месяцев назад +8

      @@mrnelgin its not about him proving anything we want to learn from him how to approach games in different situations 🙂

    • @kshitiz6376
      @kshitiz6376 9 месяцев назад +2

      Agreed, hope he does it.

  • @DanielJohns-jd6kq
    @DanielJohns-jd6kq 9 месяцев назад

    The last question and its answer remind me of an Evans Gambit game I saw recently. A game began 1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bc4 Bc5 4.b4 Bxb4 5.c3 Ba5 6.d4 d6 7.dxe5 Nxe5? 8. Nxe5 dxe5 9.Bxf7+ Ke7 10.Ba3+. Presumably the player who resigned when checked from d4 would also resign here - but by interposing with "discovered defense" Black can leave White with only a modest advantage.

  • @MarceloAGonzalezEstrada
    @MarceloAGonzalezEstrada 2 месяца назад +1

    Thanks for sharing your experience and knowledge.

  • @KapKaz
    @KapKaz 8 месяцев назад

    My issue is losing morale after making mistakes, I definitely play more carefree after. Thanks for the motivation.

  • @sprEEEzy
    @sprEEEzy 9 месяцев назад +2

    Great example themes and games!

  • @dalejirschele1299
    @dalejirschele1299 5 месяцев назад

    I'm not a strong player but I did find g4 right off in the first example. Looking at this as you explain and I am relaxed I see things easily. It is when I am playing in a game I have this anxiety level that I believe aids in my blunder making. Instead of resigning white should move Ne3 on the last puzzle, cool video lesson, thanks.

  • @lemordancel4891
    @lemordancel4891 2 месяца назад +1

    best move for black might be Kh2+ if the king moves on g1 then kf3+ king moves on g1 or f1 would lead to check mate with Qh3+, if the king moves on E1 after Kh2+ then kf3 is check mate using the other knight, correct me if I'm wrong

  • @janjaapvanstrik5119
    @janjaapvanstrik5119 9 месяцев назад

    Korchnoi was such a great character. I once saw him in a running competition (before the matches in the Interpolis chess tournement). And when most of the (younger) contestants (all chess players) finished before him, Korchnoi just would run another lap, and then claim his victory.

  • @drschwandi3687
    @drschwandi3687 9 месяцев назад +2

    If true this will improve my blunders from 8 to 4 per game. Huge!

  • @JackMan17
    @JackMan17 9 месяцев назад

    6:05 1st puzzle Nh2+ then king comes to (g1) or (g2) coz if it goes to (e1) then its a blunder then after Kg2 black (Qh3) white (Kh1) and then black (nf3) mate

  • @JkJaks
    @JkJaks 8 месяцев назад

    6:03 Nh2+
    If Kg1, Nhf3+ Kf1/Kh1 leads to Qh3#
    If Ke1, Ngf3#
    If Kg2, Qh3+, Kg1/Kh1 leads to Nhf3#

  • @FredRosenfeld
    @FredRosenfeld 2 дня назад

    In the last example, Ne3, Bxe3, Ka1 then if Black does Pxf1, then Qxf1 or if Black does Pe1, then Rxe1 or if Black does Re1, then Qxe2 winning for White

  • @hiddenmist3147
    @hiddenmist3147 2 месяца назад +1

    1:34 ah it hurts the memories they won't stop haunting me

  • @sporegazm
    @sporegazm 9 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you. I am trying desperately to make this kind of thinking habit. As an adult improver, i have developed many bad habits. You have mentioned this concept many times about always thinking about moving into opponents half of the board...and conversely, thinking about your opponent moving into your half. I have the underlying ability to play good chess...i have drawn titled players and have even had major winning positions...and i have beat a decent number of 2000+ players. But thats when im not hanging blatant pieces. I just lost to a 1100 in a casual game by hanging a blatant mate in 1. It makes me sooooo angry at myself. And its the sole reason im stuck below 2000

  • @anthonylesar7337
    @anthonylesar7337 9 месяцев назад

    You keep surprising me with your thinking processes and steps etc. but I keep just playing my same old crappy style. One day I hope to break 1500 by actually following by your methods meticulously. Keep it up.

  • @matteoborsa4912
    @matteoborsa4912 5 месяцев назад +1

    Great advice, i am now a grandmaster, thanks to this short tutorial

  • @kevinbecker4507
    @kevinbecker4507 Месяц назад

    My 3 Moves i think about: 1.Pawn from h2-h3, 2. Queen from e3-c5, and last Move after a lot of thinking, and remember Nimzowitsch Zugzwang Position: 3. King from f1-g2 (to defend the Pawn on h2, without the risk to destroy my whole defense)

  • @nilakshtayade9234
    @nilakshtayade9234 9 месяцев назад +2

    Awesome Video!! This dropped right when I needed it.

  • @allenmoody7527
    @allenmoody7527 2 месяца назад

    For the last puzzle, white is +4 in material after blocking the check with the knight and taking the promoted pawn with queen.

  • @BIDYAKUMARI-xt7by
    @BIDYAKUMARI-xt7by 3 месяца назад

    After h3 and Ng4, white can play Qb6, and whatever Balck plays , white can sac his knight and push his e4 pawn so that it opens bishop diagonals. Then whatever Balck plays we can play Qb8 and queen blocks check and then after white will kill queen and ####mate. Bishop and queen mate. Brilliant knight sac!!

  • @sammcclure6413
    @sammcclure6413 Месяц назад

    6:09 puzzle of day knight h2, king g1, knight f3 OR knight h2, king e1, knight f3

  • @mycommentpwnz
    @mycommentpwnz 6 месяцев назад

    One thing that helped me a TON is investigating/analyzing my opponents knights moves MUCH more closely than other pieces. If an opponent moves a knight on my side of the board, or near my pieces, I immediately search for forks, and other potential dangerous situations.
    The human brain (at least mine) recognizes straight lines very easily. And, diagonals are easy too, unless they are like the ENTIRE LENGTH of the board. Then, you can BLUNDER to queens/bishops because of "out of sight, out of mind."

    • @GMIgorSmirnov
      @GMIgorSmirnov  6 месяцев назад +1

      Appreciate you for being here💛

  • @TactfulWaggle
    @TactfulWaggle 8 месяцев назад +1

    It took me like 40 seconds to find the defence for that last puzzle, you block with the knight, freeing the queen's diagonal, then if bishop checks, you move the king back to h2, if pawn takes rook, you take with the queen, if the pawn promotes, you take with the rook and win since the bishop is attacked and black rook is also attacked at the same time

  • @gregoryfray4366
    @gregoryfray4366 9 месяцев назад

    6:06 Knih2+, if kg2 then Qh3 mate in 2, if ke1 then Knif3 mate, If kg1 then black play Knih2 to Knif3+ mate in 2 with queen

  • @KermitNZ
    @KermitNZ 9 месяцев назад

    Puzzle one best move is ..Nh2+. Black cannot move 2. Ke1 otherwise Ngf3#. 2. Kg1 Nhf3+ 3. Kf1 / Kg2 / Kh1, Qh3# else 2. Kg2 Qh3+ 3. Kg1 / Kh1, Nf3# cornered!

  • @HelloWorld-up4of
    @HelloWorld-up4of 9 месяцев назад

    I had a game with a brilliant move, also a mate in 3, didn't see it, blundered it, lost the game. Thank you for this video.

  • @sirrola1974
    @sirrola1974 8 месяцев назад

    One thing I learned from our unfortunately deceased coach is to play with minimal risk preventing most threats and easily winning / drawing the endgame even against higher rated players. Or with others words from my former teammate: "You have to solve the problems before they arise!" So dont leave your chess pieces uncovered or exposed to threats. If you can't calculate the outcome of a move just play a good safe move. Good moves are only good moves if they are part your plan. You should always have a plan and your game should have a clear red thread. A bad plan is better than no plan. Your pieces must all work together.
    Even if you blunder a piece / pawn, often it means the opponent has to make several moves to get there. So sometimes you get compensation and the initiative.
    I am 43 year old and playing chess since i was 6. In my youth i had especially endgame training and a bit of middle game training. 2010 i had reached almost 1900 rating. Than in 2015 my rating dropped to 1750. Now I am at 1933 and getting every year better even without training, just by playing and winning slowly. It's so satisfying, if you blunder a pawn in the beginning and win after 6 1/2 hours, crushing your opponent piece by piece psychologically.

  • @EmilEngholmSrensen
    @EmilEngholmSrensen 4 дня назад

    Since i started to look at my opponents pices before i make a move, i improved my elo a lot.

  • @cscoetzee
    @cscoetzee 9 месяцев назад

    Just want to add: At 11:45, more reasons players could feel compelled to take with the queen, is because they believe they should not double their pawns, and because they want to castle kingside behind an unbroken pawn structure.

  • @Nightly_Night
    @Nightly_Night 9 месяцев назад

    For the final puzzle: Ne3 to open up the queen's vision to the e2 pawn. Bishop takes knight check,Kh1, exf1=Q+, Qxf1 and now its bishop and rook vs queen so maybe a victory

  • @andrewlewis4863
    @andrewlewis4863 8 месяцев назад

    1. Ne3 Bxe3+ 2. Kh1!
    Black must capture the rook on f1 which is now covered by the queen in order to maintain initiative and avoid White's promotion, which thwarts Black's attack and ends the exchange with white still up his queen with a brutal e7 pawn. It looks like it leads to promotion for white in all lines that aren't rook sacrifices because if we go Qf6, the kingside diagonal is directly covered by the queen and the queenside diagonal is indirectly covered by 4. ...Bc5 5. Qg5+! Kf8 6. Qxc5.
    Since both diagonals are covered black just becomes a sitting duck here. They could instead try to counterplay by inviting the pawn to promote and trying to threaten back rank but then white plays h3 there's nothing left and the pawn is still on e7.

  • @JaswanthDaniel
    @JaswanthDaniel 4 месяца назад

    Last Puzzle: Ne3, Bxe3+, Kh1, exf1=Q, Qxf1. There's a pawn ready to be promoted, its bishop and rook against queen endgame..

  • @-AxisA-
    @-AxisA- 9 месяцев назад

    6:46 Unless there's alot of open lines from opponent's side to your side and their pieces can hit your pieces from their side.

  • @Guu_ho
    @Guu_ho 8 месяцев назад +2

    The best move for black in first puzzle is Kh2
    And white does any move it's forced checkmate

  • @ronaldc8634
    @ronaldc8634 4 месяца назад

    Puzzle at 6:03:
    NH2
    1. if KE1: NG5 to NF3 is mate
    2. if KG2: QH3 check and the king has to go either G1 or H1, where both NH2 to NF3 is mate
    3. if KG1: QH3 check (protected by the knight on g5). king must move g1 or h1.
    3A. if KG1: check with NH5 to NF3, king is forced to move to h1, move the knight on H2 and win with a discovered check
    3B. if KH1: NH2 to NF3 wins with discovered check

  • @pokethebear
    @pokethebear 8 месяцев назад

    In the final scenario, I'd move Ne3. Bc you've got to get the Knight out of the way of your Queen if you have any hope of thwarting the attack. Then after BxN+, Kh1. White can rebuff any attack and is poised to promote a pawn and take material advantage.

  • @Onlyone421
    @Onlyone421 9 месяцев назад

    Last puzzle answers Ne3 , bxe3, re2, pawn prmotion check to the king Qf1

    • @Gmrashed3
      @Gmrashed3 9 месяцев назад +1

      After bxe3 You can go to h1 if he take your rook you take his queen with yours

  • @Onlyone421
    @Onlyone421 5 месяцев назад

    Puzzle 1 ans- Nh2 check K f1, Ng3#mate

  • @rgw8872
    @rgw8872 4 месяца назад

    Thank you Igor for your great instructive chess videos. You quickly became my favorite chess youtuber!

  • @wontpower
    @wontpower 2 месяца назад

    Final puzzle: Ne3 Bxe3+, Rf2 e1=Q+, Qf1 Bxf2+, Kh1 Qxf1#

  • @faisalortell74
    @faisalortell74 7 месяцев назад

    there are three key aspects to consider: where the attacks are happening, where pieces are idling, and the reserves. First, identify the attack. Then, check if any idling pieces can contribute to the attack. These are typically pieces that have moved from their original starting squares but appears as if they are not contributing to the attack. Finally, consider the reserves, which are pieces that have not moved at all. Determine if these reserve pieces can support the attack within one move or so. By doing this you'll be aware of what is happening around the board instead of focusing on where the opponent is attacking, you can effectively improve your rating from 1300 to 1900 in 3 to 10-minute games. I'm a 1500 player but I can reach 1900 if I do it this ways, but I enjoy trap positions and they work well around the 1500 rating range 😅😅

  • @sumsumwong498
    @sumsumwong498 9 месяцев назад +1

    6:05 I think it is Nh2+, if Ke1 then Ngf3#, if Kg2, there is Qh3 followed by Nhf3#, and is Kg1 there is Nf3+ and Qh3# no matter what white plays here. However, please correct me if I am wrong.

    • @JuliusNkabirwa
      @JuliusNkabirwa 9 месяцев назад +1

      The king can run to h1

    • @sumsumwong498
      @sumsumwong498 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@JuliusNkabirwa Nhf3# then

    • @sumsumwong498
      @sumsumwong498 6 месяцев назад +1

      @@JuliusNkabirwa oh you mean after Kg1?

    • @sumsumwong498
      @sumsumwong498 6 месяцев назад +1

      if after Kg1 then Nhf3+ and Qh3# no matter what

  • @RobinHood70
    @RobinHood70 8 месяцев назад

    6:03 Correct me if I'm wrong, but I'm seeing Nh2+ as mate in 2 (although I'll be the first to admit I saw it wrong in my head and only once I set it up and started making the moves did I see my mistake). A couple of others have mentioned this, but didn't go through all the possibilities, so:
    If Ke1, Ngf3#.
    If Kg1, Nhf3+; (any), Qh3#.
    If Kg2, Qh3+; (any), Nhf3#.

    • @eliska64477
      @eliska64477 8 месяцев назад

      What if after Kg1, Nf3 King goes to g2 there will be no Qh3#

    • @RobinHood70
      @RobinHood70 8 месяцев назад +1

      @@eliska64477 Did you move the wrong knight? After Kg1, Nhf3+, Kg2, the knight at g5 is protecting both f3 and h3, so Qh3 is mate - the king is threatened, neither the knight nor the queen can be taken, and the king has no safe space to move to.

    • @eliska64477
      @eliska64477 8 месяцев назад

      @@RobinHood70 yeah i moved the wrong knight now I see it. Thank you 🫶

  • @EnglishNuggetoff
    @EnglishNuggetoff Месяц назад +1

    5:42 at first i considered h4 but when you said that there was the queen h3 check i changed my mind and said Knight g1

  • @onlinewealthwiz
    @onlinewealthwiz 8 месяцев назад

    Answer to the last question
    Ne3, Bishop takes knight, Rf2, if Bishop takes rook, king takes bishop and promotes next no matter what, if Pawn promotes to a queen, Qf1 and its kind of an equal position

  • @jryer1
    @jryer1 8 месяцев назад

    5:56 - for the puzzle; I see black to move Qa7 (threatening mate) Qe1,Nh3 seems like lots of trouble for white? If white goes Nd4 then exd and this game starts to fall apart for white.

  • @DougalCharteris
    @DougalCharteris 7 месяцев назад

    Kight on C4 to B3 blocking check and opening A6 F1 diagonal for Queen protection of F1 rook . Bishop takes Knight , King to H1and white will win with extra material.

  • @sourasishdutta4126
    @sourasishdutta4126 2 месяца назад

    6:04 I think it is ng4 to h2 then if king moves up to g1 queen gives a check from h3 then I guess it's a checkmate after ng5 to f3 ? Please tell me if I am wrong
    2. If king moves to g1 or e1 after nh2 check then youplay nf3 and it's a checkmate after that if he was on e1 or if he was on g1 you have to play qh3 before making that move so that king can't escape

  • @kimbirch1202
    @kimbirch1202 9 месяцев назад +1

    ALWAYS , ALWAYS scan the whole board before making a move.
    Always counter threats with bigger threats if possible.
    Make your pieces work together.

  • @cm-a-jivheshchoudhari9418
    @cm-a-jivheshchoudhari9418 8 месяцев назад +3

    Answer to 6:06
    Knight to h2 check, Any way king moves from here is checkmate:
    if Ke1 -> Nf3
    if Kg1 -> Knight at h2 to h3, After this no matter the move bring Qh3
    if Kg2 -> Reverse of above, First Qh3, then for any move king makes Knight at h2 to h3

    • @Captain_MelonLord
      @Captain_MelonLord 8 месяцев назад +1

      Nice. I was trying to see if anyone else got it

    • @MaltaCros
      @MaltaCros 5 месяцев назад

      I'm sure you mean: if Kg1 -> Knight at h2 to F3, After this no matter the move bring Qh3

    • @Hendur
      @Hendur Месяц назад

      What about kf3, restricting the kings moves and threating checkmate with kh2# or Qh3#

    • @Hendur
      @Hendur Месяц назад

      Ok nvm I just saw that the king can escape to g2

  • @ramanathanchidambaram9967
    @ramanathanchidambaram9967 9 месяцев назад

    1.Ne3-Be3+.2.Kh1.e×f1+.3.Q×f1

  • @Aniconra
    @Aniconra 2 месяца назад

    For the final question:
    You end up with your Queen versus their bishop on the right line:
    1) Ne3 Bxe3
    2) e2xf1=Q Qxf1
    3) If Re8 to block promotion and threaten pawn then Qd3 attacking bishop and threatening check/retake rook if rook takes pawn
    3) if Rook leaves the rank it is on, then simply promote pawn, so it is forced to keep rook on that rank. So is rook moves anywhere on that rank, then simply Qd3 anyways. Always attack that bishop and take that open file for check. SO either way here you'll probably be taking that bishop back because if bishop moves, now you can slide up to d7 with your Queen, which will threaten to simply capture the rook if it doesn't move. If the rook is on a different file on the same rank and the bishop did not move to protect d8, simply push queen up to check on d8, and force rook to take, then promote that pawn back to queen.
    I think white ends up better here no matter what, but I'm probably missing something

  • @DaniilDorofeev-b5s
    @DaniilDorofeev-b5s 4 месяца назад

    This is just the best strategy ever. Thank you for helping us to join you on a master level :)

  • @Simon0
    @Simon0 10 дней назад

    This is a great video for me a bit of beginner! Great!

  • @JoshuaChukwurah
    @JoshuaChukwurah 5 месяцев назад

    Your tips have really helped me to become better at the game of chess

  • @develop3628
    @develop3628 4 месяца назад

    Puzzle: Knight h2 check there is 2 lines:
    First line : king g2- Queen h3 check - king g1- knight H f3 check mate
    second line: king g1 - knight H f3- Queen h3 check mate

  • @sesh7357
    @sesh7357 8 месяцев назад +1

    love the way you explain. Thank you

  • @garyfragiorgi5870
    @garyfragiorgi5870 8 месяцев назад

    I appreciate you and your channel. Many grandmasters don't explain things in such detail.

  • @grooveseeker6269
    @grooveseeker6269 7 месяцев назад

    For the black pieces puzzle, I think Night h2+ gives you check mate in 2 or three moved

  • @valkopuhelin2581
    @valkopuhelin2581 Месяц назад +1

    How should I balance time management in blitz games vs avoiding blunders?

  • @stevo-dx5rr
    @stevo-dx5rr 6 месяцев назад

    Example 4 is a trap because Qxf3 seems to have a lot going for it such as (1) the queen looks well placed on the f3 diagonal, (2) Qxf3 seems to develop a piece, and (3) Qxf3 prepares a queen-side castle. You might also consider and reject gxf3 because you were told not to double pawns.

  • @farouqbaiti4315
    @farouqbaiti4315 9 месяцев назад

    1. Qc1 Nh2+
    2. Ke1 Nf3#.

  • @MrDahunta
    @MrDahunta 9 месяцев назад

    Nothing to lose and something to gain is a very good advice. When i played the c-open in the karlsruhe grenke something like this happened. First game on the last day and out of exhaustion und tiredness i ran into a fried liver and a rook right in the beginning. I pulled myself together after the shock and played on. The opponent played very hastily as if he is absolutely sure that he will win and spend basically no time of his 90 minutes.
    Well a few moves later he tried an interesting fork with his queen on my king and queen :D And i was just sitting there lighting up. It was just awesome. If you are below 1600 there is never really a reason to give up on the spot. Most children in the chess clubs in our region are taught to never throw the game and play until mate.
    Really very good advice. Let the opponent prove that he can win. (unless you are 1900 and up then its just annoying and probably flagging)

  • @shuaige3360
    @shuaige3360 2 месяца назад

    Thanks for the video

  • @jamn0ut579
    @jamn0ut579 Месяц назад

    Ne3 to block the check. If Black plays Bxe3, the king can step to H1. And even if the pawn promotes by capturing the rook on F1, the queen has it covered. If it promotes on E1, the rook captures it

  • @Falsehooddiaries
    @Falsehooddiaries 4 месяца назад

    Yep. H4 is what i picked to put pressure on the knight from 2 angles, preventing a queen capture/check. If they chose to use their turn get the knight out of danger, my next move would be pawn to G4 to block a check. If the queen took it. it would be a loss but not a check. Not sure if that's wise. I'm typing this with the video paused and haven't seen his answer yet. >.

  • @hobbytalksstudies9083
    @hobbytalksstudies9083 9 месяцев назад +2

    But how to do better in positional understanding ? How can we master it ?

  • @AverageRNGHater
    @AverageRNGHater 9 месяцев назад +43

    just got notification after brutally losing a game 😭

    • @josephsalmonte4995
      @josephsalmonte4995 9 месяцев назад +4

      That's why we're here brother. The brutally losing squad 😂

    • @jenniferli8971
      @jenniferli8971 9 месяцев назад +1

      I got a brutal week lol, got 3 wins and 5 losses

    • @AverageRNGHater
      @AverageRNGHater 9 месяцев назад

      @@jenniferli8971 im chilling at 20% win rate this week 👍

    • @floof6896
      @floof6896 9 месяцев назад

      ​@@jenniferli8971i got 3-4 wins and around 15-20 losses this week. i was doing well until this week (dropped in 120 points of elo)

    • @Wrawiie27
      @Wrawiie27 9 месяцев назад

      It is even better

  • @Jasonemetarom
    @Jasonemetarom 6 месяцев назад

    for the position at the end, white has to sacrifice the knight and when the bishop takes it with another check, the king has to move to h1 and when that happens, if black tries to make a queen while taking the rook, white takes with the queen and at the end of that trade white is left with a queen and 5 pawns which ads up to 14 points and black is left with a bishop, rook and 2 pawns which adds up to 10 points. Based on material, I think white is still up. I'm not up to 1000 elo so correct me if I'm wrong.

  • @andersonarmstrong2650
    @andersonarmstrong2650 2 месяца назад

    This presentation is another interpretation of the Lasker maxim: "Whenever you find a good move, look for one that's better.."

  • @JaswanthDaniel
    @JaswanthDaniel 4 месяца назад

    First puzzle: First Ne3+, if Ke1, then Nf3#. If Kg1, then Nf3+, Kh1 (Forced), then Qh3#...

  • @fltwwq
    @fltwwq 7 месяцев назад

    Last example solution: 1.Ne3,Bxe3+ 2.Kh1,ef=Q+ 3.Qxf1,Re8 4.Qf6 etc

  • @baran-e9j
    @baran-e9j 3 месяца назад

    Kh1. Maybe your opponent will push the wrong button and promote to a night or bishop. Or, just move all the possible moves. If that does not make your opponent run out of time, then just wait until you have 2 seconds left. Your opponent might offer you a draw somewhere, or just leave their device alone, thinking you did the same. If it is a face to face game, you unfortunately have no option but to loose, even though you waste as much time as you like.

  • @attilahalmai4590
    @attilahalmai4590 9 месяцев назад +1

    Very good, instructive video, thank You again!