Day 383: Playing chess every day until I reach a 2000 rating

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  • Опубликовано: 12 янв 2025

Комментарии • 47

  • @santosalvin2139
    @santosalvin2139 7 месяцев назад +2

    Sheeeesh! I knew Nb4 would be a brilliant move! Good comeback from your previous games.

  • @BigFoxyChess
    @BigFoxyChess 8 месяцев назад +12

    Wow. That was a really lovely checkmate. Well done, Patrick!!!

  • @lebronjames06rules
    @lebronjames06rules 8 месяцев назад +2

    You showed perseverance and displayed brilliancy after the opening. Enjoy this W!

  • @boblester1726
    @boblester1726 7 месяцев назад

    It's very funny to see people congratulate Patrick for a checkmate he didn't see.

  • @panta692
    @panta692 8 месяцев назад +3

    You had a beatiful forced checkmate at 6:10 - You took his pawn on a2 with a check, he can either take your rook with his rook or block the check with his dark bishop, but in both cases you would win

    • @chesswithpatrick
      @chesswithpatrick  8 месяцев назад +3

      Oh wow I didn’t see that!! Thank you for pointing that out!

    • @pauloya
      @pauloya 7 месяцев назад +3

      That comes up in the analysis, at 12:40

    • @panta692
      @panta692 7 месяцев назад

      @@pauloya Ahh, I didn't watch whole video hahaha

  • @XFlyingDutchmanX
    @XFlyingDutchmanX 8 месяцев назад +3

    Hey Patrick, congratulation on this beautiful victory.
    My impressionen is that you hit a plateau recently and you said something very important during the analysis. You pointed out that you fell for this Bf4 and Nb5 idea recently and that you're not learning from your mistakes.
    The reason is, that you see/learn the idea during the analysis but you forget about it some days later, which is very common. In fact I guess thats what keeps many chess players from improving. Learing new ideas but forget them soon, gives you the feeling you are working and improving all the time but your rating refuses to go up.
    You need to make the motiv really stick in your brain. And you do that by repeating ideas over and over again. Make a screenshot from the position and look at it once every day for the next days. At some point you will never miss it again. You ate the idea during the analysis but you didn't digest it. The new idea didn't become a part of you and your chess.
    The same for tactics. Get a book or a set of tactic puzzles. And then repeat them until you can do them by heart. Until you see /know the solution in 2-3 seconds. Why? If you solve a puzzle and you need let's say 30 seconds to solve it correctly, this might sound good but in reality that means you probably never find this tactic in a rapid game. You don't have the time to think 30 seconds for each move and when you need 30 seconds when you know there is a tactic, it will be even harder during the game when you don't know that there is a tactic. You will find the ideas that you digest, that became a part of your chess and that you can spot in few seconds. Thats training is not that time consuming as it sounds, as you get faster and faster at solving your puzzles. When you solve your puzzles in 2-3 seconds you can do more than hundred in 5 minutes. Then you can move on to a new set of puzzles /the next chapter etc.
    Reapting is key, as Bruce Lee pointed out, "I don't fear the man that practiced 10.000 kicks once but the man that practiced one kick 10.000 times"

    • @chesswithpatrick
      @chesswithpatrick  8 месяцев назад +1

      Fantastic advice Flying Dutchman. I think I might make some flash cards!

  • @SH-dl4jk
    @SH-dl4jk 7 месяцев назад

    Nb4 was unreal. You play so well when you have nothing to lose!

  • @stephenwestland942
    @stephenwestland942 8 месяцев назад +5

    Not sure it was lucky Patrick. For sure, you did not play the opening well. But after that you played actively and Nb5 was a lovely move.
    You needed that one.

    • @chesswithpatrick
      @chesswithpatrick  8 месяцев назад +1

      Thank you Stephen!!! Really appreciate the continued support even during the lows! 😊

  • @elias5658
    @elias5658 8 месяцев назад +3

    You play with people who have memorized the 5-10 best moves of their favorite openings. You need to do the same thing if you don't want to be in trouble so early in your games.

  • @AlexSanchez-ff8nm
    @AlexSanchez-ff8nm 7 месяцев назад

    Good moves after the opening blunder. Watch out for that early fork.

  • @golfdoc1950
    @golfdoc1950 8 месяцев назад

    Good recovery from a shaky start. White got overly aggressive and you picked the right moves. You were close to mate then got a bit tentative but he wasn’t a match tactically and you made great combinations to finish the game. As a reminder in the future, don’t bring out the Queen early for a meaningless check that only furthers the opponent’s development.

  • @diablitosegura
    @diablitosegura 8 месяцев назад +1

    Dude this was beautiful!!!

  • @Mimang99
    @Mimang99 8 месяцев назад +1

    Always nice to win with less material than your opponent!

  • @johnsoler2661
    @johnsoler2661 7 месяцев назад

    Awesome comeback and checkmate!

  • @09fishfish09
    @09fishfish09 8 месяцев назад

    To get to this point, do you do any particular studies or concepts? I've begun playing more regularly but I'm getting bit at the 850 range yet seem to follow these quite well. There must be something I'm missing in my prep/study

  • @foodope
    @foodope 8 месяцев назад

    Good job quickly finding the only moves to continue in the opening!

  • @Roberto-bd9fq
    @Roberto-bd9fq 8 месяцев назад

    Good, you had him busted he can't retreat to d1 the bishop covers double check mate! You double checked after first rejecting the move sequence, but you went back and figured it out.
    Nice! WW!!
    Though you should have seen Qd3 you did find Nb4!
    Also, b4 was a move though, Nb4 is better. good idea to keep b4 in mind when attacking on the Q side.
    A surprise checkmate in which both sides are surprised, a rarity of all rarities!

  • @paultharp4626
    @paultharp4626 8 месяцев назад +2

    Nice win.. funny when agro's get blindsided

  • @HunterHunter-tr3it
    @HunterHunter-tr3it 8 месяцев назад

    I don’t see it as luck, Patrick. You had a not great opening, but you’re keeping your head up and making the slot of a rough situation. Your tactics at least helped to completely shut down their imminent attack and they had absolutely nothing after that to throw at you. I see it as skill too. Cazad0r75.

  • @qbb01
    @qbb01 8 месяцев назад

    Really nice check mate there mate!!! Well done!!!

  • @MarcelFuret
    @MarcelFuret 7 месяцев назад

    Great knight move. Well done 🎉👍

  • @j4n.276
    @j4n.276 7 месяцев назад

    Just found your channel and was wondering, have you ever missed a day?

  • @Jx9Rqb
    @Jx9Rqb 8 месяцев назад

    appreciate the fresh cut for the video ❤

  • @Noirlax
    @Noirlax 8 месяцев назад

    Very nice checkmate.

  • @junkcuber5611
    @junkcuber5611 8 месяцев назад

    I have only watched about two or three dozen of your games & it seems like you have a tendency to not develop your pieces very quickly or castle. I like the idea of your journey and how you present it, but are you doing any studying outside the games you play? I am not sure if that is part of the video series.

  • @spencerguffey5078
    @spencerguffey5078 8 месяцев назад +1

    studying is good...but chess is a game of repetition. the more games you play in the shortest amount of time possible is how you get rating. there's no other way to do it efficiently.
    if you're not getting like 10 hours(around 50 games) of actual play time in a week it's essentially impossible to reach 2000, let alone a man older than 40.
    maybe it's just a click-bate title? ... as long as you're having fun that's cool, but 2000 isnt happening at 7 games a week.

  • @AERO_Y250
    @AERO_Y250 8 месяцев назад

    WWWW we take those!

  • @sanjaylife
    @sanjaylife 8 месяцев назад

    Congrats good game.

  • @MrDanielfff777
    @MrDanielfff777 8 месяцев назад

    Pretty gangster

  • @AlexShushpanov
    @AlexShushpanov 8 месяцев назад

    Nice moves! Folks who start out aggressively and then lose deserve the loss that much more. Playing traps that they find on tik tok isn’t playing chess.

    • @xklepx
      @xklepx 8 месяцев назад

      The Jobava London has an opening trap, but you are not just playing for that trap. White just blew the middle game.

  • @vide0gameCaster
    @vide0gameCaster 8 месяцев назад

    gg Checkmate!

  • @lancetehira
    @lancetehira 8 месяцев назад

    Nice 👍!!!!!!!! Of course I'm not gonna lie and say I saw that checkmate cause I DIDN'T!!!!!! Only afterwards when I was getting over my surprise - "huh? Oh!!!! That's checkmate!!!!!" Cause I was going everywhere BUT there so..... Wow

  • @ryanallan5651
    @ryanallan5651 8 месяцев назад

    Nice mate

  • @Brezicka77
    @Brezicka77 8 месяцев назад

    I don’t think it was a lucky win - you are good at fighting back after going down material, which is a skill.
    One odd piece of feedback - often in the beginning of games you are speaking to the audience, stating the opponent’s name and rating, among other things. While this makes a better RUclips video (thanks!), it sometimes distracts you in the first few moves.
    Most of the time it doesn’t matter, but this game needed a very specific move (a3) to stop an early attack, and you were autopiloting caro moves. Maybe you try not making moves while introducing the opponent. Just an idea

  • @ibiwisi
    @ibiwisi 8 месяцев назад

    W!

  • @ralphderkapitaen9875
    @ralphderkapitaen9875 8 месяцев назад

    Hey didnt you get more gray in your hair during your last 12 months of playing chess? 😂