How to Calculate in Chess? [Find Tactics in Your Games]
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- Опубліковано 3 чер 2024
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In this video lesson, GM Igor Smirnov shares with you 5 key ideas to calculate effectively during your chess games. You will learn from beginner-level concepts and gradually climb to advanced-level so that you can calculate more complex positions/variations.
These calculation tips will teach you how to solve puzzles easily, how to find tactics in your games, and how to calculate efficiently and effectively. Most importantly, you will learn how top Grandmasters like Magnus Carlsen calculate variations effectively in their games.
At the end of this calculation training, you will be challenged with an interesting puzzle. Try to calculate all possible variations and find the winning shot!
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► Chapters
00:00 How to calculate in chess? [5 tips]
00:28 Example-1
00:51 Tip-1: Evaluate material
01:17 How to find candidate moves in a position?
04:09 Example-2
05:00 Tip-2: Calculate till the end of the forcing line
05:39 Example-3 (this is how Grandmasters think)
06:28 Tip-3: Use your positional understanding
09:18 How to improve your positional understanding?
09:59 Example-4
10:11 Tip-4: Don't let your opponent's king escape
11:57 Example-5
12:57 Tip-5: Try to make tactics work somehow
13:52 Test your calculation skills with this puzzle
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#IgorNation #ChessTactics #ChessTips #ChessTraining - Спорт
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Tukoh tukoh taka tukoh tu tata tukoh tu tata tukoh tukoh taka tukoh tu tata tukoh tu tata tukoh tu tata tukoh tukoh taka tukoh tu tata tukoh tu tata tukoh tu tata tukoh tukoh taka tukoh tu tata tukoh tu tata tukoh tu tata
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THANKS SIR🙏♟
Took me a while, but I believe the winning continuation is 1.Nc7+ Qxc7 2.Bxf7+ Kxf7 3.Qd5+ Ke8 5.Qe6+ Be7 6.Qxe7#
Nc7+ wins by force. But the beautiest move is 1.Qd5!!
It threatens mate on f7 and black can't play 1 ... Qxd5, because of 2 Nc7 mate!!
So, the only move for black is to play 1 ... Nxg5 (defending f7), but then white captures the black queen (not mentioning the poor juicy rook at a8).
If I was on this position as white, I would prefer this line, even after seeing the Nc7 mate line, just for fun and beauty.
I see that after all ur moves King can go to e8 @pedrinho paquiderme ans is correct one
@@jenishajackrit9546 Scaly Goose is correct. My original thought was 1. Nc7+ Qxc7 2. Qd5. From here, I didn't see a way for black to defend against checkmate, but then I realized they could block the black diagonal with f6.
Well done!
Lmao, this one is actually what i've calculated
Really like Igor's way of explaining chess. He does an excellent job.
Thanks Paul!
i agree i tryed watch hikaru and well i dont deny he is chess genius but.. in his coach videos he speak so fast.. he change topics.. and you basicly after 1 min have no clue whats going on.. for intermedium player.. its impossible to understand. While here.. everything is clear
I love this: pause the video, try to solve the puzzle and then get coached through it. You do it really well, please make more of these!
Sacrificing the white queen on d5 is the way to go. If the black queen captures, knight to c7 is a check mate. If the white queen is not captured, queen to f7 is a check mate.
I wouldn't call it a sacrifice since the d5 queen is protected by the bishop. Excellent move creating 2 checkmating threats. However black can just give up his queen and take the g5 bishop. So you have 1. Qd5 Nxg5 2. Qxc6 Rb8 3. Nc7+ Kd8. A winning advantage for sure but I don't see a quick finish. I think 1. Nc7+ gets the job done in 6 moves.
NxB and the game goes on. It´s a beatiful move, but not mate.
Queen d5 is met with Knight captures g5 and the game goes on. Mate is out of sight.
GM Igor Smirnov is by far the best chess coach I have ever encountered. Thanks for the effort, sir. Keep up the good work!
Thanks for the great video!
Solution to final puzzle: 1.Nc7+ Qxc7 2.Bxf7+ Kxf7 3.Qd5+ Ke8 4.Qe6+ Be7 5.Qxe7#
I used all your tips to solve it! (I hope I'm correct.)
This is excellent.
I made the mistake of seeing the motif but not finding a way for it to work. I kept seeing ways to gain material advantage but didnt combine the knight sac WITH the bishop sac to find mate.
1) Qd5 threatening Qxf7#. If QxQd5 2) Nc7#
@@subramanianponniah1238 Very good! That works too, but it takes longer to win (look for White's move to keep from getting mated immediately). Notice in the sequence I gave, every move by Black is forced (one move on each turn). It's a forced mate-in-5.
@@subramanianponniah1238 But after NxBg5 there is not check mate, you must play Qxc6 and the play is going on for some time.
Yes, in the puzzle, every move is forced. I love it!
I learn a lot from this channel and it is the BEST teaching channel on YT. Thanks Igor!
This is so useful for practicing puzzle! I solve tactical puzzles easily but the positional puzzles are very hard to be solved, so this video is worth to watch!
Yes solved first one. 2nd Bishop sacrifice followed by Queen check and Knight follow up. Great stuff.
Thank you so much for this lesson GM Igor
Final position is interesting. Looks like a Sicilian, Sozin variation where Black has played ...b4 to chase away the Nc3 and then grab on e4. The solution is quite fun: 1.Nc7+! (forcing move, King cannot move) Qxc7 2.Bxf7+! (forcing move, again only one reply) Kxf7 3.Qd5#.
Interestingly, I think Black saw this. In the diagram, the last move was Qc7-c6, trying to cover d5. It looks like Black could just take the knight with ...axb5, but that would allow Bxf7+ and Qd5# immediately. So Black saw the threat and tried to stop it, but 1.Nc7+! pulls the Queen away from d5 immediately. Must have been very satisfying to play as White!
I like it! Think it needs to continue 3... Ke8 (only square to get out of check), 4.Qe6+ Be7 5. Qxe7#
@@simontang2944 Nice. Thanks for the correction, I somehow completely missed that Ke8 was possible!
I found the immediate 1 Bd5 which traps and wins the queen, but of course checkmate is stronger. :)
it was an insightful analysis of the preceding moves!
@@GMIgorSmirnov I tried re-creating the game based on those hints. Looks like White offered a piece with 12.f5!?, which Black tried to decline with the "safe" 12...e5, which allows the 13.Nb5!! shot. After 13...Qc6, we reach the puzzle position:
1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 d6 3. d4 cxd4 4. Nxd4 Nf6 5. Nc3 a6 6. Bg5 e6 7. Bc4 b5 8. Bb3 Nbd7 9. O-O Qc7 10. f4 b4 11. Na4 Nxe4 12. f5 e5 13. Nb5 Qc6
The move order might not be right, but we reach the puzzle position.
The solution to the puzzle at the end of the video is as follows:
1.Nc7+ Qxc7; 2.Bxf7+ Kxf7; 3.Qd5+ Ke8; 4.Qe6+ Be7; 5. Qxe7 mate.
I'm happy to say that I solved all the problems quickly. I must be getting better. Thanks, Igor.
There are some truly amazing chess teachers on youtube, but I find my chess improves the msot when watching your videos.
This is an excellent video, thank you! And I was able to get the last one! (thanks to your video on the King's gambit --> you mentioned a similar bishop sacrifice). VERY satisfying! thank you!
- Evaluate the material balance to understand the position's urgency (start: 0:52).
- List candidate moves before deep calculation to stay organized (start: 1:18).
- Focus on enemy territory and consider forcing moves first (start: 1:48).
- Calculate variations until the end of the forcing line for accurate outcomes (start: 5:03).
- Prioritize moves using positional understanding to simplify calculation (start: 6:30).
- Keep the opponent's king restricted to develop your attack (start: 10:17).
- Reorder moves to make identified tactical motifs work (start: 13:00).
Fairly easy and straightforward examples with a clearcut one viable line worth calculating.
Awesome timing of this video 👌👍😊
Truly appreciate your help.
🙏
on the second puzzle I calculated every variation, as you teach, and Black can defend (doesn't need to take the bishop with the pawn), meaning it's not necessarily mate.
This is one of the best chess channels ever. Thanks a bunch. More videos please
Great information! Love the way you explain it. Also, after doing a lot of puzzles the last few days, I figured out that first position checkmate in about 10 seconds. Puzzles aren't everyone's cup of tea but they really get you in the right mindset... my humble opinion.
Have to say !! Amazing masterclass have improved a lot on tactical side !
Thanks, great video!
Great great video. Good tempo.
13:35 Qe2 Kc1 Bf4 Ba3 prevents instant checkmate, but Bxg3 trades Qeen for Bishop, but you can get a Rook for the Bishop Bxe7, so the piece difference is Roock + Pawn against Qeen.
Very instructive video thank you.
Great video, thank you very much.
Got all of them right great video
Your videos are becoming more and more instructive! Thank you!,
Glad you like them!
Great video, tactics are so important as an intermediate player
man you are an amazing teacher
Love your simple yet great technique
Thanks so much 😊
Superb video!
Of course a key point is that these positions don't arise by accident. You will have had to plan and work towards them, otherwise they won't happen. Even grandmaster Spielmann said of world champion Alekhine, "I can see the final combinations as well as he can ... but I can't get into the same positions". In the first example, Black will have been positioning his R, Q and B over previous moves to prepare the winning combination.
► Chapters
00:00 How to calculate in chess? [5 tips]
00:28 Example-1
00:51 Tip-1: Evaluate material
01:17 How to find candidate moves in a position?
04:09 Example-2
05:00 Tip-2: Calculate till the end of the forcing line
05:39 Example-3 (this is how Grandmasters think)
06:28 Tip-3: Use your positional understanding
09:18 How to improve your positional understanding?
09:59 Example-4
10:11 Tip-4: Don't let your opponent's king escape
11:57 Example-5
12:57 Tip-5: Try to make tactics work somehow
13:52 Test your calculation skills with this puzzle
3:33 Just wanted to point out that Nxg3 leads to Qxh7 mate, so it can be eliminated that way too
@@reyhananiz5099 That's right!
Always enjoyed RCA sessions! as for the puzzle , Qd5 wins for White
1. Nc7, QxC7 (forced)
2. Bxf7, kxf7 (forced)
3. Qd5+, ke8 (forced)
4. Qe6#
Missing one move, 4. ...Be7 and then 5. Qe7#
@@desmyt67 You're right. Thank you.
GM Igor ...I have been regularly watching your channel and truly appreciate the learning that I have been able to get and improve my games...I am around 1550 rating and this video is awesome. Thanks
Happy to know about your improvement!
Great lecture. Very practical.
Many thanks!
Very good video. You have excellent English. I did think you were saying "motif" when you showed the word "motive" in example 5. The first is a pattern in art and the latter is motivation so I think "motif" is used in chess.
love remote chess academy
hank you Igor!
Just discovered your channel and I've been watching it for couple of days. Tomorrow I have local tournment that I'm looking forward to. As a 1200 player I will try and beat 1600s there. İt's probably unlikely but thanks to your incredible commentary and videos I feel like atleast I can try. Thanks ^^
please tell us how you do!
Best of luck!
@@calencrawford2195 I got 5th place 3/5 wins
No medal but it ok 😁
@@AliEgemenB nice
Very good video. Thank you, Igor. My two most favorite players are Tal and Ivanchuk. What I find most amazing about them is that they see a winning combination in moves that on the surface look like losers. And I always wonder how do they do it. Maybe that's what genius is all about!
Last puzzle: Knight check - Queen takes, Bishop check - King takes, Queen check on D5, Queen checkmate on E6.
Fantastic chess video. ❤
I learned a lot of idea for better chess player, thank you for these..
Thanks for the lesson. Well done. I didn't notice the dark bishop hiding in the pawns... bad eyes. :-) so I was ruffled for a moment, but I got better.
13:53 Nc7+ forces Qxc7, then Bxf7+ forces Kxf7, then Qd5+ forces Ke8, Qe6+ forces Be7, allowing Qxe7#.
Hidden gem channel! ❤
The solution of the last puzzle can be 1.Qh5 threatening mate, if blackplays g6 then 2.fxg6 any pawn of black captures(f or h pawn)3. Bf7 is mate since rook supports the bishop.
I am not sure about the answer, if any one finds it please reply me.
I agree Qd5 leads to a forced mate, and the Nc7+ works
I think Qh5 is also good, although a violation of the video. Checks are covered by the knight on a4, g6 results in a recapture allowing bxf7#
Great algorithm!
Igor, I am 1050 USCF OTB player. Also 58 years old. If I get this right it this video really helped me. My answer is these are all forcing moves unless I missed something. 1. Bxf7+, Kxf7 2. Qh5+, g6 3. fxg6+ Kg8 4. gxh7+ Rxh7 (king cannot take h7 because Q is on H5) 5. Qf7# The Rook blocked the Kings escape to h7? Is this right?
QD5 and its mate by Nc7 or Qf7: with Be7 just leading to Qf7:+ Kd8 Qe7: mate
Generelly every your video is valuable - inclusively also this one. You are a clever man.
The last puzzle was hard.
I finally landed on
Nc7+ - (forced) Qxc7
Bxf7+ - (forced) Kxf7
Qd5+ - (forced) Ke8
Qe6+ - (forced) Be7
Qxe7++
1 more with Horse F3 . 2 options. take with soldier, or retreat the king. both can be chekmated. one in 3 moves second with 10-12
For the third scenario I see a number of lines:
One is 1. Nh7 Kxh7 2. Rxh5+ Kg8 3. Qh6… at this point I don’t see any way for black to escape mate on Qh7 supported by Rook or Bishop. Though admittedly Kxh7 is a blunder here…
Another is 1. Rxh5 g6xh5 2. Ne6+ - if black moves king back to either g8 or h8 or captures knight with bishop, mate is unavoidable after next queen check. If black captures with the pawn, then its a short chase along the 8th rank.
EDIT: I’m happy that I found the right line, but it took way too much calculating/overthinking positions, which takes up time and spends a lot of mental energy in game. Noted for future games! Thanks.
I think i find,a nice tactic of deviation of the queen!
Thanks Igor for your lucid illustrations..It really inspires me to think in a positional manner..
Great!
In the tip 4 puzzle, what is the continuation if after 1. Qg6, black goes 1. ... Rf7? Something like 2. Bxg7 Ke7 3. Ng8+ Ke8 I don't see anything other than a repition?
I am lazy too. Calculating all the moved makes my head spin.
Great video.
Answer of the last question Is knight c7 queen takes knight bishop f7 king takes bishop and then queen d5 is a totally forcing check mate
Answer of the first position in
Rook f1 and then queen g2 mate
Nc7+, queen takes, Bf7+, king takes, queen d5 mate. Cool puzzle!
Actually it isn't, because Black then plays Ke8. You are on the right lines. There is a mate, but you haven't calculated far enough!
14:02 I calculated 1. Bxf7+ Kxf7 only move. 2. Qh5+, if they block with the pawn they're worse, but if they play 2... Kg9 black's better.
So i changed the order of moves. 1. Qh5, it's a checkmate treat, black can only block with 1... g6 2. Bxf7+ Kxf7 only move and 3. fxg6 and white seems to be winning... I think.
The bad think is after 1. Qh5, they can block your dark square bishop with Ne or Ndf6, making breathing room for his king.
1.Qh5,g6 2.fxg6,fxg6 3.Bf7#
Hi. Can you please make your next video about piece coordination for advanced players (2000 rating). I saw you made years ago but it will be nice to have another one. Thanks love your videos!
Cool idea.
Thanks sir lots of love from bangladesh
I felt really proud seeing the solution for the puzzle immediately! Nc7, Queen has to take, Bxf7, king has to take, Qd5 check, Ke8, Qe6, Be7, Qxd7#!😊
Mm took me 3 mins to find 😅
11:34 Black king can be saved by playing Rf7 instead of playing Ndxe5
3:31 - White's continuation is QH7 checkmate if that knight is moved.
Qd5 leads to a forcing win: if QxQd5, Nc7#, if nxg5 Qxc6 and black is down significant material and looses!
Ooops spelling wrong on previous comment
White to move
Q to D5 threatening Q to F7 mate, Black queen must take or lose on next move then N-B5 to C7!!! mate . Never seen a nicer Queen sacrifice so I think this must be the solution .
Great channel, Thanks a lot
Nxg3 in Example 1 leads to M1 for white
Underrated channel
1. Kc7+ Qxc7,
2. Bxf7+ Kxf7
3. Qd5+ Ke8
4. Qe6+ Be7
5. Qxe7#
There is a forcing line with Nc7+ QxN Bxf7+ Kxff7 Qd5+ Ke1 Qe3++... but your line is much more beautiful! Unfortunately it doesn´t lead to mate if NxB, but it would be a beautiful win nevertheless.
Think Qh5 also leads to checkmate. If blocked by pawn u can take back with pawn and regardless of whichever pawn black takes with, bxg7 is mate.
Awesome video!
My solution to the puzzle would be 1.Qd5 threatening checkmate at f7 and if Black captures Qxd5 then 2.Nc7#. Only way to prevent checkmate is to play Nxg4 which will win us the Black Queen Qxc6 again threatening Nc7# checkmate.
I found that one. And as I said on my previous post (as an answer to the first post), I prefer this line (Qd5) over the forced mate (Nc7+ etc), just because it is waaayyy more FUN and BEAUTIFUL than mate... lol
@@PedrinhoCruzeirense fr
If Nxg4 you won´t check mate with Nc7. You lost your bishop. The game goes on, without a queen.
Knight to C7 bishop to F7 check queen to D5 check queen to E6 checkmate
The last puzzle is a forced chackmate in 5, starting with Knight to c7+, followed by Bishop takes f7, then coming with the queen in the middle and delievering the chackmate.
This man is an effective teacher
the second example is kind of cooperative. there is a lot of to calculate and evaluate after 1) B:h6 f5! Engine says +3 but you sac a piece for attack and it is not that easy to evaluate (i have found B:h6 and was trying to understand what should i do after f5)
Spoiler to the last puzzle below
.
.
.
1) Nc6+ Q:c6
2) Bf7+ K:f7
3) Qd5+ Ke8
4) Qe6#
Qd5 done forced mate, either queen bishop battery or Nc7 check mate.
My dad was a great pool player he was a shark in the Bronx. Making over 300 balls in strait pool without missing once. Once he told me a good player doesn't have to make hard shots he makes every shot easy. I thought of him when you were talking about positional chess.
We can do
1.Qd5 Qxd5 2.Nc7#
Or
1.Qd5 Qb6 2.Kh1 Nf2 3.Rxf2 Qxf2 4.Qe7#
queen d5 if queen takes queen knight checkmate if queen or pawn takes knight queen f7 mate
Unless I missed something, in the first example if you take the white knight with your black, queen to g3 seems like a bad move. It can move to h7 instantly checkmating the black king.
I see: nice! : 1. calculate the attacks. 2. look for the candidates. 3. use your positional understanding (ie for example, don't activate their pieces, or give them room) to simplify the task. Nice!
Kc7, Qc7
Bf7, kingf7
Qd5 checkmate
firstly queen d5 if queen takes queen then simply knight c7 checkmate if queen didn't wants exchange queen then queen f7 checkmate
14:04 Qd5 and then black’s queen’s only move is to take on d5 then Nc7#
B-d5, Qxd5 N-c7+
My answer to the puzzle
1.Nc7+ Qxc7
2. Bxf7+ Kfx7
3. Qd5+ Ke8
4. Qe6+ Be7
5. Qe7#
Solution for puzzle 6 is1.Qd5 Q×d5 2.Nc7 checkmate
1.Qd5 Q×b5 2.Q×f7 checkmate
1.Qd5 N×g5 2.Q×c6 white is winning
We wanna make Nc7 checkmate work,, so the first move that comes into my mind is 1.Qd5 threatening mate on on f7,,and so black has to react,, if 1. Qxd5. 2. Nc7#. If 1.Qb6+. 2. Nxb6, Nxb6. 3.Nc7# or Qxc7# If 1.Qc5+. 2. Nxc5. pxc5. 3. Qxf7# or Nc7#.. if 1. Be7. 2. Qxf7+, Kd8. Qxe7#..so black has no moves to defend against mate
solve no.2. 1.Bh6! gh6 2.Nf6+ Kh8 3.Qe4 wins the game with Qh7++
1.Qd5-Qxd5 2.Nxd5#
1)Qd5-QxQd5 2) Nc7 mate or 1) Qd5 - QxNb5 2) Qf7 mate or 1) Qd5-NxBg5 2) QxQc6 and white is winning