Exploring the Hedgehog - GM Yasser Seirawan - 2014.02.27

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  • Опубліковано 26 бер 2014
  • Grandmaster Yasser Seirawan presents a lecture on the development of chess understanding/theory and the Hedgehog.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 97

  • @Scy
    @Scy 8 років тому +102

    I'm on a Seirawan lecture binge :P

    • @zuheyr1
      @zuheyr1 8 років тому

      +Roberto Alba a bit corny? :)

    • @blairschirmerx1711
      @blairschirmerx1711 7 років тому +1

      He really needs to calm down.

    • @ruthwikrao9603
      @ruthwikrao9603 4 роки тому

      @@blairschirmerx1711 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @aesaehttr
      @aesaehttr 3 роки тому +1

      When you run out of lectures you'll need a subscription to Bob Ross

    • @buffalodebill7986
      @buffalodebill7986 3 роки тому

      @@blairschirmerx1711 LOL

  • @G102Y5568
    @G102Y5568 10 років тому +80

    Man, Yasser Serrawan's stories are intense. He is such an awesome guy.

  • @marcwordsmith
    @marcwordsmith 5 років тому +21

    what a gentleman, to annotate one of his losses with such clarity and patience and even apparent enjoyment. Just brilliant. Glad you made it to the Candidates' Matches, Yaz! You deserved it. Sorry you didn't win and get to challenge GK.

  • @nicholasshannon1071
    @nicholasshannon1071 8 років тому +37

    Ha, this speaks to the wonderful game of chess that DOESN'T get played... he spends 20 minutes talking about a possible line with all kinds of really cool fun stuff that he didn't end up playing. I remembered that from my games... I'd play OTB and go home and go over it and think "is that all there was?" because the UNPLAYED game was so much bigger than the played game.

  • @myigitilful
    @myigitilful 9 років тому +24

    Great personality in history of chess. Long live Seirawan.

  • @craigvandenberge6520
    @craigvandenberge6520 6 років тому +11

    Love the humility to talk through a loss like that

  • @amrmohamed1387
    @amrmohamed1387 7 років тому +7

    I really enjoyed all of your lectures and if you read this one a day I really want to say you are awesome . In fact I'm from Egypt and I got those amazing lectures very helpful thank you Mr Seirawan

  • @andrewmays3988
    @andrewmays3988 Рік тому +2

    Love Yasser's encyclopedic knowledge of the history of chess !😇

  • @arrowofkira5658
    @arrowofkira5658 29 днів тому

    That a knight becomes more powerful the more it is supported by your other pieces is such a valuable lesson, i on my own would have never figured that out, i definately try to adapt this knowledge into my own games.

  • @GhostAemaeth2501
    @GhostAemaeth2501 10 років тому +13

    WoW - this man is a real great teacher!

  • @penearth
    @penearth 8 років тому +10

    first lecture I have watched of Yassers. very very good.

    • @stefanholbek2449
      @stefanholbek2449 8 років тому +5

      +penearth HA! I'm right now eating EVERYTHING I can find from that man! He's funny, polite and a great teacher for the youngsters ... A TRUE gentleman! ;O)

    • @maheshkumartak3096
      @maheshkumartak3096 3 роки тому

      Watch his pin variation of sicilian.

  • @jasondhathaway
    @jasondhathaway 10 років тому +25

    Penultimate means "next to last."

  • @panrudzki454
    @panrudzki454 8 років тому +2

    Awesome video. Thank you, Yasser.

  • @Mathview
    @Mathview 9 років тому +1

    Missed this video on publication date, and just now watching.
    TY for a fascinating 41 minutes. Watched it straight through. As I recall GM Robert Byrne was the chess columnist for the NYT in those days. Can we hang the flawed analysis on his door?

  • @alpulley4894
    @alpulley4894 6 років тому

    Another great Yaz lecture

  • @2birdbrained4u
    @2birdbrained4u 10 років тому

    Hello Chess world, I love these lectures!

  • @letlapafly
    @letlapafly 5 років тому +1

    came here to learn about the hedgehog but got so much more

  • @DailyChessTV
    @DailyChessTV 10 років тому +3

    @ 19:33
    The line given seems not correct, as mate can be prevented by Qb6+. Qb6+ picks up the hanging rook, which means Black will get the other rook and White has to opt for this instead: Rxf8+ Kg7 and Rg8+ Kf6. But this seems ok for Black.

    • @GleamingBlade1
      @GleamingBlade1 10 років тому +2

      instead of Rxf8+ what about Bd4+ it seems like white would be the exchange up

  • @aker9046
    @aker9046 4 роки тому

    Hello, may I ask what is the chess teaching app that the Grandmaster uses in his presentation? Thank you!

  • @renehenriksen1735
    @renehenriksen1735 8 років тому

    Has anyone in this area of the chessworld ever heard about the Nesjmetdinov-gambit in the Siesta-variation of the Ruy Lopez? I´ve seen it in Jakov Estrin´s little red book about gambits, which in my language is called "Gambit-play in chess". It´s just that no one seems to have heard about it and even the strong computer-engines doesn´t seem to know about it. Strange I think.

  • @mickdrummer5965
    @mickdrummer5965 2 роки тому +1

    Chess education on a silver platter !!! Thank you !!!

  • @jeffgreen3376
    @jeffgreen3376 4 роки тому

    Wow. That was a heck of a game. Korchnoi was really something special and so were you, Yasser. You both deserved to go to the Candidates tournament. Who was the WC that year ..... Karpov or Kasparov?

    • @SteelyDylan97
      @SteelyDylan97 4 роки тому +1

      Kasparov, that cycle turned out to be final match between Kasparov and Karpov for the title (5 Matches!)

  • @bengski68
    @bengski68 7 років тому +4

    *Smiles* "Knight takes G6!... No."

  • @TheSpyroMiner
    @TheSpyroMiner 6 років тому +1

    i love yasser

  • @miyukiteishi9051
    @miyukiteishi9051 3 роки тому +1

    Soon GM Young Lady will be teaching the class

  • @frequensea9434
    @frequensea9434 Рік тому

    If anyone brilliant stumbles upon this vieo and comment. I'd love to hear any thoughts on a trasnposition from KID (i assume just the NIMZO) into a hedgehog. I'm prepping hedgehog against my rival who plays the english. But i'd love to play it more proactively against D4 if possible to get practice in as no one seems to be playing the english at my level.

  • @zagadka5471
    @zagadka5471 7 років тому

    What about Qb3+ in 19.32 ?

  • @msan3965
    @msan3965 6 років тому +2

    This guy’s voice is like velvet

  • @caseybroadfoot5227
    @caseybroadfoot5227 8 років тому

    im confused on the part at 32 min after bxf3, why does whige have to take back? cant he slide rook over check, the bishop defends king, then whotes bishop attacks blacks bishop and king cant do much

  • @Malvegil357
    @Malvegil357 7 років тому

    So what is the definition of the hedgehog defense? Is it just putting pawns on e6 and d6 ?

    • @leventeadamszabo1914
      @leventeadamszabo1914 6 років тому

      Malvegil357 Me It is very well defined on wikipedia. It's a pawn structure (mainly for Black) where he exchanges the pawn in c5 and puts pawns.on a6, b6, d6 and e6. The manoeuvring of the pieces are also very typical.

  • @raymondarmagnac
    @raymondarmagnac 10 років тому

    very good

  • @geitekop507
    @geitekop507 7 років тому +1

    At 20:29, doesn't white mate? (Black played Qxe2) 1.Qxf8+ Bxf8 2. Bd4+ f6 3. Bxf6# ?

    • @yavuzkoroglu7792
      @yavuzkoroglu7792 7 років тому

      You're absolutely right

    • @eliask5867
      @eliask5867 7 років тому +2

      Aram Hassan black has Bg7

    • @geitekop507
      @geitekop507 7 років тому

      Elias Keso missed that one. :)

    • @eliask5867
      @eliask5867 7 років тому

      ahmet eren Tekbas no,because the bishop on d4 is on the way from the rook

  • @EdSuastegui
    @EdSuastegui 6 років тому +1

    Sorry, Yasser, but at the 21:10 mark, there is no mate on h1: f2 is available to the White king, and you have nothing to bring against it to trap him there. And at the 21:58 mark, the White knight is no longer trapped.

    • @garagavia
      @garagavia 5 років тому

      I think he is saying that he is in a dangerous attacking position that could result in a mate, but I may be wrong.

  • @MrPrezer
    @MrPrezer 8 років тому +8

    Korchnoi is a beast...!

    • @dannygjk
      @dannygjk 8 років тому +2

      +MrPrezer Yes he is one of the best players to never win the world championship.

    • @MusikPiratCH
      @MusikPiratCH 8 років тому +3

      +Dan Kelly I would mention other (perhaps more innovative) players like David Bronstein or Paul Keres! According to Boris Spassky Kortschnoj (as we spell him in Switzerland where he lives) is a 'chess worker" (meaning not that much talented as others but he worked very hard for his success - nothing wrong with it). But you could see the differences in his World Champion matches against Anatoly Karpov! Kortschnoj lost three times (including the 1974 candidates final)!

    • @dannygjk
      @dannygjk 8 років тому +1

      MusikPiratCH Yes of course he lost to Karpov, Karpov is one of the strongest players ever.

    • @MusikPiratCH
      @MusikPiratCH 4 роки тому

      @@fundhund62 That's just speculation. We'll never know. ;)
      But it's important to mention that even in 1973 Spassky was stronger than Karpov! Spassky won the UdSSR Super Championship ahead of Karpov! :D

    • @MusikPiratCH
      @MusikPiratCH 4 роки тому

      @@fundhund62 Though Spassky won the tournament! :P The direct game isn't that important! That could have gone in either way. Because I already mentioned Spassky in my comment!

  • @cloudatlasminer478
    @cloudatlasminer478 7 років тому +2

    34:19 ivory queen to f6, forcing ebony bishop to f6 then ivory bishop f6. Checkmate? Sorry I don't the way to write chess moves yet.

  • @Neueregel
    @Neueregel 10 років тому

    Carslen also plays the Hedgehog sometimes

  • @ianfischerschilling9779
    @ianfischerschilling9779 2 роки тому

    How can this masterclass have less then 1.000 likes?

  • @animalntelligence3170
    @animalntelligence3170 Рік тому

    I wonder if in the past 9 years the young woman (sounded like under 12 years old) has become a master -- she spoke up with confident and accurate moves.

  • @rokuroen4088
    @rokuroen4088 6 років тому +1

    can't believe how far they see the game. i can't even win AI lv(3/9) on my phone.

  • @dmaster20ify
    @dmaster20ify 8 років тому

    Why does Yasser have to recapure the knight on g6 with his f pawn after the knight sacrifice on g6? Doesn't that mess up his pawn structure and give him worries? What is so bad about hxg6?

    • @djosephsss
      @djosephsss 8 років тому

      +John Brown Taking with the f pawn gives him potential counterplay pn the open f file, and pressure on the white kingside, while taking with the h pawn opens up the h file, where black can't place a rook for play, and he is more likely to get mated on the open h file

    • @dmaster20ify
      @dmaster20ify 8 років тому

      Will reexamine video and reply back to you

    • @dmaster20ify
      @dmaster20ify 8 років тому

      So I looked back at the video and I feel you are wrong. The h file is not opened for white, and there is no counterplay black can get on the f file. The g pawn firmly protects f3.

    • @Veaseify
      @Veaseify 8 років тому +3

      +John Brown After hxg6 its mate in 2 - Qh6+ followed by Qxg7 remember the bishop on g7 is pinned!

    • @dmaster20ify
      @dmaster20ify 8 років тому

      [32:00] Steve Veasey you are absolutely right. This shows I am not going to be a grand master.

  • @reaperstar7822
    @reaperstar7822 5 років тому

    modern defense please

  • @atestarossa
    @atestarossa 6 років тому

    Serrawan's stories are good, and he's a good lecturer. He speaks a bit slow though, so I find need to increase the speed of the video to stop my mind from wandering off while he's speaking.

  • @markschwarman7231
    @markschwarman7231 5 років тому +1

    Instead of Qd3 in subvariation after Queening pawn etc...QxRf8+ followed by Bd4+ leads to mate...Yasser was incomplete in analysis.

    • @dorikaspar2415
      @dorikaspar2415 5 років тому

      Mark Schwarman I was thinking the same, but I believe Black can save himself with ...Bg7, correct?

    • @markschwarman7231
      @markschwarman7231 5 років тому

      @@dorikaspar2415 Quite right! I had optical illusion of Rook jumping over Bishop!

  • @bonkyabeans
    @bonkyabeans Рік тому

    "Euuuurrrrrrp" - Yasser Seirawan

  • @SethingtonIII
    @SethingtonIII Рік тому

    Yasser stories/smile > Feingold bad jokes/insults

  • @prussianblue14
    @prussianblue14 6 років тому +1

    19:39 Qb6+ wins the rook and does not loose,but win..

  • @chaddonschaddons7084
    @chaddonschaddons7084 6 років тому +2

    Did you know Yasser was a Marine drill instructor? Didn't work out too well though.

    • @KF1
      @KF1 3 роки тому

      His platoon didn't have the patience for an hour of what if this, what if that.
      -blank stares
      "Come on.. doesn't anyone here play pushups?"

  • @levarkizer3161
    @levarkizer3161 5 років тому

    Check out Levar Kizer on UA-cam (chess master rap) Produced by Kizer Soze

  • @charlesdarwin180
    @charlesdarwin180 8 років тому +1

    But why was Seirawan playing for a win at times when he knew all he needed was a draw to qualify for the world championship? The logic of risk vs. rewards doesn't match up.

    • @yavuzkoroglu7792
      @yavuzkoroglu7792 7 років тому +10

      I think Seirawan tries to say if it is draw, his qualification depends on some other games whereas if he wins he immediately qualifies.

  • @thelight288
    @thelight288 7 років тому

    Waving a red bull, didnt expect yasser to do that :p

  • @SangaXD44
    @SangaXD44 4 роки тому

    29:24

  • @jabbablade1884
    @jabbablade1884 6 років тому +1

    25:50 white plays Bd4

    • @kylefogel3994
      @kylefogel3994 Рік тому

      This is what I was looking at. Did anybody find a refutation?

    • @jabbablade1884
      @jabbablade1884 Рік тому +1

      @@kylefogel3994 I don't know what I was thinking 4 years ago, but I wouldn't play that move now, it seems pretty bad since black can then just take the queen for free. I am not 100% how it would play out but even after not playing chess for more than 3 years I would say that would be just a bad move for white.

    • @kylefogel3994
      @kylefogel3994 Рік тому

      @@jabbablade1884 lol wow, that’s why I’m 1400

    • @jabbablade1884
      @jabbablade1884 Рік тому

      @@kylefogel3994 Don't worry, when I first wrote that comment 4 years ago I was 1700, no matter how good you actually are, you will always make blunders... but you will make them less often as you get better for sure.

  • @u.v.s.5583
    @u.v.s.5583 9 місяців тому

    Wave a Red Bull against a flag, play hedgehog!

  • @iPlayChessAndStratego
    @iPlayChessAndStratego 8 років тому

    zzzzzzz

  • @guapoglass
    @guapoglass 2 роки тому

    Too angry. Get a calmer speaker next time.