The Immortal Rook Lift by 11-year old Josh Waitzkin

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  • Опубліковано 10 лют 2025
  • Download Mproov and Improve Your Chess Today! app.mproov.me/...
    Follow MprooV on Twitter / mproovapp #agadmator Joshua Waitzkin vs Edward A Frumkin
    "Heaven Can Waitzkin" (game of the day Jan-26-2005)
    Open (1987), New York, NY USA
    Sicilian Defense: Four Knights Variation (B40)
    1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 e6 3. d4 cd4 4. Nd4 Nf6 5. Nc3 Nc6 6. Be3 Bb4 7. f3 d5 8. Bb5 Bd7 9. Bc6 bc6 10. e5 Ng8 11. a3 Ba5 12. b4 Bc7 13. f4 Ne7 14. Na4 O-O 15. Nc5 a5 16. c3 Nc8 17. O-O Nb6 18. Qg4 Nc4 19. Bf2 Qe8 20. Rfe1 Bc8 21. Bh4 Kh8 22. a4 Bb6 23. Rad1 Bc5 24. bc5 Nb2 25. Re3 Nd1 26. Qg7 Kg7 27. Bf6 Kg6 28. Rg3 Kh6 29. Bg7 Kh5 30. Rg5 Kh4 31. Nf3#
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 1,1 тис.

  • @PaleGhost69
    @PaleGhost69 7 років тому +2275

    What a devious little kid. That was amazing.

    • @saynotolonelygirl15
      @saynotolonelygirl15 7 років тому +15

      omg truer words have never been spoken

    • @Orion-zq8jf
      @Orion-zq8jf 7 років тому +28

      Lol did he stick his hand out offering a draw after opponent took his rook knowing it was all over? Like the movie*

    • @Chrononaut2006
      @Chrononaut2006 6 років тому +1

      right, that was sick

    • @ERBideaVault
      @ERBideaVault 6 років тому +4

      Aren't all chess victors devious? But I suppose his being a kid only amplifies that deviancy.

    • @ballskin
      @ballskin 6 років тому +1

      +the savage Nope, devious is accurate.

  • @amadeuswinqvist2893
    @amadeuswinqvist2893 4 роки тому +381

    Somewhere, in the continuum of time and space, Michal Tal shed a tear at that glorious rook and queen sacrifice.

    • @alexayers9463
      @alexayers9463 4 роки тому +23

      So corny. Tal was alive when this game happened and he probably knew about it.

    • @MrVvulf
      @MrVvulf 3 роки тому +11

      I like to imagine that Tal and Nezhmetdinov high fived when they saw it.

    • @PeterWhite-q1k
      @PeterWhite-q1k 3 місяці тому

      Well said!

  • @JJ-kl7eq
    @JJ-kl7eq 7 років тому +1775

    I played pinball with Josh at a tournament in Allentown during his young prodigy days. I had no idea it was him until after I saw him playing in the next round. He was not a great pinball player. But as he had thanked me for allowing him to play doubles pinball with me, later I realized I experienced firsthand a key point of Searching For Bobby Fischer. Despite the tremendous chess talent, he just relished being an ordinary kid. Doing ordinary kid things like playing catch in the yard with Dad. Or pinball with some guy he bumped into at chess tournament.I doubt he remembers it. But because of his humility and general "coolness" it remains one of the top highlights of my life.Stay cool, Josh. In everything you do. Best regards, Jim Jumper

    • @spaceshipearth999
      @spaceshipearth999 7 років тому +46

      cool story

    • @charlieramirez9485
      @charlieramirez9485 7 років тому +14

      James Jumper nice experience

    • @jbaru1211
      @jbaru1211 7 років тому +19

      Wow. That's a beautiful fairytale

    • @mymail3950
      @mymail3950 6 років тому +26

      If he's really like the movie portrayed him (and from your comment it sounds like he is) then he probably does remember that. Fondly.

    • @bach5861
      @bach5861 6 років тому +1

      People with "tremendous chess talent" usually become world champions

  • @Jack-Lack
    @Jack-Lack 5 років тому +326

    When your opponent and the adults in the room think you're blundering your rook and queen, but you're unleashing forced checkmate in 6. This play seems brilliant to me.

    • @spaceguy7777
      @spaceguy7777 4 роки тому +1

      It was

    • @deridivisstar884
      @deridivisstar884 4 роки тому +6

      It was the arrogance of the adult he was playing that allowed for Josh to take advantage. I play every person like they are a grandmaster, even if I know they suck. I never underestimate anyone, and this game is proof of why no one should underestimate their opponents.

    • @furrykef
      @furrykef 4 роки тому +20

      @@deridivisstar884 It wasn't necessarily arrogance. There's a rule in chess: if you can't understand why your opponent is offering material, take the material. Either you will find that the sacrifice was unsound, or you'll learn something. The mate that Waitzkin played was very unintuitive -- especially considering Rg3 was much more obvious than Waitzkin's actual idea -- and Frumkin had no reason not to take the rook unless he could find the mate himself.

    • @deridivisstar884
      @deridivisstar884 4 роки тому +4

      @@furrykef If someone offers material, I immediately think it's a trap. That's when I study the position very carefully before taking the seemingly free piece.

    • @isaz2425
      @isaz2425 4 роки тому

      @@furrykef exactly, I saw the move rook to g3 before bishop f6, but even if it looks good at first, the king can actually escape.
      I completely missed the option of bishop to f6 first.

  • @CSifjrixhrj
    @CSifjrixhrj 6 років тому +2409

    Faceless hoodie guy doesn't usually fare well in these games

    • @xmus4023
      @xmus4023 5 років тому +48

      A string of bad luck.

    • @snim9515
      @snim9515 5 років тому +21

      That's exactly why they are faceless.

    • @eliteshadowproductions8547
      @eliteshadowproductions8547 5 років тому +6

      Before you can be a master you must be an apprentice

    • @michaelrose1927
      @michaelrose1927 5 років тому +7

      he should just pick a random stock photo nextime and we would never know

    • @tonymusolino2369
      @tonymusolino2369 5 років тому

      Faceless hoodie guy...AI???

  • @tacticalchunder1207
    @tacticalchunder1207 7 років тому +264

    I had to watch that twice. That's one of the best plans I've seen.

    • @swayamanandadas1221
      @swayamanandadas1221 7 років тому +7

      The best?
      Try analysing plans of Mikhail tal!

    • @notahotshot
      @notahotshot 6 років тому +36

      Swayam Ananda Das
      They said, "one of the best" not, "the best".
      It is an opinion which many share.

    • @ardytanaleon9163
      @ardytanaleon9163 6 років тому +17

      Swayam Ananda Das lol.. 11 year old and he hatin... smh..

    • @evie8078
      @evie8078 5 років тому +1

      I don't know how many times I've watched this,absolutely beautiful!

    • @dalesmith7310
      @dalesmith7310 4 роки тому

      @Swayam Ananda Das
      I guess you overlooked the words “I’ve seen”.

  • @michaelxxqvl
    @michaelxxqvl 4 роки тому +13

    "Hello everyone", is the most comforting thing I hear all day.

  • @jp4431
    @jp4431 5 років тому +741

    When someone who's good at something blunders...
    IT'S A TRAP

  • @michaelstern5206
    @michaelstern5206 7 років тому +339

    Thank you for using quotes from the chess players involved in the matches themselves! It’s really nice to see your attention to detail and how your videos are developing.

  • @chesschannel8262
    @chesschannel8262 2 роки тому +5

    Josh Waitzkin showed me the great depth and beauty of chess. This is the best game in the world! It was a great pleasure learning from him. It was a magical time. Thanks a lot Josh!

  • @chasechapman9302
    @chasechapman9302 4 роки тому +18

    His book he wrote as an adult The Art of Learning is probably one of the best self help books I've ever read. Changed my mindset

  • @mylovelyman2
    @mylovelyman2 7 років тому +287

    Underestimated the little fellow! 😂😂😂 Just a bit, that little fellow destroyed him in a very painful way. Classic comment!

    • @johnjuan4741
      @johnjuan4741 7 років тому +73

      Haha. But it can be weird psychologically playing a child. Long ago, I played a guy who's now a 2475 rated IM, back when he was age 7. He was sitting on two phone books when we played. In a drawn endgame, he stood on the books to reach his little hand across the table to offer me a draw. I declined, something in me not able to take a child seriously. I then took the famously bad approach of trying to force a win in a dead drawn endgame and... I lost. A lesson for me long ago to play the board and never the opponent... cuz the board does not care how many phone books you're sitting on :)

  • @baphometic8767
    @baphometic8767 6 років тому +73

    Anyone rewatch the ending sequence to the video like 5 times? what an amazing finish

    • @Astrobrant2
      @Astrobrant2 4 роки тому +9

      I did. And each time I was more impressed. Yes, it looked like Josh lifted the rook just to pile up on the king side. But moving Rg3 on the next move after the lift would have lost tempo right after losing a rook. Josh _had_ to sacrifice the queen first in order to be successful. And I'm thinking, who would even consider sacrificing a rook and a queen on consecutive moves with so many pieces still on the board? Who would picture walking black's king all the way to h4? When thinking about the sequence from the point of sacrificing his rook, I never pictured his Bg7 move, either. I also never considered the knight being the final killing piece until ...Kh4.
      I'm not much of a chess player, but if the real experts are impressed with this, then I don't feel _too_ dumb for considering it so amazing.

    • @MrVvulf
      @MrVvulf 3 роки тому +2

      @@Astrobrant2 Morphy, Nezhmetdinov, or Tal. Take your pick.

  • @mohdamini773
    @mohdamini773 6 років тому +437

    7:23
    Me: of course I see, its pawn to g3

    • @robbierotten2215
      @robbierotten2215 4 роки тому +37

      Pawn to g3 works as well. Mate in 3.

    • @anubis63000jd
      @anubis63000jd 4 роки тому +6

      @@robbierotten2215 Yeah, rook to h5 would do it.

    • @GlorifiedTruth
      @GlorifiedTruth 4 роки тому +12

      Because I'm not very good, it took me a while to see it! 31) g3+, Kh3; 32) Rh5+, Kg4; 33) Rh4 mate

    • @Hummabubba
      @Hummabubba 4 роки тому +3

      I saw the same thing lol

    • @sardinhunt
      @sardinhunt 4 роки тому

      @@GlorifiedTruth It's about manouvering the rook actually

  • @stigekalder
    @stigekalder 6 років тому +16

    I'm not much of a chess player myself, although the game fascinates me. But for the first time this game has giving me a glimpse how beautiful chess can be. Thank you very much !

    • @Astrobrant2
      @Astrobrant2 4 роки тому

      Since you posted that comment, agadmator uploaded a video titled "This is Why Chess Will Always Be Beautiful".
      ua-cam.com/video/HkBz79W5tV4/v-deo.html
      If you want to skip to the good part, go to 12:24. Take time to notice how tight this is for both players and how many blunders white could make that would result in a stalemate. There is literally only one move white can make to win after black's ...Qb7.
      It'll blow your mind.

  • @contactkeithstack
    @contactkeithstack 4 роки тому +3

    Beautiful game. I come back to watch this every now and again. Keep up the good work agadmator.

    • @hkumar7340
      @hkumar7340 20 днів тому

      I do too... It is an amazing end game, and doubly so because it was played by an 11-year old.

  • @gilber78
    @gilber78 4 роки тому +140

    And it was in this position that Josh disappointed his father 😂

    • @nationalgeo2191
      @nationalgeo2191 3 роки тому +5

      No wonder he quit chess and was viewed as only caring about how he appears when he plays

    • @nicbentulan
      @nicbentulan 3 роки тому +11

      HOW IS IT POSSIBLE TO LOSE IN 7 MOVES???!?
      Dumbledore asked calmly

    • @metlife8682
      @metlife8682 Рік тому +2

      Who punished him severely

  • @Owyn999
    @Owyn999 4 роки тому +1

    Love that you plugged his book with no affiliate links. Was a great book, it keeps coming back to me whenever I’m learning new things.

  • @xyon9090
    @xyon9090 7 років тому +698

    That kid lifted that Rook better than I do at the gym.

    • @rafaelgabrielgarlinidal-bo9496
      @rafaelgabrielgarlinidal-bo9496 7 років тому +24

      Then lift queens

    • @Fonzleberry
      @Fonzleberry 7 років тому +11

      Sounds a bit gay. Nothing wrong with that, if that's what you're into.

    • @999KMX
      @999KMX 7 років тому +6

      Fonzleberry 😂😂😂😂

    • @EmdrGreg
      @EmdrGreg 6 років тому +1

      If they're heavy, all the better...

    • @MartinJohnZ
      @MartinJohnZ 6 років тому

      Dutch word for rook is "toren", meaning "tower". Lifting towers has a different ring to it no?

  • @jollyjack5856
    @jollyjack5856 7 років тому

    I LOVE your software highlighting the "from" and "to" squares for the current last move! Makes all the difference, much easier to follow. Thank you!

  • @nomibe2911
    @nomibe2911 4 роки тому +14

    I met Josh, he came to my job to play some of the kids there. I was the only one who knew who he was and the movie based on his life. I also mentioned how I learned so much from his tutorials on Chess Masters. I played him and he destroyed me.

  • @basehead617
    @basehead617 6 років тому +513

    Seeing these games is frustrating for us low level players.. I can often see a 'good' sacrifice, but making errors calculating is so common.. you miss one possible defensive move 5 moves later, and all of a sudden that mate plan fails and you're down a piece or two.

    • @brianpeck4035
      @brianpeck4035 5 років тому +49

      After the rook sac and then the queen, it's a sure thing. Good checkmating skills allowed him to see it. Double sacs to get to a mating position are counter intuitive to me. I got better when i stopped chasing complicated plans that always seemed to backfire and focus on good positioning and tactical protocols like posting and overloading positions. Then the winning moves fell into my lap and I didnt need to see 4 or more moves ahead which is not my strong suit.

    • @CabbageSandwich
      @CabbageSandwich 5 років тому +3

      Yea, I feel you problem is it's almost impossible to win against a really good player without calculating

    • @HarrisonCountyStudio
      @HarrisonCountyStudio 5 років тому

      Delon Duvenage i agree

    • @imapopo2924
      @imapopo2924 5 років тому +2

      @Delon Duvenage I've noticed the same thing myself. That's why I play pretty much only on a tactical level rather than strategic. My overarching strategies always fall apart, but my winging it tactics are usually better.

    • @JS-tm1gq
      @JS-tm1gq 5 років тому +2

      @@imapopo2924 you're a popo

  • @Alebtong1
    @Alebtong1 7 років тому +144

    Brilliant!! The more I watch these videos the more i realize that hanging on to pieces does not neccessarily guarantee a win. Positional play is key in Chess. With a good position you can use only three pieces to make someones life mserable

    • @viacheslav5574
      @viacheslav5574 7 років тому +6

      Don't forget about the "survivourship bias"

    • @theazrael4423
      @theazrael4423 6 років тому

      Steven , truly

    • @ShifuCareaga
      @ShifuCareaga 6 років тому

      correct: the Shi is EVERYTHING

    • @johnnypastrana6727
      @johnnypastrana6727 6 років тому +3

      Steven ...Yes, well stated...time and time again pieces are sacrificed for positional dominance. I am lousy at this aspect of the game...

    • @ethanrozling2732
      @ethanrozling2732 6 років тому +6

      The other epiphany one has is that, it's not the squares your piece's occupy, it's the squares that they are threatening. Every now and then I'll pause a game and count and see which player's pieces are attacking more squares, if that players king is reasonably safe, that player will usually win.

  • @YetiDoesArt
    @YetiDoesArt 6 років тому +3

    Your videos and your commentary are awesome! Also, this is by far my favorite game and Josh Waitzkin is my all-time favorite chess player!

  • @LargestClassifieds
    @LargestClassifieds 5 років тому +8

    "I have never considered myself a prodigy." phrase could only come from a truly humble prodigy.

  • @franrukavina6034
    @franrukavina6034 7 років тому

    thanks for put more of joshes games, they are wonderful and when you hear him explain the principles and ideas behind moves it gives you a new way to play the game

  • @SamuelPearlman
    @SamuelPearlman 4 роки тому +34

    "Ha ha, you give me Rook! Hahahaha, you give me Queen! .... ohhhhh...."

    • @bdbailey
      @bdbailey 4 роки тому

      "Hahaha, you give me king!"

  • @gcsumat7900
    @gcsumat7900 4 роки тому +2

    You do the best chess match breakdowns. Really appreciate the insight and perspective you provide.

  • @AT-qm8gv
    @AT-qm8gv 5 років тому +103

    When you exchange a Rook and a Queen for a King.

  • @kevinschoedinger8335
    @kevinschoedinger8335 4 роки тому

    Thank you for sharing this... my favorite one so far! So cool how this ‘misdirection’ played out. Helped me see how Josh could see many moves ahead. Wow!

  • @shaunlemouton2534
    @shaunlemouton2534 6 років тому +9

    I didn't see that queen sacrifice coming. Well played.

  • @justinwr092
    @justinwr092 7 років тому

    That Chessmaster course was how I first learned the game. So frikkin perfect. I was so hooked. I could not stop watching it. I remember annoying some coworkers because we were all packed on a bus for a work trip, and I had my laptop out nonstop watching that damn course. I need to find that again. His annotated games are worth the price alone.

  • @arrowghost
    @arrowghost 7 років тому +77

    Good times when I used to play Chessmaster. :)

    • @abduljalal5727
      @abduljalal5727 7 років тому +1

      I still do :)

    • @shantoreywilkins651
      @shantoreywilkins651 6 років тому

      arrowghost 🎩
      😁
      👕👍Great!
      👖

    • @vineethnarayan1811
      @vineethnarayan1811 4 роки тому

      @@abduljalal5727Huh , the softwere is not sold anymore !!! 😞
      Really used to enjoy it

    • @EsthelielSunfury
      @EsthelielSunfury 4 роки тому +1

      @@vineethnarayan1811 Piratebay has the 1.02 version and it's very easy to install.

    • @vineethnarayan1811
      @vineethnarayan1811 4 роки тому

      @@EsthelielSunfury thanks mate , which check it out

  • @scicofilms8037
    @scicofilms8037 4 роки тому +1

    Marvelous game! Unusually good commentary. Interesting video! Thank you for sharing.

  • @joshscott7401
    @joshscott7401 6 років тому +3

    Great analysis on one of the more interesting games I’ve ever seen!

  • @paulstabin6233
    @paulstabin6233 4 роки тому

    Thank you. One of my favorites.

  • @PaladinswordSaurfang
    @PaladinswordSaurfang 7 років тому +3

    I recently re-installed an old copy of Chessmaster 10th Edition on my computer, with all the Josh Waitzkin tutorials. Waitzkin pretty much taught me most of what I know about chess, especially the endgame. Amazing guy. Sucks that he quit. And yeah he was definitely a prodigy as a kid.

  • @godbluffvdgg
    @godbluffvdgg 5 років тому

    If only everyone that would explain things as succinctly and precisely without their over-explanations of moves, as you did...It's cool how you just showed the moves...I Saw that Finding Bobby Fisher movie when it came out and forgot about it...Until yesterday; I thought Joshua was a fictional character... I had just rewatched it yesterday...What a brilliant masterpiece and the kid that played Josh stopped making movies not long after...Thanks for the upload!

  • @phineasgage8252
    @phineasgage8252 3 роки тому +4

    He was so adorable, noone would have thought he was a little monster

  • @paulstabin6233
    @paulstabin6233 6 років тому +1

    My favorite analysis of some real magic. This is what makes it all worthwhile for me

  • @brianfarley4814
    @brianfarley4814 5 років тому +24

    Game lasted two years. Waitzkin started out 9 and finished the game at 11.

  • @amyalindaily3781
    @amyalindaily3781 7 років тому

    You make my day white Joshua Waitzkin. "Nobody" showed a game (of his) in a long time ( only You and Suren). Thanks a lot.

  • @NoelThe1st
    @NoelThe1st 7 років тому +8

    Thanks for the Waitzkin game! Can't wait to see more in the future.

  • @nickpalmer209
    @nickpalmer209 6 років тому +1

    I really like how you explain all the games. It given me a renewed interest in the game.

  • @johnredberg
    @johnredberg 6 років тому +10

    "11-year old Josh, although, maybe he was ten, I don't really know, played..." classic agadmator XD

  • @ERBideaVault
    @ERBideaVault 6 років тому

    A rook sac in itself is one thing. A queen sac in itself is another. BUT...a rook sac immediately followed by a Queen sac? Remarkable. One move I especially love is rook A to D1; I think this is where Waitzkin knows the game is won because it gives him the flexibility to lift either rook, depending on how black plays the C4 knight. If black moves his knight off of C4 (which he does), life the E1 rook; if black keeps his knight in place at C4, lift the D1 rook. Thank you, Joshua, for showing us what brilliance looks like.

  • @Gizziiusa
    @Gizziiusa 5 років тому +12

    wow, rook and queen back to back sacrifice. that would be hard to see regardless.

  • @pjoter_the_great7879
    @pjoter_the_great7879 7 років тому +2

    Svaka cast ! Sve pohvale agadmator samo tako nastavi !

  • @victorslist3718
    @victorslist3718 7 років тому +5

    you have a great voice brother...all the videos you make are awesome...some guy is copying you style of presentation but unfortunately his voice/knowledge sux...you are the best youtube chess video reviewer...

    • @dezsoracz872
      @dezsoracz872 6 років тому

      O yes, with that voice ...he could be a soprano at the Manhattan Chess Club....

  • @redoarceneaux1203
    @redoarceneaux1203 5 років тому

    idk why but everytime i start playing badly at chess, i find myself coming back to this vid bc it’s just so badass and it cheers me up lol

  • @paradigmshift4686
    @paradigmshift4686 5 років тому +30

    I met Josh at a tournament in Connecticut many years ago where he played Reshevsky. My impression of him at the time was that he was too nice a person to succeed at the highest levels of chess. He didn't seem to have the Killer Instinct, the excessive will to win, or the necessary character flaws to be a world champion.

    • @powerlifting1012
      @powerlifting1012 5 років тому +2

      To be the greatest at something you have to be obsessive is what Eddi le Hall said the 2018 worlds strongest man are you saying the josh just didnt have that kind of drive

    • @jdlessl
      @jdlessl 4 роки тому

      Which is exactly what his movie was all about.

    • @Aisatsana1971
      @Aisatsana1971 4 роки тому +2

      Paradigm Shift i kind of agree but i think you’re majorly forgetting about the personality of Spassky. He was a gentleman who did not possess typical competitive behaviour, he just enjoyed the game and happened to be the best at his time before potentially the best ever chess player dethroned him...Fischer may have been what you described: an obsessive player with killer instinct, but the truth is he was just one of a kind or could beat anybody.
      My point being that you may be onto a correlation, but ultimately Josh could have made if he wanted to. An excessive will to win is not always necessary.

    • @Herv3
      @Herv3 4 роки тому

      @@jdlessl a boy's journey through the junior chess world and the obstacles that results from his journey.
      It also includes messaging about what it means for parents to raise a child in a competitive field for kids.

    • @IamJustinM
      @IamJustinM 3 роки тому +2

      He is a World Champion in Martial Arts so he has the killer instinct... IT'S A TRAP

  • @mobiusklein9140
    @mobiusklein9140 5 років тому

    Fantastic, thanks so much for bringing us this.

  • @KironKabir
    @KironKabir 5 років тому +43

    He’s now a Brazilian Jiu jitsu black belt at the Marcelo Garcia academy in New York

    • @BratvaTV
      @BratvaTV 5 років тому

      And I bet he gets his ass handed to him easily

    • @HRRRRRDRRRRR
      @HRRRRRDRRRRR 5 років тому +5

      @@BratvaTV Why?

    • @LUchesi
      @LUchesi 5 років тому +6

      He's the co-founder of said New York academy. He also has multiple U.S. medals in Taiji Push Hands and was the 2004 world champion.

    • @johnhanselman6371
      @johnhanselman6371 5 років тому +6

      I find it amazing that all sorts of gifted people enjoy Jiu jitsu. The star from "Married With Children" is also is a Brazilian Black belt. You know the guy that scored 4 touch downs in a single game for Polk High School.

    • @noone-qu5ec
      @noone-qu5ec 4 роки тому +1

      @@BratvaTV says the batman nerd

  • @galapagos1809
    @galapagos1809 5 років тому

    The real genius of that rook lift is that it would appear that he is using it indeed to slide into g3 as agadmator said (with or without delayed knight capture by queen), with the idea to take g7 on the subsequent move, giving black time for a defensive f7/g7/h7 pawn plat first. The immediately forcing Q x g7 sacrifice play is easily overlooked. Thanks for sharing this gem!

  • @Ceece20
    @Ceece20 5 років тому +4

    I like this style. Never play defensive when you can play hyper offensive. Always be looking to sacrifice for better positioning.

  • @richtofenillingroth641
    @richtofenillingroth641 5 років тому +1

    Awesome match...a very clever rook and queen sacrifice. I loved it!

  • @jancivianci3028
    @jancivianci3028 7 років тому +60

    Edward Frumkin looks like Nazgul

    • @onewhostudies6856
      @onewhostudies6856 5 років тому +4

      Nazgul: "No man can defeat me"
      Josh: "I am no man. I'm a kid."
      Checkmate.

    • @eliotfintushel
      @eliotfintushel 4 роки тому

      I knew Ed Frumkin in Rochester, NY. He organized the chess club there. A very nice man!

  • @TheEndlessNote
    @TheEndlessNote 7 років тому

    very nice channel. All games I 've seen so far have your commends straight to the point without more words than really needed (like most of chess channels in youtube). Thanks mate, keep it going

  • @herzwatithink9289
    @herzwatithink9289 7 років тому +40

    It looked kind of innocuous til the queen went kamikaze.
    It was a sweet combo, maybe somewhat easy to overlook in that White was hanging a piece that if captured meant Black would be hitting another again-more-valuable unprotected piece, encouraging Black to think it needed to be moved, after which the defensive Rg8 looks to be covering the bases.
    This game could almost be called the Immortal Intermezo :)

  • @cirke1477
    @cirke1477 4 роки тому

    My all the time fav UA-cam channel

  • @IDDQDSound
    @IDDQDSound 4 роки тому +4

    Damn he brought his king out to the centre while everyone watched and shot it in the face :O

  • @josephasghar
    @josephasghar 6 років тому +1

    Brilliant! And great storytelling.

  • @Abulletinmyhead
    @Abulletinmyhead 7 років тому +202

    Rookie mistake :)

  • @Ak-eu7nx
    @Ak-eu7nx 7 років тому

    I am ur channel subscriber from 5k to 37k ur channel really grew very fast and in the starting ur garry,booby,tal vids really inspired a lot thanx a lot :)

  • @fungoorstitch
    @fungoorstitch 6 років тому +3

    Wow. What a brilliant game.

  • @LeoLewis
    @LeoLewis 6 років тому +2

    Wow. I haven't played chess in years and watching this game has really made me want to dust off my board. Thank you!

  • @radrook4481
    @radrook4481 6 років тому +4

    Imagine the shock it caused the opponent when that queen was sacrificed and he gradually realized that there wasn't a way out.

  • @darkin1484
    @darkin1484 5 років тому +6

    6:25 yo that's one very fast king. He jumped to g7 in 1 move

  • @bennyrodrigz
    @bennyrodrigz 5 років тому +2

    That was incredible. When he took the bait and the check. Ooof I had to replay

  • @Xellros
    @Xellros 7 років тому +17

    The audio book for the art of learning is also narrated by Josh Waitzkin himself. So if you liked the Academy from Chessmaster, I'd highly recommend the audio book.

  • @michaelmorris4515
    @michaelmorris4515 7 років тому +94

    Waitzkin covers this game himself in the tutorials of one of the Chessmaster programs. It's an entertaining account. Apparently after lifting the rook he ran off to find his father to show him the rest of the game, leaving that grandmaster wondering why the kid was so excited about losing a rook. Also, this was the first time Waitzkin beat a grandmaster.

    • @alirezazarabian1919
      @alirezazarabian1919 6 років тому +5

      Yeah exactly I remember I saw this game on chessmaster

    • @JimTDF
      @JimTDF 6 років тому +2

      i don't think Frumkin was ever a GM. His FIDE profile simply says "No Titles". His US rating is around 2000 and he gained US National Master in 1992.

    • @11rockiton
      @11rockiton 6 років тому +4

      @@JimTDF Exactly, Michael Morris is an idiot with incorrect facts, yet has 53 likes to his dumbass comment. Frumpkin is NO Grand Master. His play this game wasn't even worthy of his FIDE Master ranking.

    • @farzana6676
      @farzana6676 6 років тому

      @@11rockiton ua-cam.com/video/Qf_mpaMJwng/v-deo.html
      Waitzkin says he's a master himself.

    • @farzana6676
      @farzana6676 6 років тому

      @@JimTDF ua-cam.com/video/Qf_mpaMJwng/v-deo.html

  • @nobodyspecial2835
    @nobodyspecial2835 5 років тому

    You are awesome, man. Thank you for these rich videos.

  • @preparedsurvivalist2245
    @preparedsurvivalist2245 6 років тому +3

    I'm always looking at rook sacrifices when creating attacks on the kingside. You have two, so if you can give up one to gain a tempo or remove a defender, the other rook along with a queen may be enough to force mate. Especially when the opponents rooks are themselves inactive, and his only idea is to gain a material advantage.

  • @anindyamookerjee7823
    @anindyamookerjee7823 4 роки тому +1

    Thanks for suggesting the book by josh , much appreciated

  • @develote7670
    @develote7670 4 роки тому +9

    Could I suggest that you stick with one color for the border of the board when the game played is being discussed but switch to another color when you are discussing other possible moves and the consequences of these. This way we have a visual way of knowing what you are talking about. Other than that, solid channel mate.

    • @Astrobrant2
      @Astrobrant2 4 роки тому +1

      That's not a bad idea. That or some other way of letting us know when he is exploring possibilities. I'm thinking maybe putting a second board on the screen just for such sequences. While I consider his screen layout very nice, we don't need to see him or the other things for brief periods of time.
      I can usually follow when he does that, but I do get confused sometimes. It would be nice to have the original position as a constant reference.

  • @matrix31003
    @matrix31003 6 років тому +1

    I've read his book. He is a really fascinating guy. What I appreciate about him is that he left chess for competitive martial arts which I have done my entire life. Very cool!

  • @SamuelPearlman
    @SamuelPearlman 4 роки тому +6

    I'm just waiting for one video where Faceless Hoodie Guy pulls off a miraculous win.
    Kinda like if the Washington Generals ever beat the Harlem Globetrotters.

  • @teucelsali
    @teucelsali 7 років тому

    I admire your passion for rook lifts. Keep up the good work!!

  • @Northeasy215
    @Northeasy215 7 років тому +44

    Josh moved on to physical chess 😁

    • @Hamking1
      @Hamking1 6 років тому

      Northeasy taiji chuan, the game of unlimited movements

    • @warbandjudo6904
      @warbandjudo6904 6 років тому +2

      Hamking1 Taichi is a shit martial art

    • @CoachJohnMcGuirk
      @CoachJohnMcGuirk 6 років тому

      Uggly Boi ALL martial arts are for retards.

    • @ballskin
      @ballskin 6 років тому +1

      +Pie Guy No, it takes experience. The current masters of GJJ are uneducated morons.

    • @ballskin
      @ballskin 6 років тому

      Here's one of those uneducated morons I was talking about.

  • @BillParslow
    @BillParslow 6 років тому

    Brilliant game - thanks for adding the background as well.

  • @Vigyananand104
    @Vigyananand104 6 років тому +8

    The King was 'dragged out of the castle and trampled by the Rook'!

    • @sabin97
      @sabin97 6 років тому +6

      well he was dragged out of the castle by a bishop, cornered by a rook, and killed by a knight.....while a bunch of pawns watched.....

  • @jawadhussain8175
    @jawadhussain8175 6 років тому +2

    One of my favorite games. Period.

  • @MrEdwardCollins
    @MrEdwardCollins 4 роки тому +3

    You know you're a chess nerd when you can say you read "Searching For Bobby Fischer" five years _before_ the movie came out.

  • @whiznot3028
    @whiznot3028 6 років тому

    That is one of my favorite chess videos. Thanks.

  • @RachelZamstein
    @RachelZamstein 4 роки тому +10

    The computer would have said he made the wrong move I bet.

    • @nickzee7723
      @nickzee7723 4 роки тому

      I'm certain the engine I use would!

    • @League____
      @League____ 3 роки тому

      @@nickzee7723 nope NNUE Stockfish13+ says the best move is the Re3 on move 25 at depth 34 because capturing the rook is forced mate.

  • @Enuelle
    @Enuelle 7 років тому

    Loved the way you explained the game and told the story at the same time

  • @Robi2009
    @Robi2009 7 років тому +141

    Don't move before you see it...

    • @jamesart9
      @jamesart9 6 років тому +5

      Robi_CK Holy, holy, HOLY FCUK ! ! ! !
      EVERYTHING wrong about my game that is crap is because I do NOT follow your axiom.
      Now I am going to imprint it on my simpleton's brain and maybe get somewhere with my chess game.
      The B E S T A D V I C E E V E R..... Thank You !!!!

    • @rodmact6548
      @rodmact6548 6 років тому +12

      James Arte - That advice from Robi_CK is a quote from the movie Searching For Bobby Fischer, about Josh Waitzkin.

    • @VisionPoet
      @VisionPoet 6 років тому +2

      @@rodmact6548 talk about looking stupid 😂

    • @nomibe2911
      @nomibe2911 6 років тому +1

      He says that in Chessmasters.

    • @hypercubemaster2729
      @hypercubemaster2729 6 років тому +3

      I believe that it was said before Chessmaster, actually. He is right that it was a quote from the movie 'Searching for Bobby Fischer'. More than likely Josh's teacher Bruce Pandolfini actually said the quote in real life, although what was really said was "Don't move until you see it."

  • @TommyBeaux
    @TommyBeaux 6 років тому +1

    This is such a great website! Thank you.

  • @fishsmellbad1862
    @fishsmellbad1862 5 років тому +20

    I don't play chess all too much and i'm just wondering what the hell a rook lift is...

    • @darthkek1953
      @darthkek1953 5 років тому +10

      Getting one of your rooks in front of one of your pawns.

    • @jurjenvanderhoek316
      @jurjenvanderhoek316 5 років тому +1

      A rook lift is simply a move in which the rook goes from the back rank to a higher one

    • @brianpeck4035
      @brianpeck4035 4 роки тому +25

      A minor surgical procedure which removes the wrinkles from the rook.

  • @oregonone132
    @oregonone132 5 років тому

    excellent quick play---thanks. great talk.

  • @FOAA2021
    @FOAA2021 7 років тому +5

    That tutorial in Chessmaster 11th Edition is what hooked me on chess and it elevated my understanding of the game to a whole other level! Glad to see you agree with me on the quality of that Virtual Chess Academy. In my opinion the best place to start for a beginner and it's also very inexpensive! Funny how Josh really ended up "like Fisher in a sens.." The game of chess in this age, I also have a problem with it. today, it's almost more about memory than anything else.. All about the best "engine move" and whatnot. I understand how it got to that point, but sometimes I have much more fun playing games full of "inaccuracies", and where me and my adversaries don't know all the perfect move. It's much more exciting and creative. But hey, that's just my opinion. Ps: the grandmaster edition is basically the same but has a little bit more content, mostly related to Josh's book.

    • @exclamationx2
      @exclamationx2 7 років тому

      Me too - this was actually one of my favorite games from that - this one and the on vs Luna and also vs katina, which was very similar to the Luna game - same position reached after 6 or 8 moves

  • @theazrael4423
    @theazrael4423 6 років тому

    Thoroughly enjoyed this 😀

  • @roshanverma9276
    @roshanverma9276 5 років тому +3

    When I saw it first time .. I'm like ""whaaaaaaaat ????????""

  • @stevenmederos
    @stevenmederos 4 роки тому

    And this is why this game intrigues me so much. What a beautiful game!

  • @akmd114379
    @akmd114379 4 роки тому +27

    Waitzkin should have offered him a draw when his opponent took that rook.

    • @ghezoi
      @ghezoi 4 роки тому +1

      why?

    • @EternalHappElements
      @EternalHappElements 4 роки тому

      To save some dignity for his father?

    • @akmd114379
      @akmd114379 4 роки тому +13

      @@EternalHappElements on the movie searching for Bobby Fischer, Josh offers his opponent a draw on the final match after realizing his opponent made a fatal mistake.

    • @ghezoi
      @ghezoi 4 роки тому +2

      Oh ok lol

    • @kennethbuluran2348
      @kennethbuluran2348 3 роки тому +1

      @@akmd114379 Hahaha that's funny

  • @elbay2
    @elbay2 7 років тому

    Wow, what a game! Thanks for posting!

  • @eqonox307
    @eqonox307 3 роки тому +4

    Who came here after watching “Innocent Moves” from Netflix

    • @Pidamoussouma
      @Pidamoussouma 3 роки тому +1

      Me...😉

    • @nicbentulan
      @nicbentulan 3 роки тому +1

      JOSH WAITZKIN CAN COMPETE IN CHESSBOXING
      'The current minimum requirements to fight in a Chess Boxing Global event include an Elo rating of 1,600 and a record of at least fifty amateur bouts fought in boxing or another similar martial art.'

  • @mathiasg.7163
    @mathiasg.7163 3 роки тому +1

    6:25 aaahh yes.. king captures with check. This Waitzkin kid is a genius

  • @sanseng000
    @sanseng000 6 років тому +3

    "Franklin got the rook and he also got his king on h4" ,😂

  • @tonyswhirl
    @tonyswhirl 7 років тому

    Thanks - I am a big fan of the movie - well done as always