BLUNDERS! Lecture with GM Ben Finegold

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  • Опубліковано 13 тра 2024
  • Check out Ben's Chessable courses here! www.chessable.com/author/BenF... GM Ben Finegold discusses blunders in a variety of games. This lecture was recorded July 8, 2018 at CCSCATL in Roswell, Georgia.
    Games Discussed:
    Praggnanandhaa, R vs. So, Wesley
    31st Leon Masters (2018)
    Vallejo Pons, Francisco vs. Santos Latasa, Jaime
    31st Leon Masters (2018)
    Mr_Earl_Gray vs. CCSCATL
    Chess.com (2018)
    CCSCATL vs. ya_boy_Agent
    Chess.com (2018)
    TheSuperSaiyan vs. CCSCATL
    Chess.com (2018)
    CCSCATL vs. JohnnyBoyUSA
    Chess.com (2018)
    Benedikt Jonasson vs. Haukur Angantysson
    Reykjavik (1984)
    Ignatz von Popele vs. Georg Marco
    Mante Carlo (1902)
    Carlos Torre Repetto vs. Frank E Parker
    New York (1924)
    Originally posted on the CCSCATL channel, but moved here for channel consolidation.
    If you're interested in sponsoring a lecture of your choice, email Karen at karen@atlchessclub.com
    Signup or gift a chess.com Premium membership to get access to their lessons, remove ads, improve your chess, AND help Ben at the same time!! Upgrade your chess.com membership or join! - go.chess.com/finegold.
    Buy Merch today! ccscatlmerch.com/
    Watch live at / itsbenandkaren
    Donations are appreciated at: streamlabs.com/itsBenandKaren...
    Follow me on Twitter: / ben_finegold
    #benfinegold #chess #basics
  • Ігри

КОМЕНТАРІ • 184

  • @mitchellwilson5770
    @mitchellwilson5770 10 місяців тому +210

    This is one of the best chess lectures you will ever see, Ben is the only GM who will tell you this stuff

  • @SevenTheJester
    @SevenTheJester 10 місяців тому +192

    I'm not gonna lie, the fact that a grandmaster blundered Rh8+ because he missed Rxe5, and *another* grandmaster resigned because he *also* missed Rxe5 makes me feel so much better about my game that I'll be talking about it for the next five years.

    • @mauer1
      @mauer1 10 місяців тому +12

      tbf
      that was the last minutes of like several hours of serious incredible high stakes chess in the last few days for them.

    • @SevenTheJester
      @SevenTheJester 10 місяців тому +6

      @@mauer1 That is very true, and it's also a valid point.
      Still gonna be keeping this one in the tank, though. 😁🤣

    • @emperorsascharoni9577
      @emperorsascharoni9577 9 місяців тому +8

      ​@@mauer1Basically the same as me on my second 5min blitz fighting for 5 Elo against an 800

    • @elg7365
      @elg7365 9 місяців тому

      Shut up

    • @guillaumelagueyte1019
      @guillaumelagueyte1019 8 місяців тому +2

      They saw ghosts.

  • @_nemo171
    @_nemo171 10 місяців тому +28

    38:06 "My 1st wife ... so like in the 3rd round she resigned ... Are we married now? No." lol

  • @jamespurcell6627
    @jamespurcell6627 4 місяці тому +14

    I’ve watched countless hours of chess videos on UA-cam. This one tops them all.

    • @jamesbell1613
      @jamesbell1613 15 днів тому

      This is one of the videos I've seen today. 😂

  • @robertork2505
    @robertork2505 9 місяців тому +44

    As someone who takes a lot of pride in playing dozens of good moves in a row just to blunder later on and feel insanely frustrated, this chess lecture is easily one of my favourites I've ever listened to

    • @lollycopter
      @lollycopter Місяць тому +1

      I think having an overconfidence in calculation/visualisation/blindfold ability and not having the humility to double check after each move is played is a common reason for many of these type of blunders. Always burn clock!

  • @andrzejwilk7316
    @andrzejwilk7316 10 місяців тому +75

    5:34 to the contrary, Ben. I had watched Germany-Brasil semifinal in 2014 and i was entertained the entire time.

    • @e4jasperi
      @e4jasperi 10 місяців тому +13

      schadenfreude is a thing of beauty if you are neutral.

    • @mauer1
      @mauer1 10 місяців тому +10

      is it 9 years already? damn

    • @levyjr6857
      @levyjr6857 10 місяців тому

      😢

    • @EMDS04
      @EMDS04 10 місяців тому +2

      ​@@mauer1damn I remember watching that game w my dad and uncle
      What a match

    • @gmatsue84
      @gmatsue84 9 місяців тому

      @@e4jasperi Me (brazilian) and my brazilian friends were having a blast, laughing the entire time about how f*cked up that was - we thought it would end 3 or 4-0 before the match because that Brazil team sucked, but nobody was prepared for what actually happened

  • @MrDrummerboi182
    @MrDrummerboi182 4 місяці тому +8

    I live by this motto of never resign, I was playing a game and was down to only my king and was about to get mated, he had mate in 1 on the board. He missed it and pushed his pawn and stalemated me so, yeah never resign.

  • @AkshaySinghJamwal
    @AkshaySinghJamwal 10 місяців тому +32

    I actually spat out my coffee at 10:25 because I laughed so hard.

    • @huracan200173
      @huracan200173 3 місяці тому +2

      hahaha brain damage or something haha Ben is gold

  • @samuellehman7796
    @samuellehman7796 10 місяців тому +90

    One of the best chess lectures ever

    • @strangetobias1474
      @strangetobias1474 10 місяців тому +11

      This one is definitely going down as one of the lectures in history.

    • @KvS1248
      @KvS1248 10 місяців тому +1

      I find humour so important in a teacher and Ben sure has that 😄

    • @Fidtz
      @Fidtz 10 місяців тому

      came here to post this.

    • @jongalt6837
      @jongalt6837 10 місяців тому +2

      I mean, it's good, but the moral of the story is not resign.. and try to limit blunders.. I don't think that's life changing information..

    • @pivotmaster9556
      @pivotmaster9556 10 місяців тому +2

      @@jongalt6837 he talked about a bunch of stuff, most importatn thing you forgot to mention is dont lose concentration against lower rated players and people that are worse than you

  • @freefall9832
    @freefall9832 10 місяців тому +30

    My blunders, half-assed attacks leaving pieces hanging.

    • @SevenTheJester
      @SevenTheJester 10 місяців тому +10

      Yeah, that's not good. You gotta make sure you're using whole-assed attacks. 😉😂
      Edit: whole-assed attacks are not to be confused with ass-hole attacks. Completely different thing.

    • @jorymil
      @jorymil 10 місяців тому +1

      It's better than playing passively and blundering... I've been doing that of late.

    • @FFadeaway
      @FFadeaway 10 місяців тому +1

      Lmao yep

  • @methanbreather
    @methanbreather 10 місяців тому +10

    'you at home know nothing' That is disturbingly accurate. Has Ben seen me playing?

  • @Tx66
    @Tx66 10 місяців тому +36

    Thanks for re-uploading my all-time favorite chess lecture. Ben is absolutely hilarious.

  • @chrisdiscgolferson1815
    @chrisdiscgolferson1815 10 місяців тому +12

    “That’s boring; that kid is going to get killed. I don’t care about that” -Benny F

  • @adrianvega3032
    @adrianvega3032 10 місяців тому +6

    this man has an amazing way with words, what a good samaritan with good advice

  • @thearm95
    @thearm95 9 місяців тому +4

    Halfway through this I thought I'd take a break for a 30 min rapid game...went on to blunder my queen!

  • @SolarPlayer
    @SolarPlayer 10 місяців тому +7

    I agree with the central premise of the lecture, but you also have to give me an opportunity. I try to blunder my queen whenever I can, but it's sometimes hard to find a good square for it. If you cooperate by developing your pieces and castling, together we can accomplish anything

  • @scaptal
    @scaptal 9 місяців тому +2

    man, how I love Ben Finegolds lectures, useful and entertaining, as we'd say in dutch, "hij is een heerlijke droogkloot"

  • @MarcFromBerryland
    @MarcFromBerryland 9 місяців тому +12

    Some years ago when this video was originally uploaded I watched it through and then my next chess session I won 17 consecutive games and I am a 900 player. That 17 game win streak probably had some luck involved and I was also probably a little more focused that day than usual but for sure it also had something to do with this lecture.

    • @bullymaguire632
      @bullymaguire632 8 місяців тому +4

      What rating are you now?

    • @MarcFromBerryland
      @MarcFromBerryland 8 місяців тому +1

      @@bullymaguire632 I just checked and I'm 1041 and 1438 on the 2 chess websites. I say "the 2 web sites" and not the actual names because UA-cam always seems to block comments with website names in them but anyway I'm pretty sure you know what 2 websites they are.

  • @verstraetenandre
    @verstraetenandre 10 місяців тому +9

    Finally, we discuss a subject which i am an expert of! \o/

  • @electorofsaxony7646
    @electorofsaxony7646 10 місяців тому +6

    This is absolutely phenomenal stuff. Bravo Ben.

  • @1pwNz0mb13Z
    @1pwNz0mb13Z 6 місяців тому +5

    In my last game, my opponent resigned a winning position immediatly after blundering a queen. I was confused as to why untill i noticed i could take the free queen. I was too busy calculating a mated net 😅

  • @satisficingmoves2044
    @satisficingmoves2044 10 місяців тому +3

    This is my favorite lecture of all time.

  • @monkeygrip2412
    @monkeygrip2412 10 місяців тому +10

    You're a really good teacher and lecturer. I really enjoy your videos teaching Chess. Keep it up!!

  • @thecrimsonking187
    @thecrimsonking187 5 місяців тому +2

    You are an awesome teacher. It brings back memories of my favorite character from Scrubs and my boss in the compulsory social year that still existed back then.

  • @flstudent2928
    @flstudent2928 9 місяців тому +1

    Thanks Maestro Ben you are unique and generous

  • @reginaldd.paperstacks194
    @reginaldd.paperstacks194 10 місяців тому

    Thanks this really helped

  • @mynameischess230
    @mynameischess230 10 місяців тому +2

    Best reupload ever

  • @mozzikum
    @mozzikum 9 місяців тому

    Golden lecture for beginners!

  • @peterbrown797
    @peterbrown797 3 місяці тому

    Thanks!

  • @natekunnen7021
    @natekunnen7021 10 місяців тому +5

    These always give me some hope of getting back to 600 and then I blunder 10 matches in a row

  • @TheRicoCallao
    @TheRicoCallao Місяць тому

    Amazing video. The best chess teacher in youtube

  • @Dagfari
    @Dagfari 9 місяців тому +17

    How to win at chess:
    1. Don't blunder
    2. Don't resign
    3. Don't lose

  • @aureliusfeynman485
    @aureliusfeynman485 8 місяців тому +2

    Is it a very encouraging sign if I see the moves he's asking? I have put chess away for many years since 13, scored 1400 at a local club back then. I just restarted playing and I realize that these chess puzzles are "moderate difficulty" for me. At any rate, thanks a lot for this lesson Mr Finegold

    • @bradjones7835
      @bradjones7835 4 місяці тому

      Yes - as long as you don't blunder.

  • @SkyWayMan90
    @SkyWayMan90 9 місяців тому

    I love Ben.

  • @stbauch1
    @stbauch1 8 місяців тому +4

    I really like, that there is an actual lecture with students. It makes the content far more relatable than Levy babbling for 20 minutes straight. This makes it relatable and the tempo is nice to learn the lesson. Apart from that, the lesson was really nice and I enjoyed it very much. I like how he keeps insulting his audience and is very sweet to his students. I look forward for more content of this kind.

  • @jamarflash
    @jamarflash 10 місяців тому +2

    Oh how I wish I had a 60 sec conversation with this man about not blundering advice 💭

  • @curtisfox1233
    @curtisfox1233 2 місяці тому

    About 35 years ago, my brother and I had a friend who was terrible at chess, but he loved to play, even though he lost every single game against us in an epic way. That is, all but one. He was obsessed with putting us in check, and 99% of the time it was a wasted move. However, my brother was so bored at beating him, he quit thinking about playing the game and just made random moves [could beat him spotting him two rooks and a queen, right]. Then he got beat a few moves into the game by two bishops, checkmating his king on the back rank. His opponent did not even see the checkmate, he just kept putting him in check, and my brother ignored the threat. Thank you for another one of your amazing lectures. I particularly enjoy your humor. Your lectures are very informative and fun to listen to and watch.

  • @adam-wq9ew
    @adam-wq9ew 10 місяців тому +4

    hundreds of weeks ago for us at home

  • @lollycopter
    @lollycopter Місяць тому

    Fantastic lecture. I think one other sport that can come close to chess with critical blunders is speedskating - as per Steven Bradbury's 2002 Winter Olympics gold medal where his main strategy in the final was to hang back and wait for blunders. Snooker could also be like that on a per-frame basis where being in the lead doesn't matter if the opponent manages to really snooker you; except in snooker, a match is always decided out of multiple frames.
    So yeah, chess is quite unique with the type of intestinal fortitude it trains tournament players up for.

  • @sindrigujonsson6278
    @sindrigujonsson6278 Місяць тому

    Real talk!

  • @zackarialundy
    @zackarialundy 4 місяці тому +2

    Goddamn, why'd i get flamed in the first minute? 😂
    He's right though, I'm not even playing rn and I've already blundered in my next game

  • @evanm6739
    @evanm6739 10 місяців тому +8

    I don’t blunder because of Ben. Except for when I do

  • @sindrigujonsson6278
    @sindrigujonsson6278 Місяць тому

    As an Icelander I was gald to see the game between Benedikt (who I know) and Haukur (who I knew, but he passed away many years ago) starting at the 39th minute ish

  • @jinjocat
    @jinjocat 10 місяців тому +2

    You can resign in Curling. Which may be why they often call it Chess On Ice!

  • @CokeVoAYCE
    @CokeVoAYCE 10 місяців тому +4

    ben is a good chess teacher

  • @paulocosta8770
    @paulocosta8770 Місяць тому

    just discovered your channel, great stuff, can you please share the software that you are using to review the games?

  • @itsonly9euros33
    @itsonly9euros33 10 місяців тому +4

    Finally, relatable chess content.

  • @pedroaranha9921
    @pedroaranha9921 9 місяців тому +2

    I was really expecting: "today we're going to talk about blundering and resigning. Don't do these. Thanks for watching the lecture"

  • @mannynunez1481
    @mannynunez1481 Місяць тому

    🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation:
    00:00 *🏁 Resigning and Blundering*
    - Understanding the concept of resigning and blundering in chess.
    - Resigning and blundering are common occurrences in chess games.
    - Resigning often happens when a player realizes they are in an irrecoverable position, while blunders occur when players make serious mistakes in their moves.
    01:02 *🧠 Chess Psychology and Game Evaluation*
    - The importance of evaluating positions and not solely relying on player ratings.
    - Demonstrating how players at any level can make mistakes or blunders, affecting the outcome of the game.
    - Understanding that winning in chess often results from capitalizing on opponent blunders rather than solely playing superior moves.
    07:38 *⏳ Time Management in Chess*
    - Highlighting the critical role of time management, especially in blitz games.
    - Explaining the consequences of time trouble, leading to suboptimal moves or even blunders.
    - Emphasizing the significance of not resigning prematurely, especially in fast-paced games, where opponents may make errors under time pressure.
    20:21 *🏠 Avoiding Blunders in Chess*
    - Making a blunder in chess can ruin an otherwise strong game.
    - The frustration of losing due to a blunder can be compared to building a house only for it to collapse with one misplaced nail.
    - High-level players often win not just by playing perfectly, but by capitalizing on their opponent's mistakes.
    22:31 *🏁 Exploiting Opponent's Mistakes*
    - Even in equal positions, one side often has more practical chances to win.
    - Relaxing prematurely in chess can lead to blunders, even in seemingly easy positions.
    - Maintaining focus throughout the game is crucial to avoid falling victim to unexpected blunders.
    26:12 *🎖️ Identifying Winning Moves*
    - Sometimes, players miss winning moves due to time pressure or tunnel vision.
    - Recognizing mating threats and forcing moves can lead to decisive advantages.
    - Being aware of all potential threats on the board, even in Blitz games, is essential for maximizing winning chances.
    31:06 *🤷‍♂️ Handling Resignation in Chess*
    - Resigning in chess is often seen as conceding defeat, but it can also be considered insulting in certain contexts.
    - Not resigning can be a strategic choice, especially when playing against stronger opponents who may make mistakes.
    - Understanding when to resign and when to play on can impact a player's reputation and competitive success.
    38:58 *📜 Learning from Famous Examples*
    - Analyzing famous chess games can provide valuable insights into tactical and strategic principles.
    - Even strong players can overlook winning opportunities, leading to surprising outcomes.
    - Resigning prematurely, especially in winning positions, can result in missed opportunities for a comeback.
    40:57 *🏆 Chess blunders and missed opportunities*
    - Examples of chess blunders from historical games.
    - Importance of not resigning prematurely in winning positions.
    - Highlighting common mistakes and overlooked winning moves.
    46:14 *🏞️ Simultaneous exhibition game blunder*
    - Explanation of a simultaneous exhibition game scenario.
    - Analysis of a blunder that led to resignation in a winning position.
    - Demonstrating a winning move overlooked by the player.
    51:01 *🎾 Drawing opportunities and resigning prematurely*
    - Discussion on drawing opportunities in chess.
    - Illustration of a game where a drawing move was overlooked.
    - Emphasizing the importance of not resigning hastily and seeking chances for a draw.
    Made with HARPA AI

  • @evanm6739
    @evanm6739 10 місяців тому +18

    There are more billionaires than Grandmasters in the world. Go Ben! Never play F6 like I did once in your stream. I’m new but Ben is my virtual coach lol

    • @paulandaloro8514
      @paulandaloro8514 10 місяців тому +4

      Everyone tries to make money, but not everyone is interested in chess.

    • @loganmyall660
      @loganmyall660 9 місяців тому

      Go Ben!
      And stay there

  • @LympyDownunder
    @LympyDownunder 10 місяців тому +3

    I blundered by watching this vid years after the theory changed and Ben is well ....

  • @paulflood2709
    @paulflood2709 9 місяців тому +1

    These days The Patriots vs a high school team might be pretty competitive

  • @linusmcginty1583
    @linusmcginty1583 2 місяці тому

    “Sometimes when you win, you actually lose. Sometimes when you lose, you actually win. Sometimes when you win or lose, you actually tie. And sometimes when you tie, you actually win or lose.” - Gloria

  • @serrie85
    @serrie85 10 місяців тому +3

    Finally a chess lecture about a subject where I know to be good in.

  • @rainerausdemspring3584
    @rainerausdemspring3584 10 місяців тому +2

    I have a complete book about games resigned in a won position.
    Resigning is possible in boxing - throw the towel.
    Of course, Ignatz von Popele must be Popiel! And Marco - famous editor of the Wiener Schachzeitung - was not "one of the top 100 players in the world" - around 1905 he was one of the top 10 players in the world.

    • @Apfelstrudl
      @Apfelstrudl 9 місяців тому

      Thanks for the clarification!

  • @johnanderson6690
    @johnanderson6690 9 місяців тому +1

    Change the words chess with life and this would be a lesson for all humanity to see.

  • @Typhlosion56
    @Typhlosion56 10 місяців тому +2

    Not asleep yet Ben, give me a few more minutes though

  • @jacklondon8385
    @jacklondon8385 7 місяців тому

    what is you opinion on blitz chess? I know it can be fun but does it improve your chess? Is it a valuable training tool?

    • @guaranagaucho3071
      @guaranagaucho3071 2 місяці тому

      It’s fun if you have solid opening theory knowledge. But no, it’s not a valuable training tool. You need to get better at chess to be good at blitz, not vice versa.

  • @imeaniguess.6963
    @imeaniguess.6963 10 місяців тому +2

    56:08 I felt that. 🤕

  • @jonrwert
    @jonrwert 9 місяців тому

    GM Finegold is very uncompromising in his analysis and instruction. I'm an amateur player but have a had a few encounters with some excellent teachers, like Mitch Fitzko, and I appreciate the direct/harsh instruction. It really comes down to that in any endeavor, scientific analysis, uncompromising approach.

  • @TommyLikeTom
    @TommyLikeTom 6 місяців тому +1

    Man I was just playing a 1700 opponent and I was winning decisively and I lost everything after one blunder, I hung mate in 2

  • @zetacrucis681
    @zetacrucis681 9 місяців тому +1

    Amazing how two top players can both be blind to a rook on a mostly empty board 9:20

  • @martinr113
    @martinr113 10 місяців тому +1

    You would love lead climbing, there also you can be the best in the world, but one little mix-up like a foot slipping or a hold being worse than you expected, you fall, and you just don't win, end of story. You don't even have a hope that the wall will blunder too and let you back into the game

  • @Hemant95035
    @Hemant95035 10 місяців тому

    Sir meri 1700 rating h , 2000 krni g kese kru?

  • @nathaniel5059
    @nathaniel5059 Місяць тому

    I actually think the same "no blunders!" mentality applies to basketball. Look at the Boston Celtics in the past few years. They play brilliant basketball with great focus and execution, go up by 20 or 30, get comfortable, think they can win on auto-pilot without the same level of focus, and then they lose games. If you want to win in chess or basketball, stay locked in until the game is over!

  • @Deucely
    @Deucely 10 місяців тому

    I already blundered the resign.

  • @snookslayer4559
    @snookslayer4559 9 місяців тому

    I'm only 1700, but years of chess videos taught me solid openings, tactics, and getting big early advantages... only to blunder it away. Very frustrating. Not from giving away pieces, but from sub-par moves killing my advantage to zero, or worse. Ben's advice "don't blunder".?. Ok, I'll try to remember that.

  • @edwardp7725
    @edwardp7725 8 місяців тому

    "You at home know nothing as usual"
    I know Ben ... I know... :(

  • @NidusFormicarum
    @NidusFormicarum Місяць тому

    This is very true; however, it doesn't tkaes into account what lies behind blunders. The reason you blunder is so often that you already had a terrible position, or had very little time on the clock, didn't understand the opening etc. So while it is true, it is also a bit superficial and not the whole story.

  • @goda743
    @goda743 10 місяців тому

    "For you guys, weeks later!" No kídding xd

  • @askthepizzaguy
    @askthepizzaguy Місяць тому

    At around 13 and a half minutes, or shortly before that, Ben says, paraphrasing
    "Now youre going to say that never happens and that was weird, except this is what this lecture is about so im gonna show you a million examples."
    Correct. That's why those million examples are there, because there's valuable lessons to be learned if you accept the fact that there is a valid lesson to be learned. If you dismiss it as not worthy of learning, you won't learn nothin' and you'll never get better.
    Learn from every game, every opponent, learn from people you've never played, learn from your teacher, learn from right examples, learn from bad examples, learn from brilliancies, learn from mistakes. Always learn, and if you forget, learn it again until you stop forgetting.
    Never don't learn. Always be learning. The only reason the world champions of chess are any good is because they're constantly studying each other and critically analyzing their own games, wins and losses alike. They never stop learning, and they reinforce stuff they already know with constant reminders.
    If you ever have an excuse not to learn something, your brain is lying to you. Tell that punk to shut up, and listen to your teacher.

  • @love.flower.chainsaw
    @love.flower.chainsaw 9 місяців тому

    I thought he was throwing shade at Nakamura until I read the description

  • @wcydiiwii
    @wcydiiwii 10 місяців тому +3

    10:27 lmao fucking lost it

  • @Heroball299
    @Heroball299 10 місяців тому

    It's also really frustrating when you mouse slip

  • @asdf_asdf948
    @asdf_asdf948 9 місяців тому

    Was wesley so really better than nakamura in 2018?

  • @dontcensormebro3217
    @dontcensormebro3217 9 місяців тому +1

    "Wesley So the best player in the US besides Caruana".
    Finegold haaaaaaaaaaaates Hikaru, lmao.

  • @7waytruthlife
    @7waytruthlife 3 місяці тому

    Summary:
    Don't mess up
    Don't give up

  • @abdallahtarek7003
    @abdallahtarek7003 3 місяці тому

    so i got that i shouldn't resign but how to stop making 6 blunders a game

  • @rizka7945
    @rizka7945 9 місяців тому +1

    At 52:30 you could be even funnier and put three bishops on the board!

  • @speedchessbattles4047
    @speedchessbattles4047 10 місяців тому

    I got some games on my channel where I beat some titled players. Beat a 2500 FM and a 2500 IM in bullet. And I'm only 1900.

  • @BenHyle
    @BenHyle 10 місяців тому +15

    There are a lot of people who would pay to watch Mike Tyson fistfight a teenager. Like, a lot, and a lot of money, just to see that kid get absolutely beaten to a bloody pulp.

  • @shamslife9182
    @shamslife9182 9 місяців тому

    You are a chess GM , but Why are you not a super grandmother? ❤😮

  • @andrewpickup3697
    @andrewpickup3697 2 місяці тому

    OMG I played a 3+2 blitz right after this, blundered my queen, said f*&% it, I going to stalemate this guy, and bingo, got a draw! Then the next game the guy has me dead in his sights, I played a distraction move...and he resigned! I looked at the chess engine and I still can't figure out why. Since then, I refuse to resign, and have pulled draws out of a number of absolute fire sales to prevent losses and am getting better in general and creeping up the (my admittedly terrible) blitz rankings. I must say, the pure joy of a stalemate against a higher ranked opponent who should have me done is almost better than a checkmate. Of course, the wins are nice, but when it is clear when the ship is sinking, I try to set up a stalemate if I can't find a "ha, you idiot, checkmate" and it is surprisingly possible in blitz.

  • @hobit7585
    @hobit7585 9 місяців тому

    Ah this is why I humiliate people between 1800 and 2100 at the internet by making 5 queens , they never resign

  • @DanielDugovic
    @DanielDugovic 10 місяців тому

    At USATN I relaxed against then-NM Rosen at the end of a long day, so he won. The truth hurts!

  • @Now_Roxas
    @Now_Roxas 10 місяців тому

    My dad just sent this to my at 11

  • @happyprince4261
    @happyprince4261 3 місяці тому +1

    "You watch NBA cause you are brain damage"😂😂😂😂.

  • @coughwheezeexplode
    @coughwheezeexplode 4 місяці тому

    you had me at "new england patriots"

  • @Apfelstrudl
    @Apfelstrudl 9 місяців тому

    41:16 the Player is called Ignatz von Popiel (not Popele)

  • @kevinhurzeler9705
    @kevinhurzeler9705 Місяць тому

    10:25 😂

  • @jefftaylor1186
    @jefftaylor1186 6 місяців тому

    I made the 2nd biggest blunder you can make in chess today.
    I offered a draw in a winning(+6.0) position.
    Luckily my opponent declined and he blundered a rook and resigned.

  • @fernandofabbri637
    @fernandofabbri637 10 місяців тому

    Some players find offensive when their opponents don´t resign in a much worse position.

    • @suezuccati304
      @suezuccati304 10 місяців тому +7

      We call those "players who are afraid of losing"

  • @RishabhSharma10225
    @RishabhSharma10225 10 місяців тому +3

    Rawrrrr...
    also etc.

  • @debasishraychawdhuri
    @debasishraychawdhuri 3 місяці тому

    "Who plays very well, but blunders a lot" - like Alex Botez.

  • @mesielepush2124
    @mesielepush2124 10 місяців тому

    First!!! Also, so much GMFinegold this passed months, most be xmas year :D

  • @woah5333
    @woah5333 Місяць тому

    I made the same mistake at 700s with 2 minutes on the clock😂and I drew the game I could've won

  • @cowboyespacial6167
    @cowboyespacial6167 22 дні тому

    Ben i love you

  • @EpicVideoMaster11
    @EpicVideoMaster11 9 місяців тому

    37:43 lol

  • @MrCupidd
    @MrCupidd 10 місяців тому

    I’m watching Ben Finegold now is that wrong 😮

  • @alfredopina1213
    @alfredopina1213 10 місяців тому +1

    Ben pls I can only handle so much abuse 😭