Magnus Carlsen shows his win against Hikaru Nakamura (part 2 of 2)

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  • Опубліковано 12 вер 2024
  • In round 8 of the Tata Steel Chess Tournament, leader Hikaru Nakamura lost his first game. The world's highest rated player, Magnus Carlsen, outplayed the American in a Sicilian Najdorf, and afterwards explained it all in the press room in Wijk aan Zee, The Netherlands.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 143

  • @GEM4sta
    @GEM4sta 9 років тому +131

    Dude recalls his entire chess game and all the variations of it with ease and people are ragging on him because he dropped some pieces and didn't speak up?
    You can tell his brain is flying at a million miles a second. He can't show you the variations as fast as he wants to, that's why he's dropping pieces. He's already moved on to the next move.

  • @zoravursingh5617
    @zoravursingh5617 10 років тому +55

    4:34 all right who took that picture

    • @mana-wx4er
      @mana-wx4er 6 років тому +1

      😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂

  • @DexterHaven
    @DexterHaven 10 років тому +34

    He just replayed the whole game from memory with all the key variations not played too vs. the USA's No. 1.

    • @SSJ5VegetaV4
      @SSJ5VegetaV4 8 років тому +2

      +Dexter Haven That's a recent game, so it's not like he's alone about being able to do that. A lot of grandmasters can. Yet, if you want to see an amazing trick, open a chess book to him with a position, and he will be able to identify who played it, what year it was, and how the game went down. Magnus can remember tens of thousands of games from start to finish.

    • @DexterHaven
      @DexterHaven 8 років тому +7

      Me too. When someone showed me e4, I said Fischer. It was right.
      SSJ5VegetaV4

    • @SSJ5VegetaV4
      @SSJ5VegetaV4 8 років тому +1

      Dexter Haven lol

  • @josephbishara4791
    @josephbishara4791 9 років тому +14

    I love when he says "it's only a little trick that I've seen before" 07:13. I bet he has a bag of tricks.

    • @gaming2top759
      @gaming2top759 8 років тому +5

      +Joseph Bishara a little trick...in 5 moves :D

  • @CSRookie
    @CSRookie 10 років тому +50

    as good a player as he is, he drops many pieces

    • @ovionot
      @ovionot 10 років тому +21

      ba dum tzz

    • @sanduzmeu8891
      @sanduzmeu8891 9 років тому +1

      It shows his skill. He so natural at the game he doesnt care about placing chess pieces properly, he just wants to get it done!

  • @dajusta87
    @dajusta87 10 років тому +26

    What a dick question the guy asked at the end. Off topic, disrespectful, and darkened the mood about his victory over Nakamura

    • @vitalivotilatori4436
      @vitalivotilatori4436 10 років тому +19

      The guy just asked that question because he is a bad chess player and felt
      humiliated by carlsens game.
      He also has a very small personality but a huge ego and tries to get into
      the middle whenever it's possible. A typical narcissistic personal disorder,
      but that's not tolerated by carlsen and I'm sure, Magnus, Anand and Nakamura
      will beat him up when they find him in a dark corner.

    • @philofblood855
      @philofblood855 8 років тому

      haha great to imagine anand beating someone up with magnus 😅😄

    •  7 років тому

      I think it could be that Dutch guy from chess.com. The one that does the interviews.

  • @openclassics
    @openclassics 8 років тому +17

    7:53
    Magnus: "Shit happens, but it shouldn´t..." :-)))))))

  • @DavidKlausa
    @DavidKlausa 10 років тому +9

    An exercise I do after games with a friend is we start from the beginning and replay it from memory as far as we can and discuss thought processes and variations. Often we can remember the whole game and we are not masters. Try it and you may surprise yourself.

    • @chosenlink2
      @chosenlink2 10 років тому +4

      Yeah, after spending so much time of thinking of the best move to play and why, why your opponent played their move, and repeating this cycle for hours, it becomes more about logic than memorization. Not that hard to do right after a game. Still, I've heard his memory is phenomenal and can remember games wwaayyy after they are played as well as games that he hasnt even played (THATS way harder).

    • @mcpartridgeboy
      @mcpartridgeboy 9 років тому

      yeah im begging to remember most of the game I played from memory and im just 1800 player !

    • @danman127
      @danman127 9 років тому +2

      Plastic brains for everybody today right here and right now. He developped his memory when he was very young, and now this is easy for him. Musicians have strong memory as well. Still in time

    • @mcpartridgeboy
      @mcpartridgeboy 9 років тому

      ***** Fischer remembered other peoples games to the exact move, how many other games I don't know but he was discussing a game with dinzihashvillie and he corrected mr hashvillie on his own game and told him what he had player, everyone was shocked to find fischer was right !

  • @lokkarggg
    @lokkarggg 11 років тому +4

    Who brought this medieval board

  • @BobfromSydney
    @BobfromSydney 13 років тому

    All they reallly needed to do was just leave a table or stand for him to put the pieces on next to the board. I'm surprised no one thought of it.
    I loved his explanation. It was really clear and opened up the game for me. I feel I learned a lot about the Najdorf just watching this video. That said he's a stronger player and you certainly have a think for yourself at some points but he never loses you. A natural teacher as well as a champion player. I look forward to reading his books one day.

  • @Eshium
    @Eshium 11 років тому +1

    WOW, WHAT TECHNOLOGY!

  • @chessloverontwitch
    @chessloverontwitch 9 років тому +11

    dont ask this guy to bag your groceries lol

  • @fisher00769
    @fisher00769 11 років тому

    I don't exactly remember which game but I was analysing one of Carlsen's beauties with Houdini. At some point in the endgame Magnus made a really strange move evaluated inaccurate by Houdini. A couple of moves later his position was completely winning. I didn't see where the opponent blundered the evaluation just changed from ~ 0.33 to 3.33 and then I started looking at the moves backwards. Turns out the blunder was two moves before his weird move, the engine didn't have enough time to find it.

  • @imranhq13
    @imranhq13 8 років тому +8

    how can someone remember a whole game? unbelievable

    • @rawrinmypants176
      @rawrinmypants176 8 років тому +5

      After post-game analysis, it's pretty easy to remember

    • @peacockmusicpage
      @peacockmusicpage 7 років тому +3

      Culturejam, his IQ is probably higher than the rest of us lol. Probably significantly higher.

    • @unicockboy1666
      @unicockboy1666 7 років тому +1

      Imran Haque I could, anyone could, but Magnus has over 10 000 in kept mind (which he proved btw)

    • @unicockboy1666
      @unicockboy1666 7 років тому

      Chai Its about 190, whereas 130+ is the score for the the top 2%. I believe he is on the top 9 list of smart people or sth...

  • @mlcollins10
    @mlcollins10 12 років тому

    Magnus is so quietly dominant. I love this kid.

  • @teejay5511
    @teejay5511 6 років тому

    simply amazing that he recalls all this by memory... I can't wrap my brain around what Magnus can do. Wish I could...

  • @Metagross31
    @Metagross31 11 років тому +2

    3:40 "I don't know what the Computer says here, but i think white is completely winning"
    I just figured it out:
    Houdini 1.5 says like +21.4 for white :D

  • @yistackness
    @yistackness 12 років тому

    Gotta love the space-age board from the cold-war. I'm surprised magnus didn't throw his back out.

  • @latmat
    @latmat 13 років тому

    That last end combination is just brilliant!

  • @Mr2Azn4You
    @Mr2Azn4You 10 років тому +1

    Give him a table or a box to put his pieces down. Digital board might be a little more complicated but at least something to free his hands.

  • @BrainSane237
    @BrainSane237 11 років тому

    Yeah.... And the thing is it's not even a big deal for Magnus...
    It's absolutely inconceivable for an average person to understand that people like Magnus can remember pretty any match they have played.
    You could show him a situation from any famous chess match and he could tell you which one it is, what year, where, who played, who won.

  • @LennoxLewis86
    @LennoxLewis86 12 років тому

    The second dislike is from Nakamura's best friend to disprove your theory

  • @JaapVersteegh
    @JaapVersteegh 11 років тому +1

    Very strong game and fantastically uninspiringly explained by Magnus!

  • @nataschmidtt
    @nataschmidtt 12 років тому

    magnus is insane tactician, and he also a great positional player..no wonder Magnus is world No.1

  • @yistackness
    @yistackness 12 років тому

    5:05 "I probably have a million ways to win" lol

  • @skinnyjohnsen
    @skinnyjohnsen 13 років тому

    Amazing how they can still use these low tech display in our days!
    Magnus' Qd2 move against Giri was just shockingly bad! The desperate Kn g5 was terrible, but to me it seemed everything was losing.
    Anyway; This was a truly beautiful end game at a perfect time. 5 rounds to go. He may still win the tourney, but Anand seems to be really strong these days, and he has som "pushovers" for opponents next. And we should always look out for Aronian ;-)

  • @dobtoronto
    @dobtoronto 12 років тому

    Wow he is so amazingly good. This was very instructive.

  • @ramon1930
    @ramon1930 8 років тому +1

    in the genius professional players, there are many plans of 6 and 7 moves that are thrown out

  • @ramon1930
    @ramon1930 8 років тому

    just only a question: is headache a common collateral effect?

  • @heltok
    @heltok 13 років тому

    always a pleasure to watch

  • @guthax30
    @guthax30 12 років тому

    That figure always astounds me when i hear it/read it...fascinating.

  • @1monire
    @1monire 13 років тому

    He is so much into the game that he forgets to speak LOL

  • @Slashtap
    @Slashtap 12 років тому

    Art is perceived by human senses. Even if two brush strokes are different at the quantum level, our imperfect senses will not discern the difference. Of course each has his own definition of art, but I'm just pointing out that there is a limited number of possibilities, and so we shouldn't have to narrow our definition of "art" to only things that have endless possibilities.

  • @Eshium
    @Eshium 11 років тому

    I was offended for humanity because someone could even post such a comment, so thank you, I accept your apology.

  • @eloisaflorencecastillon951
    @eloisaflorencecastillon951 12 років тому

    GREAT brain.......
    that needs a lot of practice........and also a talent.....

  • @guthax30
    @guthax30 12 років тому

    Hmm...chess, as an art form, always reminds me that there is, theoretically that is, only a finite number of possible forms that any medium can possibly take...with chess it's easier to prove that on a purely mathematical basis, with something like painting it is far harder to argue the point. But think about it...there has to be a limited number of colors, a limited number of lines and curves one can make on the canvas. a limited number of brush stroke thickness etc etc...

  • @Ruxistico
    @Ruxistico 11 років тому

    that is completely trivial for a player of his caliber. He remembers hundreds of games and thousands of opening variations. He has played 8 players at the same times without seeing the boards. He is the best chessplayer in the world - and the skills I've described are not even really part of it. Many lesser players can do even do more impressive stuff. But what he does at the board - against the best players in the world - when it really counts - nobody fully understands. That's why he wins.

  • @TVOham
    @TVOham 11 років тому

    ......
    Do you have any idea how many games players like Magnus, Anand, and Kasparov remember at a time?

  • @MbL_AoE
    @MbL_AoE 13 років тому

    Ehm, what would happen if black went queen to e5 at 7:30 ?

  • @kriptozen
    @kriptozen 12 років тому

    What a talent! Amazing calculus capacity!

  • @90acceptance
    @90acceptance 12 років тому

    The Shannon number, 10 to the 120 power, is an estimated lower bound on the game-tree complexity of chess.
    As a comparison, the number of atoms in the observable Universe, to which it is often compared, is estimated to be between 4 × 10 to the 79 power and 10 to the 81 power.
    There you go, There are more ways to play a chess game than atoms exist in the universe. Go make the math!

  • @letung1310
    @letung1310 11 років тому

    How do you get a checkmate from the final position?

  • @NytoDork
    @NytoDork 8 років тому +1

    So many pieces get dropped in these 2 parts, it's like Shogi. :D

  • @pkp901
    @pkp901 12 років тому

    did this position come after sicilan English attack ????

  • @HalDanGhor
    @HalDanGhor 11 років тому

    Yes of course.

  • @bairkuatov5340
    @bairkuatov5340 4 роки тому

    You are very very well player in the chess world!

  • @liamweinberg4902
    @liamweinberg4902 11 років тому

    This guy is a fucking genius. Nuff said.

  • @cribbo188
    @cribbo188 11 років тому +2

    Did he just remember a full chess match? WTF

  • @MSav1988
    @MSav1988 12 років тому

    i dont think so....it makes u part of his club which goes by the name "The Indecipherables".....the members of this club can understand each other even though they may sound gibberish to others :P

  • @Melpheos1er
    @Melpheos1er 11 років тому

    2:02 QB6 i saw that one...whoohooo

  • @vortechzandersson8411
    @vortechzandersson8411 11 років тому

    I hope you realize that if only all spectators had a sufficient intellect he would not need to show any board at all, just tell them the moves in the different variations.

  • @MrRazorblade999
    @MrRazorblade999 12 років тому

    I wonder how many games he remembers by heart.

  • @TheBrolymega
    @TheBrolymega 12 років тому

    End of game, king not in check mate.. King to d7= safe
    If queen to e7 after this, then black retake with queen to e7= game not over..

  • @Inkachess
    @Inkachess 11 років тому

    Bravo...bravo...aplausos...que torpes los que están ahí...no aplauden...carachos!!

  • @joealanbrooks
    @joealanbrooks 12 років тому

    Black's queen is on d5, not covering e7.

  • @Inkachess
    @Inkachess 11 років тому

    Tata Steel Chess 2013

  • @behnamasid
    @behnamasid 13 років тому

    We live in a touch screen age!

  • @jacovc1986
    @jacovc1986 12 років тому

    give the man a louder mic

  • @Freezythree
    @Freezythree 11 років тому

    Im a chess beginner, but looks like whites only legal move from the point where he suggests its checkmate is King to D7, whites queen to E7 which then its check mate, no way to get out of that.

  • @luxjason
    @luxjason 12 років тому

    @snizshizzle
    a lot of people who are extremely skilled at things don't necessarily make the best teachers .

  • @kyan1336
    @kyan1336 7 років тому

    1:17 why not nc3 to a4? Could lead to the attack of nb6...

  • @NotThat3
    @NotThat3 13 років тому

    Give the man a proper board.

  • @evilgodpanda
    @evilgodpanda 12 років тому

    why is this board not magnetized?!

  • @UIM_Loki
    @UIM_Loki 10 років тому +7

    I wish he wasn't mumbling so much, someone with no understanding of the game wouldn't be able to figure out what he is saying at all.

    • @TheDutchMan110
      @TheDutchMan110 10 років тому +18

      Why would someone with no understanding of the game watch this?

    • @UIM_Loki
      @UIM_Loki 10 років тому +1

      it doesn't matter, even if they wanted to they wouldn't be able to.

    • @TheDutchMan110
      @TheDutchMan110 10 років тому +6

      Grant Ward But they won't watch this so there is no problem...

    • @UIM_Loki
      @UIM_Loki 10 років тому +1

      yes, they can't watch it because they wouldn't be able to hear what he is saying.

    • @TheDutchMan110
      @TheDutchMan110 10 років тому +2

      Grant Ward I think we can both agree on the fact that Carlsen is better at playing chess than explaining stuff. Lets keep it at that.

  • @rthmjohn
    @rthmjohn 10 років тому +1

    fineprint: This lecture assumes the attendee is at least 2000 or higher rating.

  • @guthax30
    @guthax30 12 років тому

    Whahahaha, you got me...perhaps I was being a bit biased. It's a fascinating argument, in any case...

  • @jamesk2478
    @jamesk2478 12 років тому

    black bishop at 3:01

  • @BlakMetall
    @BlakMetall 11 років тому

    king d7, queen e7 check mate. OR queen e6, rook e6 check, king d7, queen e7 check mate.

  • @BigGus87
    @BigGus87 4 роки тому

    As soon as he played e4 I was like oh I know what Carlson is gonna do. These peasants had no idea. That's why it's so ez to memorize his whole game.

  • @sapbucket
    @sapbucket 12 років тому

    That's low tech proper son!

  • @trustOnMeU2be
    @trustOnMeU2be 11 років тому

    6:26 please some body help magnus with his pieces ... 6:36 ohh thank you Super Man.

  • @kikook222
    @kikook222 13 років тому

    @NotThat3 You can't host a seminar with a real chess board, nobody could clearly see it even if it was on a TV moniter.

  • @cenntraru
    @cenntraru 11 років тому

    I don't understand, why blacks can't just take Kxf4 at 0:26? If Qxf4 then Rf6, right?
    Please, explain it to me, gentlemen.

    • @sumant93
      @sumant93 10 років тому

      I dunno whats really happening...but I guess white's plan after Nxf4 would be Qxf4 Rf6 Qh2 Rh6 Bxc8 Rxh2 Be6+ Kh8 Rxh2 Qe5 Rdh1...seems like white will be slightly better though I'm not sure its winning...probably none of those players particularly liked black's position after that...

    • @paulpena5040
      @paulpena5040 10 років тому

      There's a nice line after Nxf4 Qxf4 Rf6 Qh2 Rh6 Qg2! (if rook on c8 m oves anywhere Rxh6 gxh6 Be6 discovered check mates) so Rxh1 and before recapturing Be6+! Kh8 Rxh1 and the rook on c8 is still hanging rook moves and now Qg6! h6 Rxh6 and mate on g8. You'd have to verify it with a computer but it looks pretty good.

  • @PexySancakes
    @PexySancakes 10 років тому

    Omg this guy is amazing

  • @rthmjohn
    @rthmjohn 10 років тому

    @ cribbo188 its like with any other game--billiards, football, world of warcraft--play enough and you start remembering entire matches.

  • @xBorg6of9x
    @xBorg6of9x 13 років тому

    @BobfromSydney I also would buy his book but i doubt it will happen, not Calsen's style.

  • @RBHILL300
    @RBHILL300 12 років тому

    @MILOSHITZA The other dislike is from a family member.

  • @MILOSHITZA
    @MILOSHITZA 13 років тому

    One dislike is from nakamura :)

  • @kinkehpanda
    @kinkehpanda 11 років тому

    Pieces falling off must be his biggest pet peeve.

  • @shiryu008
    @shiryu008 13 років тому

    problems with the pieces magnus??

  • @govindoburdwan
    @govindoburdwan 10 років тому

    Go magnus...!!

  • @mozartiano123
    @mozartiano123 13 років тому

    This board is older then my grandma. Why don't they just pick a computer with a big screen on the wall?

  • @ciuffoZanetti4
    @ciuffoZanetti4 12 років тому

    isn't it strange for a champion giving away his thought like that to normal humans? I thought chess players were like poets or something..

  • @Slezi2007
    @Slezi2007 13 років тому

    2 dislikes from Hikimaru and from Nakamura

  • @MrFedexfefo
    @MrFedexfefo 11 років тому

    That it's true, but the point is that the majority of those moves are totally absurds!!! you are talking about the number of legal moves, not playable ones...

  • @cribbo188
    @cribbo188 11 років тому

    4?

  • @mikemitchell2105
    @mikemitchell2105 11 років тому

    I know right and all the other moves but he probably went over it first

  • @Metagross31
    @Metagross31 11 років тому

    But he is indeed winning clearly :)

  • @marufjontoshboltaev9628
    @marufjontoshboltaev9628 6 років тому

    best game

  • @hikkenwayans
    @hikkenwayans 12 років тому

    ha ha ha that is so funny

  • @D3ADR1GHT
    @D3ADR1GHT 12 років тому

    @Savarkar19 Accent + mumbles = hard to understand ;p

  • @Dancindazed
    @Dancindazed 11 років тому

    he was showing a line that is bad for black.. it didn't happen in the game.. :)

  • @thedrjayroe
    @thedrjayroe 12 років тому

    I bet it was you so you could post that generic pseudo-comical comment

  • @vortechzandersson8411
    @vortechzandersson8411 11 років тому

    You wouldn't reply like that unless you were offended, so I apologize for the previous comment.

  • @thomaspfanne9524
    @thomaspfanne9524 11 років тому

    Versteht was vom Schach !

  • @MSav1988
    @MSav1988 12 років тому

    didnt understand a word of what hes speaking.......and no i dont mean i dont know english......but jsut the way he speaks....just cant decipher his words :P

  • @YsnipezYMw2
    @YsnipezYMw2 11 років тому

    ballsy

  • @godmakoto1041
    @godmakoto1041 8 років тому

    SDR RDS GJOOJG (descifrar)

  • @Metagross31
    @Metagross31 11 років тому

    OH CRAP!!!
    big mistake right here! I said its whites move, but actually its blacks move, so white is NOT +21.4 in advantage!!!

  • @briefcaseofblues
    @briefcaseofblues 13 років тому

    jackass question at the end