Clear, well organized instruction, as is your custom. I encourage all my chess friends to watch your videos because of your consistent quality. Brilliant! So glad I stumbled upon your channel. I look forward to your future work.
Greetings...I do like when you say, just because you're in a positive/winning position...still concentrate and do not get over confident (my words). I think this channel will help my game...Thank you. Hopefully your journey towards GM, will become a reality. Cheers.
I have found this piece of intellect to be very well written and presented, with one flaw... any of those Whom are studying this material will find that moves that are being discussed will be much more easily portrayed if arrows were added. I happen to be living with the effects of a mini-stroke... but even without this issue, arrows would be such a powerful clarity booster to several explanations, especially with the deeper topics. Honestly, I want more!!! Thanks so much!! Rex
This is a relatively new YT channel but the content is exceptional. You have a wonderful method of teaching. Very smart. Thanks for the amount time and effort you put into your videos. Just by reading the comments you can tell how much people love it.
Another quality lecture . Thank you . I try to solve at least ten tactical puzzles on Lichess every day , therefore I am familiar with the tactics in your lecture. I watched for re-enforcement and reminding purposes , and it was worth it. Again , thank you, and much respect for your time and effort.
Hey Stjepan, great video as always. I found it extremely helpful. But as it happens with one take videos, there are some mix ups of the terminology or imprecise explanations. I'm sure you are aware of them, but I want to clear them up for beginners. 1) at 3:40 it may sound like there are only forks with Knights, but as Stjepan then explains correctly, forks can happen with every piece, especially less valuable ones. Therefore, another typical fork is the pawn fork which can be especially devastating in the opening of beginner games. When you place your pieces on the same rank (especially the forth and the fifth) one file apart, you are often inviting a pawn fork, which can loose you the game immediately - so please look out for that. 2) To differentiate the pin and the skewer more clearly: The idea behind both these motives is the same. You have a piece that moves and attacks in a line (Q,R,B) hitting two pieces of your opponent, while all these three pieces are in one line. The difference lays in the placement of the more valuable piece of your opponent. With a skewer you are hitting the more valuable piece directly (=it is the one you would capture, if it was you turn) and force it to move away. With a pin you hit the more valuable piece indirectly - the only thing stopping you from capturing it is the piece in between, which renders the latter immobile. However you have to be careful, as there are two types of pins: Absolute and relative. In an absolute pin, the more valuable piece is the king, so moving the less valuable piece would be illegal because it would result in a "self-check". In a relative pin, the more valuable piece is anything besides the king. Therefore, it may often be unwise to move the less valuable piece, but it is still possible. A great example of that is Legal's mate, where you sacrifice your Queen by moving your Knight out of the pin to checkmate the opponent. So do not relay on the fact that a piece is relatively pinned, when you calculate. 3) Deflection, Removing the Defender, Blockade: Those terms got a bit mixed up so here are some short definitions first: - The aim of a Deflection is to make your opponent move an important defender away from the defense, often by use of a sacrifice. - Removing the defender in contrast means that you capture the defender, again usually by giving up material. - A blockade means that you move one of your pieces between the defender and the piece (or square) he is defending, by this nullifying his influence. This also often comes with a sacrifice. In the video, Stjepan often used "remove the defender" in a broader sense of "moving it out of position", so here is a quick overview of which tactical motive he actually meant, with some further explanations: - Following 10:42 it is a deflection, as Stjepan said. - Following 12:36 the tactical motive is even more ingenious than the simple "removing the defender" make it seem like. You are actually trying to deflect the rook by threatening to remove the defender of a mate in 1 (Nf7#), a capture that would also threaten another mate in 1 (Qg7#). After Rc8, QxR8 is actually a case of removing the defender which in turn renews the threat of both a deflection and removing the defender. If you are a total beginner and this sounds way to complicated to you, train like Stjepan explained, come back in 6 months and you will probably be able to enjoy the sheer beauty of this position! - Following 22:40: Rc8 is a typical pattern of a deflection/decoy to ensure pawn promotion, but after Rxc8 Qe7 is NOT removing the defender (in the narrow sense of the tactical motive), but a blockade. You're blocking the black queens access to the important squares on the back rank, thereby, threatening some mating ideas. And there is another side to the move: If the black queen captures on e7 then motive turns into a deflection, because now dxc8Q is mate in 1. The black queen can block, and after the white queen captures it's mate. This example also shows another important point: Tactics are not only focused on pieces, they can also include squares. For instance: If in the example for the discovered attack there would be no black knight on d5, the white knight would have been pinned: If it moved, black would either play Qg2# or Qh1#. Hence, the white knight would be pinned to those to squares. Also you should be aware that - as Stjepan greatly has shown with these amazing examples - tactics work together. Yes, there are "one move tactics" where you only have to find a fork and basically win the game, but there are also situations, where you have to force your opponent to allow you one tactic by using another one. For instance you may need to give up a rook for a knight, but thereby you'll remove the last defender of a square where your knight can in turn come in and fork the King and the Queen. With that all said, I really have to thank you again, Stjepan. This was an amazing and very instructive video and I can't tell what I enjoyed more: The absolutely wonderful examples you picked or your apparent joy over those examples. One can really sea and sense how much you love chess! Keep up the great work and all the best on your road to the GM Title!
I do 50-100 tactics per day 💪, it's really helpful specially at intermediate level as the game at this level is mostly decided by tactics. TBH I still miss lot a tactics like I do today in my game against a NM it was like -10(Black) for me and I've like 10 sec. I see the tactics but one move later and he was able to prevent that and then I just horrendously blunder my queen 😅
Hmm. If you can solve 100 a day, you should definitely switch to harder tactics! Always solve them over the board. Use ones from books which are 5-10 move combinations. Not lichess two three move tactics.
Ya I do like 50-60 on lichess and the rest on chess24 . Chess 24 tactics are really good you should try that if you haven't. And I doesn't use book or board , that's doesn't feel necessary to me
11:50 I saw a cooler checkmate. 1) Nf3+, Kh1 2) Nd2+, Kg1 3) Rxf1+, Kh2 4) Qh1# The only way white could stop the M4 would hvae been by sacrificing his Queen by playing Qxf3 but that would only delay the inavitable because then white would be 6 points down and he would go on to lose the game a couple of moves later.
Very clear, to the point and very efficient explanation of the key factors. Thank you very much for your time, energy and expertise spent on your series of videos. Love to watch them & keep learning - afterall, learning is a lifelong process! 😀
Your way of explaination is awesome. I learned lot of concepts from your videos. I recommended your channel to my son and chess friends. They too appreciate your teaching skills.
First book I studied when I chose to be a professional Chess player was Susan Polgar's Tactics for Champions, this video would have been my 2nd choice :) Nice job and ty again
Excellent video, as they usually are. Quick question, at 6:00 why can't white play Qf5? Takes a pawn and allows for queen exchange (althought idk if you'd want that if you're down a piece)
That's what i was thinking actually. I'm not very sure but I think he just didn't want to waste any time so he just wanted to make sure we understood what he was trying to say.
Great ! this explanations is what i needed. I like all of your video content. easy to remember and understand. We dont get such explanations on other channels.
There is a rare tactic called windmill, it's very beautiful to see and how it work. It,s a combination in which there is only 2 moves available for the king and other side can check the king rapidly gain material until he gets all of the pieces that are defending by first inserting a check and grabbing a material with an another check . And continuing the process repeatedly until all the material which could be gained. This can be only worked if the king can move 2 squares and a piece in the attacking side Is aligned with another piece on files or diagnols. For example black king on g8 , white knight is on f7 aligned with the white bishop on a2 g8 diagnol.
I love your videos, they're really instructive and simple to follow thanks to your clarity of exposition. The content is great so far (I'm glad I still have so many videos of yours to watch) but I would suggest you purchase better equipment for the videos, the audio quality wasn't the best today and the lighting could be improved. While I don't actually care about this stuff (I'm much more focused on the quality of the content) other people do, so this might help your channel to grow. Thank you for your work, I'll stay tuned for more chess :)
I will hopefully. I really don't have ,money to invest right now though. I hope I will be able to buy decent recording equipment and a better comp in a few months. I'm aware of the issues:(
Very interesting video. One thing that puzzles me as beginner - when I do tactical puzzle from the book over the board, I don't often know what would be best opponent response. In online puzzles computer always chooses the best move. How to figure out best opponent response when I am using the book?
Great channel and video. But I'm confused at 18:30. Rxf7 is not a check. The king doesn't have to move. Oh, got it. You're starting with Qf8+. That wasn't clear initially.
Actually, at 11:24, Ne2 doesn't lose our knight as the queen can simply take that knight, and the bishop can't take back as it is pinned to the king. But besides that, a very helpful video!
There is a game called the Mexican immortal which the great emmanuel lasker lost by the tactic of windmill. You can check out the game in agadmator's chess channel . The title of the video is lasker against the windmill. That's a excellent game to show the example of windmill tactic.
Hi, many thanks for your videos, I've learnt a great lot from them and really enjoy watching everyday. I tend to play the Kings Gambit as white and as black I often try similar ideas using the Latvian Gambit. Would it be possible to make a video about the Latvian please? I can find little about it online. Many thanks :-)
6) Removing the defender: When white Queen moves to D8 I would play black rook to take white knight in D6. If white Queen proceeds to take black rook in G8, I move black Queen to D7. Alternatively, if white Queen takes the black rook in D6, I move black Queen to E8. Is there another threat that I don't see in this line of defense for black? (I am truly an amateur)
For 7) quiet move, an even better tactic would be Rf6 and if his knight dares to take then you can take back with your knight and easily find checkmate.
in second example what about queen takes f5? u can then force a queen exchange later and somehow survive. It's still not winning cuz u suffer material loss a lot but it's surviving. Isn't it?
Mark my words, this channel will have an exponential growth throughout this year. Quality content.... keep it up man!!!
Thank you very much for these kid words mate:) that really means a lot!!
@@HangingPawns it's not only kind words, it's prophetic :)
Thanks for the beautiful prophecy, Beautiful World. Greetings from Stjepan's mom
Did mark your work. But they were wrong. So your no Grandmaster.
Has it had exponential growth??
Clear, well organized instruction, as is your custom. I encourage all my chess friends to watch your videos because of your consistent quality. Brilliant! So glad I stumbled upon your channel. I look forward to your future work.
Thank you David, as always:)
"If he has a hope to survive just kill the hope" (22:34) Brutal! ;)
my age is 26 and I suddenly want to improve at my Chess just for self satisfaction....don't know how but luckily found this channel 🙏🏻🙏🏻
"just kill the hope" - Loved it!!😁
You are a genius!! The best youtuber of the world, thnx, gretings from Argentina
Greetings...I do like when you say, just because you're in a positive/winning position...still concentrate and do not get over confident (my words). I think this channel will help my game...Thank you. Hopefully your journey towards GM, will become a reality. Cheers.
I have found this piece of intellect to be very well written and presented, with one flaw... any of those Whom are studying this material will find that moves that are being discussed will be much more easily portrayed if arrows were added. I happen to be living with the effects of a mini-stroke... but even without this issue, arrows would be such a powerful clarity booster to several explanations, especially with the deeper topics.
Honestly, I want more!!!
Thanks so much!!
Rex
This is the best UA-cam chess channel On the planet. A big thank you from Italy
This channel is amazing. Thanks for all of the great content.
Thank you for watching Mike!
Very good and useful advice Stjepan!
Thanks a lot for all your videos! Waiting for them every day
Thank you Artem:)
This was the best video till date. Very fun and thematic
Thank you Mate:) Glad you think it was fun!
This is a relatively new YT channel but the content is exceptional. You have a wonderful method of teaching. Very smart. Thanks for the amount time and effort you put into your videos. Just by reading the comments you can tell how much people love it.
Thanks very much for the feedback Patrick:)
Another quality lecture . Thank you . I try to solve at least ten tactical puzzles on Lichess every day , therefore I am familiar with the tactics in your lecture. I watched for re-enforcement and reminding purposes , and it was worth it. Again , thank you, and much respect for your time and effort.
Thanks very much Maurice;) I would suggest grabbing a book and solving harder combinations otb!
@@HangingPawns lichess do have very hard puzzle u just have to change the mode to Hard(+600)
GMS do have problem solving some of this tactics
Hey Stjepan, great video as always. I found it extremely helpful. But as it happens with one take videos, there are some mix ups of the terminology or imprecise explanations. I'm sure you are aware of them, but I want to clear them up for beginners.
1) at 3:40 it may sound like there are only forks with Knights, but as Stjepan then explains correctly, forks can happen with every piece, especially less valuable ones. Therefore, another typical fork is the pawn fork which can be especially devastating in the opening of beginner games. When you place your pieces on the same rank (especially the forth and the fifth) one file apart, you are often inviting a pawn fork, which can loose you the game immediately - so please look out for that.
2) To differentiate the pin and the skewer more clearly: The idea behind both these motives is the same. You have a piece that moves and attacks in a line (Q,R,B) hitting two pieces of your opponent, while all these three pieces are in one line. The difference lays in the placement of the more valuable piece of your opponent. With a skewer you are hitting the more valuable piece directly (=it is the one you would capture, if it was you turn) and force it to move away. With a pin you hit the more valuable piece indirectly - the only thing stopping you from capturing it is the piece in between, which renders the latter immobile.
However you have to be careful, as there are two types of pins: Absolute and relative. In an absolute pin, the more valuable piece is the king, so moving the less valuable piece would be illegal because it would result in a "self-check". In a relative pin, the more valuable piece is anything besides the king. Therefore, it may often be unwise to move the less valuable piece, but it is still possible. A great example of that is Legal's mate, where you sacrifice your Queen by moving your Knight out of the pin to checkmate the opponent. So do not relay on the fact that a piece is relatively pinned, when you calculate.
3) Deflection, Removing the Defender, Blockade: Those terms got a bit mixed up so here are some short definitions first:
- The aim of a Deflection is to make your opponent move an important defender away from the defense, often by use of a sacrifice.
- Removing the defender in contrast means that you capture the defender, again usually by giving up material.
- A blockade means that you move one of your pieces between the defender and the piece (or square) he is defending, by this nullifying his influence. This also often comes with a sacrifice.
In the video, Stjepan often used "remove the defender" in a broader sense of "moving it out of position", so here is a quick overview of which tactical motive he actually meant, with some further explanations:
- Following 10:42 it is a deflection, as Stjepan said.
- Following 12:36 the tactical motive is even more ingenious than the simple "removing the defender" make it seem like. You are actually trying to deflect the rook by threatening to remove the defender of a mate in 1 (Nf7#), a capture that would also threaten another mate in 1 (Qg7#). After Rc8, QxR8 is actually a case of removing the defender which in turn renews the threat of both a deflection and removing the defender. If you are a total beginner and this sounds way to complicated to you, train like Stjepan explained, come back in 6 months and you will probably be able to enjoy the sheer beauty of this position!
- Following 22:40: Rc8 is a typical pattern of a deflection/decoy to ensure pawn promotion, but after Rxc8 Qe7 is NOT removing the defender (in the narrow sense of the tactical motive), but a blockade. You're blocking the black queens access to the important squares on the back rank, thereby, threatening some mating ideas. And there is another side to the move: If the black queen captures on e7 then motive turns into a deflection, because now dxc8Q is mate in 1. The black queen can block, and after the white queen captures it's mate.
This example also shows another important point: Tactics are not only focused on pieces, they can also include squares. For instance: If in the example for the discovered attack there would be no black knight on d5, the white knight would have been pinned: If it moved, black would either play Qg2# or Qh1#. Hence, the white knight would be pinned to those to squares.
Also you should be aware that - as Stjepan greatly has shown with these amazing examples - tactics work together. Yes, there are "one move tactics" where you only have to find a fork and basically win the game, but there are also situations, where you have to force your opponent to allow you one tactic by using another one. For instance you may need to give up a rook for a knight, but thereby you'll remove the last defender of a square where your knight can in turn come in and fork the King and the Queen.
With that all said, I really have to thank you again, Stjepan. This was an amazing and very instructive video and I can't tell what I enjoyed more: The absolutely wonderful examples you picked or your apparent joy over those examples. One can really sea and sense how much you love chess! Keep up the great work and all the best on your road to the GM Title!
This is great! I will implement with my games. Every video you have done is well done and helps my play! Thank you so much,
I do 50-100 tactics per day 💪, it's really helpful specially at intermediate level as the game at this level is mostly decided by tactics. TBH I still miss lot a tactics like I do today in my game against a NM it was like -10(Black) for me and I've like 10 sec. I see the tactics but one move later and he was able to prevent that and then I just horrendously blunder my queen 😅
Hmm. If you can solve 100 a day, you should definitely switch to harder tactics! Always solve them over the board. Use ones from books which are 5-10 move combinations. Not lichess two three move tactics.
Ya I do like 50-60 on lichess and the rest on chess24 . Chess 24 tactics are really good you should try that if you haven't. And I doesn't use book or board , that's doesn't feel necessary to me
@@HangingPawns nice hurried nugget of gold here.
@@ravirawat6856what's your elo now?
Thanks for helpful Videos... waiting for endgame strategy series
Coming soon:)
This is very well made I am a 1800 player and these tips are very good for everybody
Your channel and content is very great! I have improved my level of chess by seeing your videos. Thank you very much :3 ;)
🙏valubal inform sirji 🙏
11:50 the first tactic that came to my mind was Qxf4 followed by Ne2+ Nxc3, but white would probably be better still
I was looking at that too straight away. Shame the knight is pinned to the king 🤔
Just found this channel! You have great content!
Great video , I learned heaps .
thanks coach..for teaching tactics...more power...
11:50 I saw a cooler checkmate.
1) Nf3+, Kh1
2) Nd2+, Kg1
3) Rxf1+, Kh2
4) Qh1#
The only way white could stop the M4 would hvae been by sacrificing his Queen by playing Qxf3 but that would only delay the inavitable because then white would be 6 points down and he would go on to lose the game a couple of moves later.
Very clear, to the point and very efficient explanation of the key factors. Thank you very much for your time, energy and expertise spent on your series of videos. Love to watch them & keep learning - afterall, learning is a lifelong process! 😀
Yeah your channel is very good..... It made me improve so much
Make a video on full reti variations. Your video is really a boost . Its really a pathway
The Reti is coming Shivam:)
Pls make a video how to understand openings ?
Such an excellent, well explained tutorial... thx much !!!
really informative! time to go practice some puzzles >:)
You have such a wonderful gift for teaching chess! Thank you very much.
Your way of explaination is awesome. I learned lot of concepts from your videos. I recommended your channel to my son and chess friends. They too appreciate your teaching skills.
Thanks a lot:)
Very good, clear advice. Thanks for these videos
gone for 3 days and i already missed a lot. man! i will not miss out more.
Fantastic, very instructive. Thanks a lot!
It's a pleasure Brayan!
Thank you for this video. Very informative. I need to check out your “strategic planning” video. Keep up the good work!
Thanks Mark! Yeah, strategy is the second part of the story. The two go hand in hand.
Excellent demonstration, Thanks for keeping with the quality!
First book I studied when I chose to be a professional Chess player was Susan Polgar's Tactics for Champions, this video would have been my 2nd choice :) Nice job and ty again
very nice and simple explanation
Amazing presentation! So helpful and clear. Thank you.
Here I improving my english skills and my chess too
WHAT AN AWESOME CHESS CHANNEL. THUMBS UP TO YOU BOSS.
Thank you Jishnu!
Pure class in your teaching. Great video 👏
Magnifico estuche de patrones básicos de táctica,ojalá aborde más temas gracias de Cd Juárez Chihuahua México
Excellent video, as they usually are. Quick question, at 6:00 why can't white play Qf5? Takes a pawn and allows for queen exchange (althought idk if you'd want that if you're down a piece)
That's what i was thinking actually. I'm not very sure but I think he just didn't want to waste any time so he just wanted to make sure we understood what he was trying to say.
I was thinking the same thing. It does invite another discovered attack, but white should be able to keep fighting here.
@Austnax rook e3. It's not a fun position, but you could keep up the fight.
maybe you could double up rooks on the open file and get the bishop involved in protecting the knight? idk ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
underrated channel
As always, thanks for your videos. Recent game (19/3/19) with a nice tactical ending. I was Wh.
[Event "CardiganA v Aberystwyth Town”]
[Black "J. Van Kemenade” (1762)]
[Date "19 Mar 2019"]
[Result "1-0"]
[Round "?"]
[Site "?"]
[White "B. Brewer” (1555)]
1.d4 Nf6 2.Nf3 h6 3.c4 d6 4.Nc3 Nbd7 5.e4 e5 6.dxe5 dxe5 7.a3 a5 8.Be2 Be7 9.O-O O-O 10.Qc2 c6 11.Rd1 Qc7 12.Be3 Ng4 13.Bd2 Bc5 14.Be1 Re8 15.Na4 Be7 16.h3 Ngf6 17.b4 axb4 18.axb4 c5 19.Nxc5 Rxa1 20.Rxa1 Nxc5 21.bxc5 Bxc5 22.Ba5 b6 23.Bc3 Bb7 24.Nd2 Nd7 25.Nb3 Be7 26.Rb1 Bg5 27.g3 Qc6 28.Bd3 f5 29.Re1 f4 30.Bb4 Qg6 31.Kg2 Nf6 32.c5 bxc5 33.Bxc5 Bc8 34.Nd2 Bh4 35.Bc4+ Kh8 36.Qd3 Nh5 37.g4 Nf6 38.Nf3 Bg5 39.Bb5 Rg8 40.Nxe5 Qh7 41.Nf7# 1-0
Edit: My opponent and I both had 5 minutes left at the end of the game. So time pressure was a factor.
Nice game against a higher rated opponent! Great job!
I'm pretty good with strategy and positional play, but tactics is, to me, what chess is about, and I need work on that. Thanks!
Loved the vid. You are my unofficial chess coach.
Very beneficial, thank so much.
Excellent, as ever, many thanks.
Great video and instruction.
great video, thanks alot!!
Great ! this explanations is what i needed. I like all of your video content. easy to remember and understand. We dont get such explanations on other channels.
Thanks for the feedback Allan:) I'm very happy to hear that!
wonderful Teaching! Thank you!!!
I really needed this video. Thank you very much for creating it.
Bronstein had a mate in one, Qd8# instead of Rc6+, although the mate he was going for is prettier i guess...
Endgame version please! Love it!
The endgame series will start in a few months:)
@@HangingPawns Please make it as early as possible if can. My tournament is coming soon
thanks for the amazing video
Your passion for the game is really inspiring and each of your youtube videos is a gift, thank you!
Thank you for saying that:)
Great video! Thanks! I really like your explanations!
I 've recently joined and enjoying your vvideos which are best . Thanking you.
Great video and excellent teaching 👍🏻
Finally! I saw all the chess middle game ideas series. :D Now I can become a pokemon grandmaster just by learning the openings
Beautiful video. Very informative. I believe your chess lessons are excellent.
There is a rare tactic called windmill, it's very beautiful to see and how it work. It,s a combination in which there is only 2 moves available for the king and other side can check the king rapidly gain material until he gets all of the pieces that are defending by first inserting a check and grabbing a material with an another check . And continuing the process repeatedly until all the material which could be gained. This can be only worked if the king can move 2 squares and a piece in the attacking side Is aligned with another piece on files or diagnols. For example black king on g8 , white knight is on f7 aligned with the white bishop on a2 g8 diagnol.
Yes. The windmill is a pain to face and a pleasure to play:)
This was really helpful.. Thank you.
Hi I am from Osijek and I honestly laughed when you said "gospodin" instead of mister
I love your videos, they're really instructive and simple to follow thanks to your clarity of exposition. The content is great so far (I'm glad I still have so many videos of yours to watch) but I would suggest you purchase better equipment for the videos, the audio quality wasn't the best today and the lighting could be improved. While I don't actually care about this stuff (I'm much more focused on the quality of the content) other people do, so this might help your channel to grow. Thank you for your work, I'll stay tuned for more chess :)
I will hopefully. I really don't have ,money to invest right now though. I hope I will be able to buy decent recording equipment and a better comp in a few months. I'm aware of the issues:(
Excellent video
Very interesting video. One thing that puzzles me as beginner - when I do tactical puzzle from the book over the board, I don't often know what would be best opponent response. In online puzzles computer always chooses the best move. How to figure out best opponent response when I am using the book?
im a big fan of your videos, mr. pawns!
great video, thank you so much, keep it up
Great channel and video. But I'm confused at 18:30. Rxf7 is not a check. The king doesn't have to move. Oh, got it. You're starting with Qf8+. That wasn't clear initially.
Actually, at 11:24, Ne2 doesn't lose our knight as the queen can simply take that knight, and the bishop can't take back as it is pinned to the king. But besides that, a very helpful video!
Sir everything is great in your videos NO faults at all
My perfect coach
Just one request please upload more n more videos daily
Haha:) Thank you Aaditya. I'm not sure I can though. I work and have a lot of obligations too. I wish I could.
he already upload like an avalanche, how much more do you want?!
I just don’t want this consistency to be interrupted
Love your work my friend.
videos are great! thank you sir!
There is a game called the Mexican immortal which the great emmanuel lasker lost by the tactic of windmill. You can check out the game in agadmator's chess channel . The title of the video is lasker against the windmill. That's a excellent game to show the example of windmill tactic.
I know the game! It's amazing, yeah.
Thanks so much
Hi, many thanks for your videos, I've learnt a great lot from them and really enjoy watching everyday. I tend to play the Kings Gambit as white and as black I often try similar ideas using the Latvian Gambit. Would it be possible to make a video about the Latvian please? I can find little about it online. Many thanks :-)
Hmm. I think I will cover it in a few months. Not sure when exactly. And thank you:)
@@HangingPawns Many thanks :-)
In the 12:31 position, is it check-mate after Rxf1, Kxf1 and Qh1+? The knight is defending the e2 square but it is still pinned.
5:50 why not Qxe5 ? And if the f6 knight moves, Bd5 or Bd1 to protect f3
Another great video....
Thanks Markus!
Congratulations!!!!
very instructive!
thanks very good videos
You are my chess teacher
6) Removing the defender: When white Queen moves to D8 I would play black rook to take white knight in D6. If white Queen proceeds to take black rook in G8, I move black Queen to D7. Alternatively, if white Queen takes the black rook in D6, I move black Queen to E8. Is there another threat that I don't see in this line of defense for black? (I am truly an amateur)
Nice video!
Thanks!
Thank you!!!!! 🙏🙏🙏✍✍
For 7) quiet move, an even better tactic would be Rf6 and if his knight dares to take then you can take back with your knight and easily find checkmate.
Your Page is amazing I'll work trough all the videos asap :)
Recently discovered your channel. Your content is great and very easy to keep up with. Will you make videos on the semi slav for black?
I will Jakob. There will be 5-8 videos on the Semi-Slav:) And thank you!
thanks man i like your videos i wish that u make an introdution and veriations of the petrov's defense
Coming up right after the Scandinavian!
So helpful!
Great video
Thank you Harshit:)
in second example what about queen takes f5? u can then force a queen exchange later and somehow survive. It's still not winning cuz u suffer material loss a lot but it's surviving. Isn't it?