I like this a bunch! Helps to study older games with different openings and how they think in middle game. Plus it’s very clear and easy to understand why they move/sacrifice their pieces. Thanks a lot Igor!
Amazing How anyone can think so clearly is incredible .. Well I know we r talking about mr kasparov.. simple moves yet gun moves .. kills the opponent slowly but surely
Used this opening with the transfer of knight on D5 and demolished my opponents. I like this idea with keeping the king in the middle because opponent be thinking I'm going to castle when in fact I had no intention since C5. You have to use it to believe it. The octapus knight on D5 is such a nuisance. Great game and teaching to use in sicilian repertoire
At 9:04, why didn't White move Bh1?? Because Black would have gone KnH4 then KnG2? Or to prevent White going Kng2 or e2? I would have expected Black to exchange his black square bishop for white knight, but then again, it is also a powerful piece in this setup.
As the commentator says, White's position is completely lost after ...Bxf3. It's too bad White didn't resign at that moment: Kasparov would have won the game as Black in 36 moves _without ever having moved his king!_
No you are mistaken mate although I get why you think that. It doesn't matter e4/ e5. The Najdorf is 1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 d6 3. d4 cxd4 4. Nxd4 Nf6 5. Nc3 a6. Its the move a6 in the open Sicilian that makes it the Najdorf. If black plays e6 you get similar pawn structures to the Sveshnikov as you said but its not the same move order. If black plays e5 you get Shevenigen type pawn structure. Usually the structure you go for depends on your opponents moves but both are Najdorf when a6 is played first and you're not developing your other knight or pushing e pawns right away.
I like this a bunch! Helps to study older games with different openings and how they think in middle game. Plus it’s very clear and easy to understand why they move/sacrifice their pieces. Thanks a lot Igor!
This is my favorite Sicilian opening so far.
Amazing
How anyone can think so clearly is incredible .. Well I know we r talking about mr kasparov.. simple moves yet gun moves .. kills the opponent slowly but surely
One of the best instructive videos on the Sicilian that I have viewed - excellent!
Glad you enjoyed it!
A great instructional video, made clear with main ideas and plans - thank you!
Very good explanation. Kasparov is one of the best players.
An absolute banger of a game
Espectacular!
Used this opening with the transfer of knight on D5 and demolished my opponents. I like this idea with keeping the king in the middle because opponent be thinking I'm going to castle when in fact I had no intention since C5. You have to use it to believe it. The octapus knight on D5 is such a nuisance. Great game and teaching to use in sicilian repertoire
Great video! Very useful even for my beginner level. Thanks a lot!
Lovely game
So break every rule in the opening and win
Impressive
genius
Played in 2017 by Kasparov wow
kasparov king
Deep blue
@@user-bk1xy5gt4b what?
@@Qppqpqpqpqpqpqpqpqppqpqpqpq it won very easy. Against a Pentium.
@@user-bk1xy5gt4b ok
At 4:45, does anyone know the name of that move to B5? I couldn't understand the speaker...advanced viachero (???)
Black takes pawn to b5. It si a vert common idea I would like you to remember, again it is an advance FIANCHETTO, and It is a multifunctional nove.
Black takes pawn to b5. It is a very common idea I would like you to remember, again it is an advanced FIANCHETTO, and it is a multifunctional move
@@albertocaruso5200 thanks for your insightful input
When I go to download this game, there is just code on the screen...?
At 9:04, why didn't White move Bh1?? Because Black would have gone KnH4 then KnG2? Or to prevent White going Kng2 or e2?
I would have expected Black to exchange his black square bishop for white knight, but then again, it is also a powerful piece in this setup.
@The Genius
Care to elaborate pls?
As the commentator says, White's position is completely lost after ...Bxf3. It's too bad White didn't resign at that moment: Kasparov would have won the game as Black in 36 moves _without ever having moved his king!_
what chess software does he uses?
Chessbase
e6 is sveshnikov while najdorf is e5
No you are mistaken mate although I get why you think that. It doesn't matter e4/ e5. The Najdorf is 1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 d6 3. d4 cxd4 4. Nxd4 Nf6 5. Nc3 a6. Its the move a6 in the open Sicilian that makes it the Najdorf. If black plays e6 you get similar pawn structures to the Sveshnikov as you said but its not the same move order. If black plays e5 you get Shevenigen type pawn structure. Usually the structure you go for depends on your opponents moves but both are Najdorf when a6 is played first and you're not developing your other knight or pushing e pawns right away.