This kid is a MONSTER - How Abhi Became the Youngest Chess Grandmaster in History
Вставка
- Опубліковано 8 лип 2021
- Abhimanyu Mishra, 12, became the youngest chess grandmaster in history after beating GM Leon Mendonca, breaking Sergey Karjakin's record!
Join GM Ashley in today's video as he breaks down the decisive game.
➡ mauriceashley.com
➡ / mauriceashley
➡ / grandmastermauricea
➡ / gmashley
#chess #mauriceashley #grandmaster - Розваги
Is Maurice back to doing studio work? I feel like I haven't seen him stream as much as he used to. Miss you Mo!
I enjoy Maurice's videos so much. There's so much power to his game and analysis. I wish he would make more
Grandmaster Maurice needs to play at Coffee Chess, like GM Hikaru
Maurice is so underrated. You can't disagree🔥
Maybe if he was better at chess and not so annoying.
@@michaelwright8896 alright being a cool guy is annoying? good I am not living in your skin
@@seife41 Also it would help if he could understand what he was explaining.
@@michaelwright8896 get good and you'll get it ;)
@@RainingArtillery No he just uses engines.
We need maurice now!!!!
Monster in chess is a compliment
Miss you Maurice, hope you’re doing OK
We love you Champ!!
I think 9 will be the youngest ever one day. It’s like the hundred metered sprint and breaking 8 sec it is almost impossible because of the limitations of the human ability to develop to a certain level .
The kid sat at a computer since he started. How exciting.
Can you suggest me a good book for opening oriented planning and development of chess
Very interesting article in the New York Times this morning suggesting that this new record as well as the previous one both depended on tournament manipulations of one kind or another - encouraging entries and draws from better players - especially GMs - who don't benefit from winning and don't fight as hard is one. Another is entering a bunch of tournaments day after day to get help from the players team analyzing the play of various GMs that will be playing in each of the tournaments. There are even worse suggestions from the past of parents paying players to lose or draw.
I have heard of these shenanigans going back to the 1970s. If you needed a GM norm, and a draw would help you, you went to your opponent before the game and explained the situation. Maybe he would help you out. And I read of rumours that a certain Eastern European GM would sell you a victory in your game with him, if you needed the point badly enough and had enough spare cash.
His focus "killer" face is.... adorable? Lol
Hey, Mr. Maurice could play chess against the Great Carlini in Coffee chess? It would be a great pleasure you both play several game. Please!!
Maurice Ashley 😆 🤣 You are initiated but still UNHAPPY and LOST
There is a reason why he wears a hat.
Do you think it is the fact he practices 10 hours a day or that he is born talented that contributes to the fact he is thousand tier untouchable than us mere mortals...?
Just like a fat-loss program, imagine you do a reality show where you take a n00b and make him a g like him.
Probably a bit of both but anyone can become a grandmaster if they put in that level fo work but they are unlikely to become a GM by 12
@@ym276 If you look at the amount of people that put a lot of effort into chess and than look at how barley any of them become an IM you would know that not just anyone can be a GM.
@@michaelwright8896 That's because most of them didn't dedicate themselves fully to chess, and instead went to school, had other hobbies, studied and got a proper job. Anyone can get to GM level if they start young and put in several hours every day. Most people don't because it's such a risky career.
@@ym276 No there is a generic factor to it not just anyone can be Michael Phelps or Carlsen.
@@michaelwright8896There is no genetic factor to become a grandmaster. Yes, there might be a genetic factor if you want to become Magnus Carlsen though. They did studies where they saw that elite junior players are actually average when it came to iq and memory but rather put in the hard work and dedication. Chess is a learned discipline. There were studies showing that while GMs can visualise positions that would actually appear on the board better than beginners but for positions that would never appear, there was no difference, suggesting that the visual memory of most GMs is no different to an average person.
RACE CODE CHESS SUNDAYS
The most smart, clever, intelligent, and sophisticated players in London.
1 Speakers’ Corner,
Free Speech Area,
Hyde Park,
Marble Arch,
London W2 2EU
#RaceCodeChess
Can you go back to the park and play some chess ♟ sharks 🦈 that would be pure gold ….. for entertainment and it would push the chess movement forward for minorities
Grandmaster Maurice needs to play at Coffee Chess, like GM Hikaru