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Chess forum by Grandmasters

Accelerated Dragon 7.Nxc6 bxc6 8.e5 Ng8 9.f4

Apologies if this has already been discussed elsewhere. In the Advanced section of the Accelerated Dragon course, GM Avetik gives this sharp line against White's plan of Nxc6 followed by e5 and f4:

1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. d4 cxd4 4. Nxd4 g6 5. Nc3 Bg7 6. Be3 Nf6 7. Nxc6 bxc6 8. e5 Ng8 9. f4 Nh6 10. Qd2 O-O 11. O-O-O d6 12. exd6 Nf5 13. Bf2 Rb8 14. Bxa7 Rxb2 15. Kxb2 Qa5 16. dxe7 

Now he gives 16…Qb4+ 17.Kc1 Qxe7 as the recommended line, and points out that 16…Qb4+ 17.Kc1 Bxc3 can be met by 18.exf8Q+ Kxf8 19.Qd8+ Kg7 20.Rd3 when White has stopped the immediate threats with a material advantage.

But looking at this with Stockfish, after 17…Qxe7 White has 18.Nb5! with at least equality, the point being that after 18…cxb5 19.Qa5! White has again stopped the immediate threats and may untangle with his material advantage. Black certainly still has full compensation, but maybe not more – and it may be fleeting.

Instead, it looks like Black has a clear path to advantage with:

16.dxe7 Qb4+ 17.Kc1 Qa3+! (Now White will not have the defensive resource of Rd3. Play might continue:) 18.Kb1 Bxc3 19.exf8Q+ Kxf8 20.Qxc3 (basically forced now) 20…Qxc3 21. Rd8+ Kg7 22. Rxc8 Qb4+ 23.Ka1 Qb7 24.g4?! c5! with a winning advantage.

Has anyone else looked at this line? Any comments or improvements?

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How do you deal with trashtalkers?

So in late march, I started a 3 day correspondence game which went pretty meh, until about move 25, after which i won an exchange and he typed in chat: “elo cheater?” and offered a draw which i refused and replied, “go report if you think” (not really the best response, looking back). I've blocked him by now and he still keeps sending me draw offers (constantly, i've been refusing them) and i think i have a winning endgame. 
In the future, please give me tips on how to deal with them😁. I'm begging you.
P.S. I'm planning to post this game on the best games of May (or april if it finishes early), should i remove his name on the pgn? or should i also post the link and his username? 🤔

 

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just report him

Disable chat. It does mean you miss out on interesting conversations sometimes but I have had one too many people throw tantrums because they couldn't beat me. Not worth it. Too much risk of still being mad for my next game and tilting.

Interesting. I’ve played on Chesscom for over 2 years now (not counting the 6month break when I explored Lichess), and I believe I have never had someone be toxic to me. 

I would probably just ignore them. You did nothing wrong (right???) and so you can’t get in any trouble. They are just wasting their time.

Doubt in Jobava London

In Jobava London, :  The course recommends - 1.d4 Nf6 2.Bf4 g6 3.Nc3 d5 4.e3 Bg7 5.h4 ,h5! 6.Nf3, Bg4 (where black keeps his K in the center). and against 5. Nf3 0-0. It only mentions 6.Be2 and 6.Nb5 in that variation. But, how to deal with this move order : 1.d4 Nf6 2.Bf4 g6 3.Nc3 d5 4.e3 Bg7 5.Nf3 0-0 6.h4 (intending h5 Kside attack, since white has tried black into castling)

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some problems with the gm call

i want to get a plan,i see the time, do it on the right time and the right place, open the skype and say a hi to chessmood,i wait for it for a long time but theres no one answering ,i dont know whats wrong,i need to get a personal plan,so what can i do to contact chessmood grandmasters for the call?

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You could try this form:

 

https://chessmood.com/contact

 

Good luck!

You need to go the Events page and then look for the 1 on 1 call event and book a call.

Very easy.

This is the next one

https://chessmood.com/event/1-1-call-with-new-pro-members#

😀Waiting for your booking… 💪

Price Raise

    Hi to the chessmood family.

 

    It says that prices will be raised from the the current price of around 600$ a year for the essential plan. The discounted price right now is about 400$ a year after taxes. What I'm confused about is whether or not chessmood plans to raise the price of the plans even higher than they currently are, or are they just going to revert back to the original price of 600$ and 900$ a year. If they are raising it, I probably going to buy the lifetime plan right now.

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😀Hi Pencheng!

Please contact Lily at our Customer Happiness Department since you have an active membership already. Better talk directly about your membership details privately, a public forum is not the right place.

Course Recommendations

I'm pretty new to Chessmood, and I've wondering of the courses that I should take. Which ones are the most helpful in your opinion? Thanks.

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Depends on what you would like to be better on, but generally:
Tactics & Mating Patterns: Tactic Ninja & Mating Matador
If you blunder a lot: Blunderproof
How to play in the endgame? : Endgame Roadmap
How to play in the opening: Opening Principles
There's a lot of material in these courses, and i hope you enjoy them 😄
 

Your most foundational two skills courses are Blunderproof and Tactic Ninja if you ask me. Go delve into those before anything else.

Hi Nobody (nice handle btw),

Good ideas have been posted, Maybe the place to start, if new here, is the Study Plan:

https://chessmood.com/chess-study-plans

It“s pretty comprehensive. They have several plans tailored to various ratings (although they are all worth reading to get a feel for making progress) and should give you a good start.

Don’t forget the Blog, which has a gazillion (or so) good articles about the details of chess improvement … and life!

Don’t forget “life!”  The folks at ChessMood haven’t :)

 

Good luck, this site is good.

Alekhine, What to play after 7.Nd7?

The postion occurs on alekhine, after 4.Bg2, 5.dxe5, Nxe5, 6.Bxe2 Qxe2, with the threat of qb5+ to win the pawn. 7.Nd7 - seemingly a multipurpose move, Defends the check and after Qb5, the d5 knight jumps to b7. What to play here? Do we castle? Play c4? Or trade the knights?

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Can you please provide the first 3 moves as well as I don’t remember playing Bg2 in the Alekhine.

After 1. e4 Nf6 2. e5 Nd5 3. d4 d6 4. Nf3 Bg4 5. Be2 dxe5 6. Nxe5 Bxe2 7. Qxe2 Nd7, you can just play 8.0-0, with a very solid and stable advantage it seems.  Next moves might be Rf1-d1, c2-c4, and Nb1-c3.

What is this weird notation on the Capablanca's chess fundamentals book?

I don't know if its because im reading an old version of the book, but i can't understand some of these notations. What is a K -Kt 1?

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That's called as the Descriptive Notation (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Descriptive_notation). It was used to be the standard notation for games, books, etc, until about the 1980's. (thank god for that) After that, the standard algebraic notation was used. 

There is a blog on chesscom on how to read the notation: https://www.chess.com/blog/chess_dot_tom/how-to-read-descriptive-notation

Looking as you are reading the old CF book, i recommend you to look at a more recently published version, or you can read an eBook version on forwardchess (https://forwardchess.com/product/chess-fundamentals?section=Best%20Seller) (It's Free!)

Alapin Sicilian

What are your thoughts on the Alapin Sicilian as an opening choice for White? i don't think i have the time to learn the closed Sicilian but i d'ident try yet.

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It is also a good anti-sicilian too. It's about taste… 😁

I do play the Alapin Sicilian and most of the players under 1700 rapid (chess.com) do not play the right moves but if they do the position will be quite balanced. I like this opening and it doesn't take a long time to learn it.

Chess improvement follow up after tactics training

I have finished most of Ninja Tactics, mating matador and can solve most of the quizzes. I have also covered attack/ defence,  7Q method, endgame roadmap. However, in my practice games, I still need a lot of improvement in my positional understanding, what to do in different pawn structures, how to handle different endgame positions. How else can I use Chessmood to improve these aspects of my game?

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Hi Luke,

I remember that we recommended you to watch one classical / attacking / endgame game per day, and that will take a whole year if you work with one game correctly. It takes one hour per game normally (at least). 
You can also do one daily lesson or even 2 in one day. That will also add 30 min more.
You must start too with the Endgame course under 2000 if you are having problems with endgames, that's for sure a good thing to do.
Then you must analyze the games but you did not tell us anything about the openings. What are you doing there? Because to understand the middlegame plans and structures goes connected with the opening. We always explain a bit the middlegame plan in our opening couses… Can you please clarify on this?😃

Did you have your one on one call with a GM which is part of the benefits of being a PRO member?

Memorizing ChessMood Openings

Before disclosing the idea, let me talk a bit about my past experience with chess.

I used to play chess a lot when I was young. My national rating was 2180 at peak. I was considered CM (Candidate Master). In those days one would get FIDE rating only if you reached a Master title.

Then I stopped playing chess for 30 years and worked on my business career and focused of my family.  I only restarted playing chess recently, after we moved to live in another country (France). 

In the last couple of years I won some games against the master and international masters, but too often I got a very bad positions out of the opening against the strong players. At the Master level and above the opportunities (i.e. opponents blunders) to save yourself out of bad opening are rare.

I am self taught and never had a chess coach. When I discovered ChessMood after listening to the Perpetual Chess podcast it occurred to me that with this method I have a chance to raise my chess to the next level - my goal is to get a master title in 3-4 years. I am quite good at tactics and strategy but very bad at openings repertoire.

So now the big question comes, how much effort is needed to remember ChessMood openings. I am sure each of you have different ways to memorize. Let me explain mine.

There are about 40 openings to remember (if you split sidelines into separate openings) and that's a lot of work. Should I try to understand one opening completely before going to the next one? In my case that would be 3-4 weeks of work for one opening. Or should like try to understand basic ideas of each opening and then deep dive further as I progress?

Then there are openings that I play more often, like Sicilians and some rarely like French or Caro-Kann. Should I focus on those that I play more often?

What about PGN files, should I have one for each opening, are they useful for trying to remember or understand the ideas?

I tried to created them as lichess studies or chessbase repertoire, but it doesn't really work for me. Especially, since I write a lot of comments to put down my understanding and in pgn format they are not so easily readable. When preparing before the game with my next opponent I like to go through the lines  quickly to be able to recall the main points/ideas. 

So I come up with another method. 

For each opening I have now a word document with a lot diagrams and comments. Word files can be saved as PDFs and viewed on my iPad. So for example if I expect my next oponent to play Caro-Kann I can prepare rather efficiently in 1-2 hours, just by browsing through the pages. Since I put down the diagrams and wrote the comments I can recall them just by looking at the positions.

At this point of time I still have many holes in my documentation and in my memory. That's why I have given 3-4 years to reach my goal. It will take me 1 year at least just to understand all of the ChessMood openings.

I play 1-3 games on lichess per week. After each game I analyze it and then watch ChessMoood video and update my repertoire in word documentation. This strategy allows me to focus on the parts of the opening theory that I play most often. 

In case of rare openings like Alekhine I have a friend that plays it so I am able to test my preparation.

I am not so sure that playing against other chessmood members when you are below 2000 ELO is useful as real OTB oponents rarely play the main lines. This was confirmed during my last OTB tournament.

Now let me give you a peek at my opening files, so you get the idea.

I would also like to hear what is your experience.

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I think this is a great question, though I'm only 1900 FIDE at the moment and was only here a few months. Personally I have simply been watching some videos from time to time, letting it seep in with interplay between understanding and memorization (obviously one view is not enough here^^), and happy with my opening progress for now.

Hopefully more qualified ppl can answer the question better :)

Wetzel suggested a flash card approach in his book Master at Any Age, although you can use hand-drawn figures. I've had mixed success with this, but the main thing has to be cutting the information down, particularly to that which is critical or difficult to remember, and not just repeating the things you already know or what you can work out at the board.

Would be interesting to know how GMs actually deal with their large PGN files, sure keeping playing them will help (you need a training partner for that much stuff as you might not see it for years), but even then it will fade quickly or not being able to recall correctly under pressure. Then there is the theory changing...

First, your document with diagrams is beautiful.

Second, great question. Let me link you to a question I asked that got very good answers that apply here as well: https://chessmood.com/forum/pro-members/how-do-you-study

Following @Richard_Dickinson's advice, I got a 30-day trial of Chess Position Trainer (CPT) and found it to be very easy to use. You create your white and black repertoire and then import your games as you play them. You'll notice where you diverge from the repertoire, the program will help you do timed repetitions so you memorize without doing it every day. Lastly, it works with Positions, so if you have several different move orders or openings that get to the same critical position, they'll all be connected, so your notes on one will be reused for the others.

I wish you best of luck studying and continuing to kick ass

Its quite interesting to use WORD doc instead of pgn file, and I can see your reason. How deep do you go with this method? How many different moves of your oponent, let`s say in move 6, can you track this way? 

How did early 20th century chess legends train and improve?

Looking at games from Capablanca, Lasker, Alekhine, it's remarkable on how they played like that on a high level at a time where information was scarce, what was it that made them THAT good? Was it just self analysis? or did they play like a trillion games before they got good? How did they approach books? And was there any of these training strategies are still effective today?
Genuinely curious on what the answers is since I never lived during a time when engines never existed in the first place😄

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The great chess players (  like Capablanca, Lasker, and Alekhine) were really good because they practiced a lot, studied old games, and learned from other players. They took chess seriously and thought hard about their moves.  they didn't have computers but their methods of learning are still helpful today : practicing a lot (like really a lot ) and playing against strong opponents. as GM Avetik Grigoryan wrote in the study plan :

The chess improvement formula : Study -> Practice -> Fix -> (Repeat) Despite having fewer resources, they followed this simple strategy for getting better at chess.

lastly Like any sport or discipline, some individuals have a natural aptitude for chess.

 

 

Information was a little harder to get, but it was not scarce. I clearly remember ordering (via regular mail) various chess periodicals and also Chess textbooks, which did a great job on openings, middlegame, and endgame study. Reviewing and analyzing games—especially losses—was as important as it is today, and I'm positive the GMs you mention did a lot of that.  

 

Computers and chess engines have undoubtedly elevated chess study to a new level. However, something may have been lost. I have study texts and notes that I've marked and highlighted before computers, laptops, and cellphones; I review my handwritten notes from time to time when part of my game needs work.  

 

In my opinion, it's important to set up a physical board with chess pieces and visualize in true 3D. This may take longer, but it's a great way to reduce screen time and helps with manual dexterity and coordination.

( The super GM tournament (Candidates) that just finished in Toronto, Canada, was an example of the highest level players – men and women – who sat opposite each other using real chess sets, handwriting their moves. )

Third question from 7 Q - where am I strong

This is from the Course 7Q Method - How to find a plan in any position

Why are we not strong in the queenside due to our pawn majority there? Is it because we have no pieces there? :-)

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Hi here's my take: Although we have more pawns on the queenside, Black controls the b-file so we cannot easily advance the pawns. Clearly our bishop is bad and the knight has a strong outpost on d4. I think Black actually has the initiative on the queenside. If we try to advance our pawns with b3 we can never exchange our bishop, Black can advance a7-a5 and increase the pressure on the queenside. Or if a2-a3 the knight still goes to d4.

I've watched this video some time ago already and I have to admit that White's best move did not occur to me immediately. Until I remembered to ask the next questions which pieces are not happy and need to be improved or traded. 

Alex's explanation is very good. Also Avetik explains why this Queen side majority is not enough in the minute 5 onwards of the video. Please check it out. 
Also just wanted to add that just counting the number of pawns is not enough, because then Black would have a majority in the center, but we cannot completely agree on that, do we? 😃

French Attack Exchange Variation

Hey guys,

Loving the French Attack!
I was wondering on the occasions where opponent castles long in Exchange Variation, what's the attack plan for us?

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I'm no chess expert but the attack plan for White can be  to create a pawn storm on the kingside. This involves pushing the f-pawn to f4 and then f5, breaking apart Black's solid central pawn structure and eventually starting a Kingside attack. This plan also gains space on the Queenside and possibly creates room for the dark-squared Bishop to come to b2.

Can I get the coaches in here to help? I face long castle using French Exchange quite frequently (1100 elo blitz). Can't do the attack set up with opposite castles =/

Brag: Finished 51,000 Puzzles

Six months ago I began a quest to complete 51,000 mate-in-1 puzzles. Today, I have reached that goal! I can say, without question, that it has made a massive improvement in my game (went from 1400 to 1740 on lichess). 

 

Additionally, going back into Tactic Ninja is so much easier for me now than it was before. Loving all the new puzzles in Tactics Ninja! Actually, I just love puzzles. Keep the puzzles coming!! :)

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Yes, I guess that you must love to solve puzzles after solving so many. Now you need to go for other types of puzzles, but don't lose the habit of working hard every day on chess! 😄

Paging Dr Avetik - this might or might not be suspicious

This site looks lifted from the SLP course. He uses the exact same terms Chessmood does. 

 

I appreciate that I might be overreacting. There are only so many ways to describe the same set of skills. If you ask me what a knight is and I say it moves in an L shape…did I plagiarize someone by explaining facts? But on the other hand ‘SLP mode’ is very much a trademark saying of Avetik's so…

 

https://summitschoolofchess.com/how-to-save-losing-positions-in-chess/

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This looks almost blatantly copied and pasted. All the article writer did was just summarize some points. They even used the same examples!!!!

Something is going on here…

Thanks for letting us know. We'll take it from here. 😀

The French Attack..

In the advanced variation of the French variation 3. e5 bd7 4. nf3 a6 5. c4 dc4 6. bc4 bc6 7.nc3 nd7 what should we do against d5?

 

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For me, i would trade everything with Bxd5 and if the take, we take back with the queen to provoke them with a trade, then castle long if they do take. This really just covers a barebones variation of the line, but i recommend you to do your self analysis on this variation.

How to play when opponent takes you out of theory?

I've been studying the chessmood repertoire and model games with commentary, and the games that go in that direction I generally win (unless I blunder x)), but lately half my opponents don't play the moves taught here. And then I went from knowing exactly what to do to not sure what to do and then I get out-played. Do you guys have tips on how to navigate in waters that are unfamiliar? 

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Shouldn’t happen much but when it does -

Use the Opening Principles (https://chessmood.com/course/opening-principles). 

My only exception is if it happens really often, (like nc3 on the french exchange) Post them on the forums as they might spark a conversation to how to play and guide you through that position.

Why does Magnus Carlsen resign in this game?

Hi,

I am a total newbie to chess, please help me understand why Magnus Carlesn resigns the following game:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rZQmbRTtAUg

He can still try to take the black bishop, with the white queen, one square to the right, but he resigns.

If he will take the black bishop with the white queen it will end up, as much as i can see, with him being in disadvantage of 1 rook, in comparison to the black pieces, but is this the reason he resigns? 

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Yes, this is the reason. At the GM level, they just resign when they're a rook behind without compensation even in blitz.

Hello Roi!

Yes of course the reason is lack of material. On GM level player may even resign being 2 pawns down, but in this case its a rook and pawn. Especially in and endgame there is no chance.

At GM level being down one piece without compensation is like being down a queen at 1600 level

need a chess coach on spot during June 10-20, 2024 at Almaty

Anyone is interested? Qualification: you need to speak English relatively well, so my kids could understand you. Our coach cannot accompany them to Almaty, so we are considering hire a coach on spot to help. Price negotiable. Prefer CM, FM or above level, titled players, or experienced chess coach with juniors. Please PM me here and then we can get in touch to explore the possiblities. Thanks. 

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If you know someone might be interested, please help forward to them. My kids will go to Almaty, Kasakhstan to join the Asian Youth and it would be good if we can find a coach on spot. Thanks a lot!

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