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Edmar Mednis - April 27, 2008 (8:03AM)
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Cheater Cheater Pumpkin Eaters..... - March 22, 2008 (12:57PM)
Online Playing Site
Why not visit the online turn base playing site, free chess, always free. A4C Online Playing SiteCan You "Buy" Your Way To Better Chess?
Unlike other sports where if you have the money you can "buy" a better game, new chess pieces and a board or a shiny new clock can't help you in the least.
In golf, any pro will tell you that equipment is a vital component. Baseball equipment, hockey equipment, track shoes, tennis racquets.......and the list goes on. In chess, new equipment doesn't mean a thing.
If we needed to run faster or jump higher there's steroids and personal trainers. Both of little help to the chess player. (I know, there's been talk of smart drugs and benefits of exercise and how it helps chess for years. I believe it with all of the BUFF grandmasters out there these days.)
What about dumping tons of cash into a chess coach, or two or three? Doesn't work, I've tried it. (Maybe I need the smart drug too.)
The aspiring chess player has only himself/herself to rely on and the only equipment that can be improved is his or her brain. Now, if you find out where to buy one of these, let me know because I could sure use one, and I'd pass out a few as gifts.
Thx,
Mike
Comments (0) Added by admin February 4, 2008 (6:17PM)
Serious About Improving? - Read This!
I don't know about you, but I'm tired of getting pounded OTB. So I started searching for an answer. I have a great rating here at this site, but my over the board play is much less impressive. I can't seem to transfer my skills from this site to OTB play. I think this is my solution: NM Dan Heisman parlays chess success with mentoring/coaching. I believe this may be the missing element in my chess ability. I don't have a coach. For those of you that are good OTB, should I spend the time and money on a good coach? Any advice would be greatly appreciated. Thanks!!!
Everything that follows is from NM Dan Heisman:
Why anyone wishing to improve needs a chess coach, and
Why anyone wishing to improve needs a chess coach: The fact is that no one ever got really good at chess without good chess coaching. This is true for almost any kind of endeavor - ever see Pete Sampras play without them showing you his coach…? Even Bobby Fischer, who liked to compare himself to the Russians by saying he did it all himself, actually went to NM John Collins’ home and studied with Collins and some of the best players in the country. Read any famous chess player’s biography and he will tell you how many years he spent studying at the Botvinnik School, or from IM Dvoretsky, or from Bruce Pandolfini, or whomever.
Chess is like anything else – to improve you need theory and practice. Theory may include reading books, watching videos, etc., but getting lessons is the key here, as it would be in sports (ever hear of a team without a coaching staff?) or music (a high school orchestra without a music teacher and instructor?), or anything else. In an upcoming Novice Nook I answer the question, “What can a good chess coach do for you that going over your game with (the chess program) Fritz cannot?” The answer:
A good instructor can:
1. Look at your games and see what you are doing wrong. Not just pointing out weak moves, but every possible weakness, such as misconceptions about how to play positions, planning and position errors, etc.
2. Talk with you and find out what you know and what you don’t. If you don’t know that both sides should try to attack when castling opposites sides with Queens on the board, he will see that and quickly tell you.
3. Answer questions and explain things to you that you don’t understand. Suppose you read in a book, “Passed pawns must be pushed” and you don’t know when or why, then if you ask a good instructor, he should be able to explain it to you until you are satisfied.
4. Work on your thought process. Listen to you think and make constructive suggestions on how to improve your technique.
5. Suggest a practice routine, including what tournaments to play, how to prepare, and what time limits would be the most helpful.
6. Suggest a way to learn new information and patterns, whether it be through reading books, watching videos, listening to tapes, etc.
7. Work on your time management. Show you when it is important to take your time and when you are wasting your time.
8. Provide psychological support. Teach you that you will not go straight up and that setbacks are normal and to be expected; teach you how to deal with and learn from your losses. Encourage you when you are down and keep you on an even keel if you get overconfident.
9. Help you pick an opening repertoire if you need help. Teach you what moves you will encounter the most frequently and the best ways to learn more.
10. Help you judge your progress and figure out what that means for your future play, practice, and study.
11. Show you themes and patterns that occur frequently so you know how to handle them when they do.
12. Listen to your concerns and desires and help you decide what are reasonable expectations; when you just need to accept what is happening and when you might need to do more.
Comments (0) Added by admin February 4, 2008 (6:09PM)
Off the Wall Chess - Didn't see the mate
Submitted by billwall on Fri, 10/12/2007 at 9:41pm.
It was round 1 of the first World Open, held in New York at the McAlapin Hotel in 1973. I was playing Black and was playing the Nimzo-Indian defense. I played the last few moves too quickly and was not defending my position. I allowed an f-pawn to get to f6, threatening Qg7 mate that I simply overlooked.
I had alternative moves, but had already formulated a plan, knew my moves, and was playing them without thinking about my opponent's threat. I thought he was going after my Bishop, not trying to checkmate me. I learned my lesson. Stop, check the position, don't play the first move that comes into your head, and defend your position before trying to win a pawn or go on the attack. Above all, don't miss a mate in one.
Comments (0) Added by admin October 29, 2007 (8:58AM)
Off the Wall Chess - Classical Sicilian
The Classical Sicilian (1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 d6 3.d4 cxd4 4.Nxd4 Nf6 5.Nc3 Nc6, or 1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.d4 cxd4 4.Nxd4 Nf6 5.Nc3 d6) is a very common opening in the Sicilian Defense. Usually White follows up with 6.Bg5 or 6.Bc4. I decided to be different and tried 6.Bb5, first played by Mackenzie against Louis Paulsen at Frankfurt in 1887. I was lucky to win this game. I grabbed a poison pawn that should have trapped my queen, but then my opponent grabbed a poison pawn that led to mate after I sacked the rook, then my knight.
Comments (0) Added by admin October 29, 2007 (8:41AM)


