2200 assault

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  • Amit R
    replied
    As of now, I am doing only basic stuff to get to a decent base(1200?) : captures, mate-in-1,tactics.

    But, once I improve my rapid rating to about 1600, I intend to prepare extensively on 1 white opening and 1 black : thinking of Italian and Caro-Kann.

    Originally posted by Neil Frarey View Post
    Hey Amit, which openings are you looking at?

    Leave a comment:


  • Neil Frarey
    replied
    Hey Amit, which openings are you looking at?

    Leave a comment:


  • Amit R
    replied
    Thank you for sharing, Neil. Will check it out.

    Originally posted by Neil Frarey View Post
    Hey Amit, just finished a book on tension you might want to know about ... TENSION in the CHESS POSITION by Riley Sheffield.

    Great little book about 70 pages or so, very instructive.

    Leave a comment:


  • Neil Frarey
    replied
    Hey Amit, just finished a book on tension you might want to know about ... TENSION in the CHESS POSITION by Riley Sheffield.

    Great little book about 70 pages or so, very instructive.

    Leave a comment:


  • Egidijus Zeromskis
    replied
    Originally posted by Stephen Wright View Post
    Four? I thought it was three sets of three: orange (the fundamentals), blue (beyond the basics) green (mastery).
    There is a Revision and Exam. Comparably a new book (2016).

    Leave a comment:


  • Stephen Wright
    replied
    Four? I thought it was three sets of three: orange (the fundamentals), blue (beyond the basics) green (mastery).

    Leave a comment:


  • Tony Li
    replied
    Oooooof! Finally finished the 4 orange Yusupov books. Didn't realize 1500 is that hard!

    Hopefully the blue books are a bit easier.

    Leave a comment:


  • Aris Marghetis
    replied
    Originally posted by Amit R View Post

    In my case, I am learning to crawl :-D .

    Let me explain : my son and I were reviewing one of the games : https://lichess.org/iLBiEKAJCXuq : I had a "great" idea on move 42 for Black : ... Bf5+ Kf4/Kf3 Bd7+ winning the Q, and completely missed Qf5# .

    Great performance in your tournament, Aris ; I checked in after round 4, and you were in 2nd place . Was seeing your 5th match live ; tough fight against the tournament winner. If you hadn't missed the 6th round, I guess you may have been in the top 5.
    Thanks Amit! Yeah, I would have liked to play to the end, but I remembered the event being 5 rounds starting at 1pm. So I advised my family, and my wife planned for family dinner accordingly. Well, the tournament was actually starting at 2pm (burnt my hour buffer), and then only after the 5th round did I actually realize it was going to be 6 rounds. But dinner was already being served!

    I really enjoyed my games, but to be honest, I scored 1.5/2 in time scrambles where I would have been as low as 0/2 at standard time control. And I hope that zero-prize online events catch on!

    Leave a comment:


  • Amit R
    replied
    Originally posted by Aris Marghetis View Post

    So on the weekend before I played in Victor's Rapid, I did 130 checkmate examples, from 2-move to 4-move, and it really seemed to help, especially in my attacking win.

    It reminded me of going for a jog before going for a run, if you know what I mean. In other words, I think your idea is good to regularly do some kind of drills. Enjoy them!
    In my case, I am learning to crawl :-D .

    Let me explain : my son and I were reviewing one of the games : https://lichess.org/iLBiEKAJCXuq : I had a "great" idea on move 42 for Black : ... Bf5+ Kf4/Kf3 Bd7+ winning the Q, and completely missed Qf5# .

    Great performance in your tournament, Aris ; I checked in after round 4, and you were in 2nd place . Was seeing your 5th match live ; tough fight against the tournament winner. If you hadn't missed the 6th round, I guess you may have been in the top 5.

    Leave a comment:


  • Aris Marghetis
    replied
    Originally posted by Amit R View Post

    ...

    Right now, planning to study like a kid : mate-in-1s and captures.
    So on the weekend before I played in Victor's Rapid, I did 130 checkmate examples, from 2-move to 4-move, and it really seemed to help, especially in my attacking win.

    It reminded me of going for a jog before going for a run, if you know what I mean. In other words, I think your idea is good to regularly do some kind of drills. Enjoy them!

    Leave a comment:


  • Amit R
    replied
    Originally posted by Egidijus Zeromskis View Post

    You're welcome :) And you're in a good club of dad's who played along their sons and daughters - Plotkin, Preotu, Hua to mention several names.

    Being a little bit old fashion I recommend books :) For the start Soviet Chess Primer and going over the real chess board. For a little bit entertainment Tal's book on his match against Botvinnik.
    Thank you for the book recommendations. I had a copy of "Soviet Chess Primer" back in India, and had started reading it casually, but it was too dense for casual reading. Never got around to dedicated study. I hope to pick it up when I go to India next . Not sure when that will be, though. I hear only good things about Tal's 1960 book, thanks for recommending it. Will start studying that once I reach atleast 1400.

    Right now, planning to study like a kid : mate-in-1s and captures.

    Leave a comment:


  • Amit R
    replied
    Originally posted by Egidijus Zeromskis View Post

    I think Anand example is not useful.

    "the probability of anyone becoming GM after 50 is vanishing low" -- I think it is about a person still climbing a hill, not going down especially from 2800 heights.

    It would be necessary to double check but I think Beliavsky is one of the oldest active GM - 66 years and still with 2517 points.
    Karpov is older but does not play regularly in tournaments.
    Fully agreed , John and Egidijus, that becoming GM if still IM/lower is near impossible at 50+ ; my comment was only on GM Finegold's "no grandmaster on Earth..." comment.

    Leave a comment:


  • Egidijus Zeromskis
    replied
    Originally posted by Aris Marghetis View Post
    I drew a game I shoulda lost, and I won on time another game I should have lost
    It just mean you fought till the end and you were rewarded. I find myself playing much better when the position looks worse. Sometimes with the help of other side, the result is not bad for me :) Though I never get into a worse position intentionally.

    Leave a comment:


  • Aris Marghetis
    replied
    Originally posted by Egidijus Zeromskis View Post

    As I see you did great - the end rating 2300 :)
    LOL, that's just lichess new rating super-volatility ... I drew a game I shoulda lost, and I won on time another game I should have lost ... on the positive side, my time management was decent.

    We'll see the CFC rating effect on Thursday ...

    Thanks for the kind words though, the event was a LOT of fun, filled with good-natured people!

    Leave a comment:


  • Egidijus Zeromskis
    replied
    Originally posted by Aris Marghetis View Post
    Tomorrow afternoon will be my first "test", with a few dozen CFC-rated players at Victor Xu's free Sigma tournament:

    https://sites.google.com/view/torontocfcchess/registration?authuser=0

    I figure I'll have new opinions about lessons and openings after that lol
    As I see you did great - the end rating 2300 :)

    Leave a comment:

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