Chess Middlegame Tactics Training: how good are you? Lessons # 122

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NM Robert Ramirez

2 жыл бұрын

Chess players! I know you feel like you are way past the fool’s mate -but how far advanced are you really? Let’s find out together here in lesson # 122 where you incorporate the elements of visualization and calculation to a simple pattern we are all familiar with: sacrifices on f7/f2. Enjoy!
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00:00 Lesson plan
01:26 1st position: fool’s mate
02:42 2nd position
03:06 3rd position
07:18 4th position
12:29 5th position
19:02 6th position
27:00 Chess visualization exercise
29:02 Subscribe
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Advanced tactics book (II): amzn.to/3bVdFVv
Carlsen’s book (excellent): amzn.to/3vwEMxy
Kramnik’s book (excellent): amzn.to/3cDlJsL
Pirc Defense book: amzn.to/3bQQefH
100 endgames you must know: amzn.to/3BkGyow
Endgames book: amzn.to/3cwxktM
Learn how to play Chess the right way from beginner to master level. National Master Robert Ramirez will take you up the pyramid by following a proven Chess training program he has been improving and implementing for over 10 years.
Benefits of Playing Chess:
​- Promotes brain growth
- Increases problem-solving skills
- It exercises both sides of the brain
- Raises your IQ
- Sparks your creativity
- Teaches planning and foresight
- Teaches patience and concentration
- Optimizes memory improvement
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- Helps treat ADHD
Chess is an intellectual battle where players are exposed to numerous mental processes such as analysis, attention to detail, synthesis, concentration, planning and foresight. Psychological factors are also present on and off the board; playing Chess stimulates our imagination and creativity. Every single move a player makes is the result of a deep analysis based on the elements presented on the battlefield.
Chess in its essence teaches us psychological, sociological and even moral values. In a Chess game, both players start with the same amount of material and time. The fact that the white pieces move first is considered to be practically irrelevant -especially because a player typically plays one game as white and one game as black. Consequently, the final result of the battle solely depends on each player. It doesn’t matter if you win by taking advantage of your opponent’s mistakes or by simply avoiding mistakes yourself. Truth is that Chess is an extremely individual sport and our defeats can only be blamed on ourselves and no one else. And this, in the end, only benefits us because we learn to be and feel responsible for our actions and never come up with excuses to justify ourselves.
We also learn that when it comes to our victories on the board, our opponent's mistakes play a more significant role than our own skills. Let’s not forget that a Chess game without any mistakes would be a draw. This way, Chess provides us with another valuable life lesson: be humble at all times.
About National Master Robert Ramirez:
With an outstanding background as a professional Chess player and over 8 years of teaching experience, Robert Ramirez brings both his passion and his expertise to the board, helping you believe & achieve!
Robert Ramirez was introduced to the fascinating world of Chess when he was 5 years old and has participated in prestigious tournaments such as the World Open Chess Tournament and the Pan American Intercollegiate Team Championships. Thanks to his performance, he has earned his National Master title from the United States Chess Federation.
Currently, NM Ramirez and his carefully selected team teach at several private schools in the counties of Miami-Dade and Broward and they also offer private lessons. He says the key to their success as Chess coaches is their ability to adapt to every student and to make lessons fun and interesting for students and even their family members.
www.chesslessonswithrobert.com

Пікірлер: 54
@NMRobertRamirez
@NMRobertRamirez 2 жыл бұрын
Hello guys! Let me know what puzzle you got stuck on 🙌 Was it experienced intermediate? 🤔😎
@muhammadbinasimrasheed3353
@muhammadbinasimrasheed3353 Жыл бұрын
I couldn’t calculate the king retreat variations of the last puzzle I saw the all of the rest of the puzzles after you told the sacrifice idea
@IanRiley915
@IanRiley915 5 ай бұрын
I really like the 6th position, but I think it's worth mentioning that the line that Alekhine followed is dubious. For those who paused the video trying to guess the next move, the move that Alekhine played is not the correct next move. That move just allows black to play out the rest of the game up a piece for two pawns. It doesn't force checkmate or win anymore material.
@marlonaustin5815
@marlonaustin5815 9 ай бұрын
Hello NM Robert Ramirez. I am 49 years old and am now looking to get back into chess after many years. Your videos are very useful. I am looking AT becoming an FM.
@user-kh6xl4yg1j
@user-kh6xl4yg1j 10 ай бұрын
Very good video. Could see for last example from Alekhine’s game, the initial sac but the follow up was confusing because didn’t realize white could deliver mate without his queen. Well done! More please
@arthurwieczorek4894
@arthurwieczorek4894 2 жыл бұрын
Pos#1: Smate. #2: Remove the guard---smate. #3: Kamakazze [I haven't found a shorter word] sack suck to [??]---Kamakazze attack on the 'queen in a box', which is also a through clearance move, is a sac suck to chuck---Check forces king to L square (his last)---T square (termination) enforces eppelett PiQ smate. #4
@adamblomquist5581
@adamblomquist5581 2 жыл бұрын
Awesome lesson! Really Appreciate the info on how to find a game, bring it to lichess then be able to analyze. This will really help me. I'm a 42 yr old construction worker so I'm basically a caveman when it comes to computers. Any & all tech help is EXTREMELY APPRECIATED. Gracias mi amigo!
@NMRobertRamirez
@NMRobertRamirez 2 жыл бұрын
Un placer Adam! Happy to help 👍
@terrysouth7201
@terrysouth7201 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for the excellent lessons!! I got most of them right but only up to a certain point, I get lost after calculating more than 4-5 consecutive moves
@terrysouth7201
@terrysouth7201 2 жыл бұрын
Honestly after your hints, I got the first few moves right on all puzzles, but had trouble with the different lines
@12anshdesai5c2
@12anshdesai5c2 10 ай бұрын
In the 3rd position we don't need to sacrifice the knight, we can deliver checkmate with queen, knight and pawns
@jeffersonparsons5519
@jeffersonparsons5519 2 жыл бұрын
very nice lesson😀 I would probably have lost on time trying to calculate the last position in a real game😅
@IanRiley915
@IanRiley915 5 ай бұрын
In the Alekhine vs Feldt game, I haven't considered this before, but I wonder if there is a discussion to be had about forced mates vs non-forced mates. The move presented leads to a Mate-in-2, but it isn't forced, which means that black gets one free move of their choice. They don't have any good moves, so it doesn't matter, but white would still have to go through all of black's possible moves to ensure that they have Mate-in-2. Whereas there is an alternative move that is a Mate-in-3, but it's a forced mate. Black only has single moves that they can make. While Mate-in-2 is faster, it seems like you'd always just choose the Mate-in-3 because it's forced. I guess you'd argue that the Mate-in-2 is more brilliant because it's faster and non-forced, but a forced mate just seems like the cleaner way to end the game. I recognize that this might be a bit of a silly point, but it's something I was considering for this game.
@anonymous-od3de
@anonymous-od3de 2 жыл бұрын
I always think that my tactic is ok until I see this video 🤣.These tactics are crazy!!
@DzdAbdou31
@DzdAbdou31 2 жыл бұрын
THANKS BRO ^^
@SalmanKhan-uz8sy
@SalmanKhan-uz8sy 2 жыл бұрын
Hey coach make more videos on sicilian diffence like you did with pirc n king indian defence, playing lots of game in a row with sicilian deffence opening with specific variation.
@cranexe9035
@cranexe9035 Жыл бұрын
I spotted the whole sequence at 23:27! e5 was what I was looking at. I also saw Re3.
@radicaldreamer320
@radicaldreamer320 11 ай бұрын
The position is lost for white after black taking bishop on g5. I was banging my head trying to figure out what to do against that and not finding anything, but it appeared that Alekhine blundered (bluffed?) this. Be3 or Bc1 instead of e5 was required according to the engine.
@dumitrualexandru5188
@dumitrualexandru5188 4 ай бұрын
23:26 e5 it is a blunder, Alekhine drops the bishop and loses the attack. 23:30 then g6 it is a huge miss
@youssefaly7067
@youssefaly7067 2 жыл бұрын
love your vids I went from 500 to 741 in 2 weeks
@NMRobertRamirez
@NMRobertRamirez 2 жыл бұрын
Congratulations! 👏💪😎
@nicholas612
@nicholas612 Жыл бұрын
26:01 I think pawn takes f6 is also winning 😊
@elkor3549
@elkor3549 2 жыл бұрын
your lessons are amazing man!
@NMRobertRamirez
@NMRobertRamirez 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you! 🙌👍
@elkor3549
@elkor3549 2 жыл бұрын
@@NMRobertRamirez you explain everything better than anyone else.
@tak3norag3
@tak3norag3 Жыл бұрын
Hello Robert. Thanks again for all these great lessons. When I play it against computer and after the king retreat on F8 and Pawn E5. Instead of playing Pawn to G6 the computer simply take the Bishop on G5 and I can't find a good continuation. Can u help me please finding the right continuation?
@tommonk7651
@tommonk7651 2 жыл бұрын
Alekhine was a great, great tactical player!
@antonioandreacchio5324
@antonioandreacchio5324 2 жыл бұрын
Great lesson. I appreciate the idea to switch on the brain when some set up are on the board. I’m on intermediate experienced but it’s a very trick to improve Your video are very helpful I’m 63 years old who started playing 1 year ago I’m now 1116 elo standard and my goal is to achieve 1501 elo Could you prepare some study program finalized to this goal? How to improve ? What really to study? One opening with black and one with white or more? And so on Thanks so much
@yakzivz1104
@yakzivz1104 2 жыл бұрын
For the third position, I was looking at something completely different. I was looking at Nf5 ?; Qg4 g6; Bh6 Kf8, etc. Of course this does not work because it is not forcing enough.
@DKAYOfficial
@DKAYOfficial 2 жыл бұрын
Awesome video! Is there by any chance you can make a video on how to study with an actual board?
@NMRobertRamirez
@NMRobertRamirez 2 жыл бұрын
I like the idea. I just made a note 👍
@frizz5933
@frizz5933 Жыл бұрын
18:15 here nearly everything wins and i saw that bxf5 wins after kh5 g4+ nxg4 bxg4#
@87rtlandry
@87rtlandry 2 жыл бұрын
I did not find the Queen sack on the “advanced intermediate” but weirdly, I was able to solve the “advanced.”
@NMRobertRamirez
@NMRobertRamirez 2 жыл бұрын
That was maybe because our brain immediately goes for 2.Ng5+. Anyways, great job on that "advanced" one 💪😎
@daleroach3485
@daleroach3485 9 ай бұрын
The white Bishop is not protected . What stops black bishop from taking it’s protected by queen
@87rtlandry
@87rtlandry 2 жыл бұрын
In the Alekhine position, I noticed you didn’t factor/calculate what happens if black just plays, Qc8. I mean, white can just play Ne5 and be super solid.
@NMRobertRamirez
@NMRobertRamirez 2 жыл бұрын
Hello Ryan! If it is on the "advanced" I think I mentioned Qxe6 threatening discovered check 👍
@87rtlandry
@87rtlandry 2 жыл бұрын
@@NMRobertRamirez oh. I must have missed it. Either way. Very instructive!
@TheMichiganFishHunter
@TheMichiganFishHunter 2 жыл бұрын
The last one was tricky.
@NMRobertRamirez
@NMRobertRamirez 2 жыл бұрын
The second one is tricky too 😎
@TheMichiganFishHunter
@TheMichiganFishHunter 2 жыл бұрын
@@NMRobertRamirez I like your content. Thanks for what you're doing.
@noah_4066
@noah_4066 2 жыл бұрын
First Puzzle: Qxh5 Nxh5, Bxf7# Second Puzzle: Nf7 Kxf7, Ng5+ Kg8, Qxe6+ Kh8, Nf7+ Kg8, Nh6+ Kh8, Qg8# Third Puzzle: d5 Nxe5, dxc6 Qb8, Bxe7 Nxc4, cxb7 Rxe7, Qe2 Qxb7, Qxc4
@TheMichiganFishHunter
@TheMichiganFishHunter 2 жыл бұрын
Can't Black just take Whites Bishop? Black has equal defenders on d5. Doesn't White have to take the Bishop first, then push d5? I think you have to remove the Queen from defense of the d5 square, then you can push. It's a deflection tactic.
@TheMichiganFishHunter
@TheMichiganFishHunter 2 жыл бұрын
I agree with the others though.
@noah_4066
@noah_4066 2 жыл бұрын
@@TheMichiganFishHunter aaah i missed that our bishop is hanging 😅
@NMRobertRamirez
@NMRobertRamirez 2 жыл бұрын
Hello! Good job, Noah, but you missed # 2 and # 3 😎💪
@TheMichiganFishHunter
@TheMichiganFishHunter 2 жыл бұрын
The diversion tactic
@mikkelskjoldan1291
@mikkelskjoldan1291 2 жыл бұрын
Intermediære beginner
@NMRobertRamirez
@NMRobertRamirez 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks a lot for sharing your answer 🙌👍