3 Ways To Exploit Pawn Pushing

Ойындар

pgn diagram resources mentioned in the video:
www.chess.com/clubs/forum/vie...
Beginner to Intermediate level target audience on how to exploit an opponent pushing too many pawns in chess. It isn't always as easy to crush as some people make it sound, so here are three ways you might be able to exploit this.
00:00 Introduction
01:34 Example 1 Setting Up Position And Discussion
08:32 Example 1 Opening Lines Of Attack
14:53 Example 2 Opening Principles
18:10 Example 3 Getting Behind Enemy Pawns
28:21 Thinking More About Territory
31:16 Conclusion

Пікірлер: 54

  • @wealthypig4033
    @wealthypig4033 Жыл бұрын

    Just thanks I couldn't take them anymore !! At 800 they all play like that😔

  • @kesetokaiba

    @kesetokaiba

    Жыл бұрын

    Even the chess master was once a beginner (Irving Chernev) and I remember being low rated too. When I first learned the rules of chess, I didn't even know what a Grandmaster was or that ratings existed! From my vague memories of chess back then, I'd estimate I was about 700 rating ability. I've had to deal with pawn-pushing opponents a lot to reach the ability I have now, so yeah we all have to go through it. I guess this is a long way of saying you are not alone. Hope this video and others on my channel help you deal with your chess opponents :)

  • @kitkatchess4443
    @kitkatchess4443 Жыл бұрын

    Great video! I never know how to deal with these types of people…

  • @gregwhittier5206
    @gregwhittier5206Ай бұрын

    This is great, especially the first example, which is common in the trenches of low ELO chess. I like that you acknowledge it's not actually that terrible for the pawn pusher. I've done a couple of opening principles courses and their pawn pusher examples are those wasting time with wing pawn pushes that are easy to deal with ("you follow your principles and build the center!" they say) but the push in example 1 is really just an overemphasis on particular principles (space and central control) to the exclusion of another (development). In shorter time controls, they can get a big time advantage as you're bewildered, creating a closed position that feels hard to crack. Then you lose on time, feeling like you're still losing despite playing "the right way."

  • @kesetokaiba

    @kesetokaiba

    Ай бұрын

    Exactly! Plus I'd sometimes get frustrated at the position being closed and try to sacrifice material to "open it up" and you guessed it...it opens up with me down material and no advantage. I'm glad you found this video helpful :)

  • @davidsandrock7826
    @davidsandrock782611 ай бұрын

    a2/a7 and h2/h7 also prevent assholes from forcibly trading their bishops for my knights, knowing full well that knights are _dead_ useful to later maneuver into a fork that the opponent doesn’t see coming and/or can’t stop. I love using knight moves to outmaneuver my opponents, and being stripped of that possibility so early in a game always makes me consider resigning on the spot. I usually talk myself out of it, and see if I can get the other minor pieces and Queens off the board as quickly as possible to turn it into a long ass rook and pawn endgame. If I can accomplish that, then I have claimed my fun back.

  • @72lucious
    @72lucious17 күн бұрын

    I should have found this video earlier when I was this elo and not tryharding so much that I outplay my elo rating by about 300 points just for people like pawn pushers This is still a great video

  • @kesetokaiba

    @kesetokaiba

    17 күн бұрын

    Thank you; hopefully my channel can help you for the level you are at now too. I've got videos at a range of rating levels because I want to include everyone on this chess improvement journey :)

  • @i.g.l.z.9215
    @i.g.l.z.921510 ай бұрын

    A very useful lesson, thank you!

  • @kesetokaiba

    @kesetokaiba

    10 ай бұрын

    You're welcome :)

  • @pushingyourownagenda9889
    @pushingyourownagenda9889 Жыл бұрын

    Very nice video anyway...i just watched it full just now..KZread reccomended me.. looks like the algorithm is doing a favour

  • @aspectsofgaming3774
    @aspectsofgaming3774 Жыл бұрын

    10/10 Video Quality:D

  • @strenesperu9956
    @strenesperu9956 Жыл бұрын

    Excelent video! now i know how to play against myself!

  • @sloefair8877

    @sloefair8877

    Жыл бұрын

    forget about Elo… now you can beat yourself

  • @chadmowers9692
    @chadmowers9692 Жыл бұрын

    Good video!

  • @davidsandrock7826
    @davidsandrock782611 ай бұрын

    a2/a7 and h2/h7 are common prophylactic moves to prevent your opponent from pinning your knight to your King and Queen, a tactic which is part of theory in many lines. a2/a7 also prevents a later fork of your king and rook, which is essential if you are playing chicken with your opponent to see who castles first instead of castling ASAP. h2/h7 prevents a protected knight from forking your queen and your rook (protected to avoid being taken by your king). There are many reasons to employ these prophylactic moves, and the statement that either side should _welcome_ leaving themselves vulnerable to common pins and forks is ludicrous. I’ll admit that it takes practice to get the read on whether any given prophylactic move is necessary in a given game, but having fallen victim to _both_ of those vicious forks in the past (one person forking my queen and rook with their knight protected _and_ my king in check), I often go with ‘better safe than sorry’ when it comes to prophylaxis in chess.

  • @kesetokaiba

    @kesetokaiba

    10 ай бұрын

    They are common prophylaxis moves, but we should be careful about small pawn moves like this as they can leave weak squares and holes in our position.

  • @DerZeppterdesAldi
    @DerZeppterdesAldi7 ай бұрын

    very good video very educating

  • @kesetokaiba

    @kesetokaiba

    7 ай бұрын

    Thank you :)

  • @aspectsofgaming3774
    @aspectsofgaming3774 Жыл бұрын

    Great vid Kesetkaiba! Also, this is is kraken again sooo yea lol

  • @TAAAAAAAYYGGG
    @TAAAAAAAYYGGG Жыл бұрын

    They all play like this at 900+ elo and i hate it, glad i found this video

  • @kesetokaiba

    @kesetokaiba

    Жыл бұрын

    It is common and that is why I thought we needed a video on this topic! Glad you found it useful :)

  • @voodooguitarz
    @voodooguitarzАй бұрын

    Thank you, your explanations were clear and helpful. It all make a lot of sense! My follow qn would be - when is the right time to push pawns? Or do you want to avoid pushing as much as possible and have the aim of playing mostly with the pieces? Cheers!

  • @kesetokaiba

    @kesetokaiba

    Ай бұрын

    Glad the video was helpful :) Different chess openings feature different pawn structures and different plans, so sometimes you'll push pawns (gain space, control the center, play for pawn levers etc.) and other times you'll avoid pushing pawns (developing pieces, keeping pawns in front of a castled king close by etc.). Several videos on my channel go more in-depth to those specific situations, but certainly think twice about ANY pawn move because they can't go back once they advance, unlike the other pieces.

  • @voodooguitarz

    @voodooguitarz

    Ай бұрын

    @@kesetokaiba thanks again for the informative answer! And I will checkout your other videos

  • @CountingDemon
    @CountingDemon Жыл бұрын

    Now i can finally start making progress :)

  • @kesetokaiba

    @kesetokaiba

    Жыл бұрын

    :) Happy to be a part of that progress!

  • @nicovanderwilt7502
    @nicovanderwilt75023 ай бұрын

    I've played a really good player lately who played a5 Ra7 and he or she later brought the rook to the h-file. And from that moment i had a really hard time. After a while i got in time trouble. So when someone pushes every pawn 2 spots it's really crazy. Confusing.

  • @kesetokaiba

    @kesetokaiba

    3 ай бұрын

    In a case like that, it is usually best to ignore their moves and keep developing pieces and controlling the center. The ...a5 move does nothing to fight for the center, or develop a piece. ...Ra7 develops a piece, but to a square it is bad on and this also does nothing for the center. Best of luck :)

  • @Phoenix-jd5gy
    @Phoenix-jd5gyАй бұрын

    pawn pushing opponent vs hero

  • @kesetokaiba

    @kesetokaiba

    Ай бұрын

    Glad you noticed that :)

  • @pushingyourownagenda9889
    @pushingyourownagenda9889 Жыл бұрын

    Oooo high level video?.. Mmmmmmm interesting

  • @travisfoster4161
    @travisfoster4161 Жыл бұрын

    The person I play most just plays either D4 and E4 or the other way around and just keeps building on it. It's so tough to break through. They will nearly always choose to be white as well.

  • @kesetokaiba

    @kesetokaiba

    Жыл бұрын

    1. d4 or 1. e4 can become many solid openings and these are also the two most popular first moves in chess. If they play solid, you have to play solid as well. If they push pawns and constantly violate opening principles, then it typically makes your job a little easier. As for them usually choosing the white pieces, most players switch colors after each game, or randomly draw for colors out of fairness.

  • @travisfoster4161

    @travisfoster4161

    Жыл бұрын

    @@kesetokaiba they normally push the Queens pawn first whether they are white or black and then they will always play the Kings pawn straight after. We normally only have one or two games per day but they usually set the game up so they choose white or get lucky when we choose randomly.

  • @kesetokaiba

    @kesetokaiba

    Жыл бұрын

    @@travisfoster4161 Having the center pawns advanced two squares together (on d4 and e4 with white or d5 and e5 with black) is called a "pawn duo" and is actually a good beginner strategy of controlling the center. Usually you want to prevent the opponent from doing this. For example if you were the black pieces: 1. d4 d5 2. e4 is the Blackmar-Diemer Gambit chess opening, but not objectively that good because white won't be able to keep the pawn duo in the center. 2...dxe4 3. Nc3 Nf6 and the black side is just up a pawn and securing their own in the center. Black is already slightly better. Granted, in this example, the game is only on move 3, so there is a ton of chess left, but if you eventually lose the game, it wasn't because of the first few moves. :)

  • @CoolockIRA

    @CoolockIRA

    Жыл бұрын

    ​@@travisfoster4161 flip a coin on it that's what me and my Father do

  • @NickGetsGainz
    @NickGetsGainz Жыл бұрын

    I thought c3 at 9:40 bc if they dont tale you take and they have to take with a pawn then d4 is destabalized and they take you have another pawn tk pressure the center

  • @kesetokaiba

    @kesetokaiba

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes, c3 is a logical idea, but a3 is better because you open up the a-file for your Rook whereas c3 might open up the c-file, but your Rook isn't ideally placed on c1. The point of openings lines of attack here is to bring your pieces into play actively. The c3 idea is a decent plan in a practical game, but a3 better understands the time factor of piece activity (c3, opening the c-file and getting the Rook to c1 takes time whereas a3 and using the a-file is quicker).

  • @NickGetsGainz

    @NickGetsGainz

    Жыл бұрын

    @@kesetokaiba thank you and that does make sense appreciate it (:

  • @pushingyourownagenda9889
    @pushingyourownagenda9889 Жыл бұрын

    I just looked at the views and it said 4B ..and i rubbed my eyes and looked again and i realised it meant 48 😅

  • @NfShf

    @NfShf

    Жыл бұрын

    Yes 4 billion

  • @kitkatchess4443
    @kitkatchess4443 Жыл бұрын

    P.S. at around 25 minutes isn’t the pawn on c4 hanging in two ways

  • @kesetokaiba

    @kesetokaiba

    Жыл бұрын

    Yup it sure is, but I gave a sample line regarding the more logical Bxc4 in the pgn diagram in the chess.com club (link in YT video description). I chose not to address this in the YT video because the video is long enough and it is actually complicated stuff. For purposes of this video, Black is losing by a lot, so it makes sense to look at if they try to keep the position closed (...c4) even at the cost of a pawn because allowing the position to open up typically favors the side better developed (white side in this example). :)

  • @user-fs3hx6qw1r
    @user-fs3hx6qw1r2 ай бұрын

    whats ur elo? 1300?

  • @kesetokaiba

    @kesetokaiba

    2 ай бұрын

    chess.com rapid is in the 2000s and my USCF rating is Class A (1800-2000). My chess.com username is KeSetoKaiba just like my KZread channel name :)

  • @user-fs3hx6qw1r

    @user-fs3hx6qw1r

    2 ай бұрын

    @@kesetokaiba nice how long? and dont make educational chess videos at 800 elo . show your own matches and the key ideas which beginners can learn from.

  • @kesetokaiba

    @kesetokaiba

    2 ай бұрын

    @@user-fs3hx6qw1r I have a few videos like that already and plan to have a few more videos of my own chess in the future. This was one of the first videos on my channel and I like to mix up the rating range so everyone feels included. :) Check out some of my other videos like the one on How To Attack Positionally or How To Dominate The Chess Board (Conquer in the thumbnail). Those show some of my own chess as do a few other videos too.

  • @Dc-kk9bd
    @Dc-kk9bdАй бұрын

    This guy doesn't understand pawn pushers

  • @kesetokaiba

    @kesetokaiba

    Ай бұрын

    Which guy? xD

  • @DaveCharbonneau1

    @DaveCharbonneau1

    22 күн бұрын

    Maybe he's pointing 2 thumbs at himself and announcing his statement with gusto? Dunno. So hard to tell without a GIF to add context. 😂🤣 Thanks for the video!

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