Advanced Tactics For Intermediate Players, Part 1: Lecture by GM Ben Finegold
Ойындар
This lecture was recorded on November 20, 2023 in Roswell, Georgia. Thank you Patrick Wheeler for sponsoring!
Games:
Games/Positions:
01:26 Nolan Hendrickson vs Ben Finegold, Spice Cup 2013
07:10 Irina Krush vs Sabina Foisor, US Women's Championship 2011
10:41 Position (1)
14:24 Position (2)
19:14 Position (3)
25:47 Position (4)
33:39 Position (5)
38:59 Position (6)
42:25 Position (7)
45:49 Jonas Bjerre vs Magnus Carlsen, European Team Championship 2023
49:53 Larry Evans vs Samuel Reshevsky, US Championship 1963/64
53:17 Ben Finegold vs Angel Arribas Lopez, Pro Chess League 2017
Check out Ben's Chessable courses here! www.chessable.com/author/BenF...
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Пікірлер: 166
this was my favourite lecture that I've watched today and I haven't watched any other ones.
@honeychurchgipsy6
7 ай бұрын
@951genni - I think it's my second favourite because my favourite is a lecture I haven't watched yet - because it hasn't been made - lol!!
@ernietollar407
5 ай бұрын
awesome and i love your comments more than any comments that have been written here including (90% of the one I'm yet to read.
This is also a good video on intermediate tactics for advanced players.
@tolkienfan1972
7 ай бұрын
Is there one on basic tactics for grandmasters?
@mydevice2596
7 ай бұрын
@@tolkienfan1972I would prefer Stockfish tactics for people who don't know how the pieces move
@timwheeler8523
7 ай бұрын
@@mydevice2596😂😂
@patrykapiezo1650
7 ай бұрын
@@tolkienfan1972 The Kramnik's reputation gambit.
@koenth2359
7 ай бұрын
I'm currently studying crappy tactics for Super GM's, but it's really hard to understand
Most people in the world aren't Grandmaster Ben Finegold and neither am I. But this guy IS. It's one of the things that make him special
Great video, Ben. I learned a thing or two. Or not. I can't remember.
This series was a good idea 👍 keep it going, please.
This will be your favorite lecture today, as long as you don't watch any other ones. 😂
I haven't watched any lectures in 2 weeks and this was my favorite lecture in the last 2 weeks.
I'm all for intermediate tactics for Advanced players being the next series.
Yay quality content! Thank you for your time Ben.
Perfect teaching video, Ben. Not overloaded with too much new material, yet not boring. I'll use these ideas. Good jokes too.
My favorite tactic I learned about in this advanced tactics course for intermediate players was "attacking the queen."
37:45 Bishop popping up from where it couldn't have been. One of my favorite blunders that I make is not looking at the whole board before an important move: some move sequences are automatic and you can't spend too much time on them, but it takes maybe five seconds to scan the board, like an aircraft pilots doing their regular instrument scan to make sure they aren't doing a controlled flight into terrain, the aviation equivalent of a chess blunder only the consequences may be a little more serious. The queen check with a fork has caught me a few times and it would have been more if I was playing stronger opponents! For that alone this video has been two hours very well spent (I watched it twice). I will try to make prevention of checks part of my development routine.
At 31:00, thanks for giving me ample time to figure it out! I needed the whole ample, but I got it just in time! Now I can forget everything about it.
thank you so much, please carry on with this
Great lecture as always! 👍🙏
That was awesome Ben ! will watch it again for sure. Really enjoyed your depth of knowledge. And great sense of humor. I love stale mates too because they involve advanced tactics ! Some of my best games are stalemates which can be exciting stuff. What's better than a stale mate ? escaping a stale mate !! In a recent chess 960 game I could escape with a backward knight move to block the rook check after a crazy king chase, and also freeing up squares for the enemy king to move to. Looking forward to the next lecture. Thanks Go Ben !
Great lecture...I liked seeing the same tactic in different positions.
Thanks for doing what you do!
This video appeared from scratch on my time line and now I loved it and I know you.
Thank you for sharing quality content!
Loved this one, thanks
Love you ben thanks for the video brotha
As a coach, i understand how great it feels when students remember something!
Thanks for this, I really enjoy the intermediate lectures. It's wasted on me though because obviously I'm terrible at chess.
Brilliant!
I watched a good lecture on Bobby Fisher earlier but I don’t remember it so this will be the best lecture that I remember today.. until I forget
Wow just what I needed!
I used to play the Max Lange Attack whenever possible as white and I think I've had the position at 26:50 over 100 times in blitz and rapid. Ben didn't mention the best part of this opening trap, which is that after Qxf6 Bxe6 fxe6 Qh5+ g6 Qxc5, Black invariably tries to "salvage" the position with O-O-O and further blunders the exchange to Bg5. It's great.
@johnreppel2756
7 ай бұрын
"Learning the opening" takes more than memorizing engine moves. You need to understand what your plans/goals in the opening are, and what options your opponent has.
@ALTTABINMAINMENU
7 ай бұрын
What's the fun of playing same dubious openings hoping for opponent to blunder a piece like that?
@johnreppel2756
7 ай бұрын
@@ALTTABINMAINMENU what's the fun of eating ginger? Some people like it.
@sirkiz1181
7 ай бұрын
@@johnreppel2756we talking about the spice or the type of person
@tellahsage6477
7 ай бұрын
@@ALTTABINMAINMENU Max Lange Attack isn't dubious. If you input the mainline moves into the engine and turn on the eval, White's actually slightly better. Black would be better off just playing the classical two knights instead of going into this dangerous line.
Thank you very much Mr. Finegold 👍👍
Easy to follow and practical.
Enjoying these these ideas.
Nice, waiting for part 2
Outstanding
I really enjoyed this lecture thanks GM
Thank you Mr. Wheeler!
This is dope, I just found your channel a few mins ago, I really appreciated your input on your video on how to get better. I’m on a journey to get better and im excited to watch this video.
Man this lecture is co cool I even brought myself another glass of herbs sirup. Cheers.
Go, Patrick Wheeler!
Suspiciously informative
Thank you
cool lecture. 10/10 would recommend
Very best post on tactis to draw in critical situation, great sir🎉❤❤
This is some fine gold right here.
very good.
I love this type of your videos sorry about the mom in the car
I'm learning to play chess, and I too suffer from old-timer's disease. I appreciate your presentation style.
Good stuff
Ben ur awesome. Please put a picture up behind u and fill the holes in your shelf unit.
more please!
"and I was like woah, that's a bishop on b1." 😂 37:42
amazing lecture. I hate the wet sticky sounds though, I hope you could find a solution to it.
@25:52 worth it no spoilers "There's a lawyer in Michigan"
I'm also very proud of your stalemate
12:40 lesson: if a GM hangs a pawn on move 5, test for poison.
Ben over here putting chess coaches out of business😅 great video!
This is Perfect, Great lesson Mr. Finegold
Ben: "oh no my bishop, oh no my rook, stalemate"
This will definitely help me reach 800 ELO except it probably won't
nice tactics there
50:55 And that's why I have a reputation for never resigning in my local club.
The joke about the triplet had me rolling lol
37:18 Someone knows the name of that opening?
The mouse slip one was awesome haha I bet you laughed hard
Isn’t it mate in 2 with Q to F5# in Evan’s vs Reshevski ?
21:18 I was wondering about Nxe5 winning the pawn and preventing you from losing the knight to Qh4+
@fengardice
7 ай бұрын
I don't know. After the queen trade on d1 there's ...Nd7, Black can castle queenside, the rook's looking at your king, Black's development is way better...
@mishaerementchouk
7 ай бұрын
It is not easy to keep that won pawn. For example, after Nxe5 Nxe5 dxe5 Nd7, if White decides to protect the pawn on e5, it comes with drawbacks. For instance, Bf4 loses the bishop to the same tactic. Qd4 Bc5 Qf4 0-0 and Black has the clear lead in development and the pawn on e5 is not safe yet. f4 doesn’t solve the problem as f6 either wins a pawn back or again leads to better development of Black pieces. In other words, Nxe5 doesn’t loose the game or something but doesn’t really give an advantage. Taking the pawn on e5 needs to be prepared by g3 (protects against Qh4) and so forth.
@qazzaqstan
7 ай бұрын
@@mishaerementchouk thanks, I wasn’t sure if I was just missing something obvious or if the other options for white are just better
This is a great videos because I say so.
bens next lecture: super advanced tactics for beginners
I kid you not, I found that night f5 move in less than 10 seconds without prewatching and nothing of that. Didnt watch that game with Magnus. I'm just 1300 rated too. I thought it was obvioius because I just saw the diagonals lining up perfectly with king and rook.
Cool
0:13 Did he just call us weakly?!
what about Nxe5? doesn't that win a pawn?
@5:00 He probably thought Bf1 is fine but forgot about QxQ and then Rxa1.
This guy is too funny😂
Uncle Ben ❤😁
in the first game instead of queen takes queen, qf3 is mate
In the third example, white already blundered rather severely by playing f3
A great book for repetition of advanced tactics I recommend “1000 checkmate combinations”
Bishop on B1, he plays a sniper in CoD, wearing a ghillie suit.
42:08 😂😂😂😂😂
yes yes yes yes yes
Pls do some analysis on Mir Sultan Khan some day.
The most advanced tactic is the "unstoppable". It's not attacking anything, there is no check, the opponent has 30 legal moves, none of which are obviously ridiculous - it's just that there is a threat that the opponent can't stop. Like Knife f5. That's hard to see.
@14:00 This actually works even if white plays the more normal Bc4 instead of Be2. Nxe4 is followed by Qa5, Bxf7 and Qxe4 causing the black king to become sus on f7 :) (Still, white is not objectively winning but oh man, who would take black in that position?)
I definitely play Rufus in round 1.😂
Why no stats! I would like to see real play results for relevancy BF. (Best Friends would reply with an answer, typical reply 😁 😁)
Goofus is the third triplet ;)
christmas came early
16:00 >it's finite >but it's almost infinite bruh the math ain't mathin' on that one, lol also just to corroborate finegold for no reason: i've had the tactic on-screen at the aforementioned timestamp as black. i had it against a 1600 after e4 c5 Nf3 e6 d4 cxd4 Nxd4 Nf6 e5. i imagine someone rated 1600 only falls for this if they're used to seeing Nc6 and they just turn their brain off.
I appreciate the fact that he goes slowly and he’s repetitive
I play The famous french player Rouffouse" Douffouse"
Grand Master Finegold, when you say "Over learn tactics, over learn tactics." You mean play overly tactical in the opening I hope?
52:10 Kh6 is funny
Finegold is the only GM who can spend 7 mins on one tactic example (spending most of the time talking about something that happened in his life)
"And then you blunder your Q... I mean that ruins... like a whole day for you."
OH NO BEN'S BISHOP
25:35 😂
2:10
6:15 in the first game wouldn't you rather play queen F4 for checkmate?
@bob3377
5 ай бұрын
White can block with their queen.
11:11 good thing I wasn't paying attention
I looked on the internet and he was 13. (That’ll show him!)