Beating the Nimzo-Indian Defense – GM Timur Gareev
Zeitnot: How to use, and survive, it
Posted on September 18,2014 By GM Levan Aroshidze in General Chess Articles, Beginner’s Corner. Zeitnot is time trouble and describes the situation in which a player has little time to complete the required moves. When a player is forced to play quickly, the probability of making blunders is extremely high. That’s why good time management is a very important aspect in chess. Time is one of the most important indicators for the evaluation of the game. A player may have huge material/positional advantage that would be useless because of time[…]
Knight or Bishop: Which has greatest value?
Posted on September 16,2014 By GM Levan Aroshidze in General Chess Articles, Beginner’s Corner. In the beginning, all new chess players must learn the relative values of the pieces. The most complicated subject is to compare and evaluate the powers of the bishop and the knight. These two pieces are completely different from each other but, surprisingly, they have similar values (3 pawns). Some coaches prefer to say that a bishop probably a quarter-pawn more valuable than a knight, but this is a quite unstable statement as the final choice o[…]
Beating the Nimzo-Indian Defense – GM Timur Gareev
Posted on September 15,2014 By OnlineChessLessons.NET Contributor in Strategy & Game Review, Chess Openings, All Articles w/ Videos, General Chess Articles. The Nimzo-Indian Refuted? The 4.Qc2 Nimzo-Indian. Timur explains that there is no reason to allow a Queen’s Indian because Black will struggle against this White response and that the Black Nimzo-Indian is harmless as the 4.Qc2 move is favored by both Kasparov and Carlsen with excellent results. Timur then examines Aronian-Karpov and makes the following findings; Queen’s Indian sidelines and the Ragozin considered if 3.Nf3 is played 3.Nc3 limits[…]
Exchange Sacrifice with Sergey Kasparov: Part II
Posted on September 11,2014 By GM Sergey Kasparov in Strategy & Game Review, Classic Games (Pre 2010), General Chess Articles. Continuing the topic of exchange sacrifice, we will consider exchange sacrifice with the idea of the destruction of the enemy’s “pawn chain.” Here one can better see the dividends, unlike in cases of ephemeral “domination.” I remind you that pawn structure can’t change very often. As a rule, it is a long-term concept. Dydyshko, V (2518) – Kasparov, S (2452) BLR-ch Minsk (1), 2001 The last move, 17. Rfd1, was unsuccessful. Excessive placidity sadd[…]
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Zeinot?