BLINDFOLD TACKLED SQUARE BY SQUARE
NY Post
By ANDY SOLTIS

April 29, 2007 — Chess FANS are often amazed when a master plays a game “blindfolded.” After all, how can you visualize the entire board in your mind?

The reality is that no one, not even a world champion, visualizes the entire board – even when playing normally. Typically a player looks at one section of the board, maybe eight to 12 squares, at a time, then looks at a related section.

The hard part of blindfold play is calculating several moves ahead when you aren’t allowed to look from one wing of the board to another.

When Vishwanathan Anand of India, now the world’s top-rated player, beat Loek van Wely of the Netherlands in a blindfold game last month, it was had to tell how deep his calculations were.

Here is the full article.

Have you ever played blindfold chess? Do you agree with GM Soltis that blindfold players only look at related sections of the board?

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