Reach 1500 ELO with the Ultimate Climb Guide

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  • čas přidán 1. 06. 2024
  • Previous Episode on Reaching 1200 ELO: • Reach 1200 ELO with th...
    00:00 Introduction
    02:22 Common Problems for 1200
    06:27 Things 1500 Can Do
    07:46 Exchanges & Weaknesses
    09:12 Calculation
    12:07 Tactics Serving Strategy
    13:40 Sense of Danger
    15:15 Rook Endings
    17:05 Typical Errors at 1500
    29:17 Summary
    34:14 Materialism
    🔵 My Chessable Courses: chessable.com/drcan
    ♟️ Find me on Chess.com: canka19
    ♟️ Find me on Lichess: cantosh
    🏆 2022 Chessable Community Author of the Year! www.chessable.com/blog/announ...
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    Connect on / kabadayichess
    Go Chessable Pro using this link to support the channel: chessable.com/drcanpro
    The overarching goal of this channel is to help you improve your game. To fulfill this goal, I started this series on how to reach certain rating milestones in chess (based on chess.com rapid ratings).
    While preparing for this series, I have looked at hundreds of games from different rating groups and made several observations that have led to various hypotheses. I will share those with you in this series.
    We will see what kind of recurrent issues are there at your level and how the next level has resolved those problems. This allows me to give you much more specific training advice to reach the next level rather than the routine advice of "just study tactics." I invite the whole chess community to join this scientific discussion and share their ideas and best training advice for each rating level.
    This episode highlights the typical issues faced by 1200 ELO players and how 1500 ELO players have overcome them. Then training advice is given to reach 1500 ELO. The episode ends with typical mistakes made by 1500 ELO players, so that they become aware of those to reach the next level.
    Thanks to one of my subscribers who has described this project as developmental psychology of chess expertise, like Jean Piaget's work on cognitive development of children.

Komentáře • 82

  • @oumarjaffar4605
    @oumarjaffar4605 Před 5 měsíci +9

    Great content with an interesting enthusiastic way of delivering it 👍

  • @eschiedler
    @eschiedler Před 5 měsíci +4

    Applying cognitive science to chess is a fantastic area of study. Congrats on your excellent progress so far.

  • @tedlis517
    @tedlis517 Před 5 měsíci +6

    Useful and well organized content. You are great resource.

    • @Dr.CansClinic
      @Dr.CansClinic  Před 5 měsíci

      I am very happy to hear this, thank you so much for your kind comment.

  • @ManishSingh-bq2un
    @ManishSingh-bq2un Před 5 měsíci +2

    Very informative and instructive. Never seen such kind of material before. Patiently waiting for 1800 elo video which is my level.

    • @Dr.CansClinic
      @Dr.CansClinic  Před 5 měsíci

      Thank you for your kind comment! I am working on it, stay tuned :)

  • @Eathisword
    @Eathisword Před 5 měsíci +1

    I went from 800 to 1500 in the last year and all the videos in this series have been spot on so far.
    You verbalize very clearly a lot of the change I can see in my games library. Its actually quite spooky 😂
    I feel like that around 1350-1450 the games are a lot less often decided by opening blunders/traps and a lot more by either tactical or positional play in the middle game. In my experience, 1500 has also been the moment when I started to see piece activity as valuable. For example, sacking an exchange to remove an active piece or to activate one myself. Which is something the would never occur to me at 1200.
    Amazing work, sir.

    • @Dr.CansClinic
      @Dr.CansClinic  Před 5 měsíci

      That is amazing to hear, thank you so much! Haha I take the word spooky as a compliment as I could diagnose your issues :)
      Indeed, piece activity and strategic play improves around that level. I have one Chessable course that is exactly on this: "The Art of Awakening Pieces".

    • @RoZaxTheGreat
      @RoZaxTheGreat Před 5 měsíci

      Same for me. 800 - 1500 blitz in the last year and i almost completely agree with you. Makes me wonder what is happening between 1500-2000 now lol. I guess endgames and some advanced middle game knowledge

    • @Dr.CansClinic
      @Dr.CansClinic  Před 5 měsíci

      Thank you for your input! That is also my hunch, but we will see what data looks like :)@@RoZaxTheGreat

  • @ndmb6333
    @ndmb6333 Před 5 měsíci +4

    I'm a 1500 player and i can totally relate to 19:03 ( consistency problems ) , i often play amazing games with strategic and positional dominance , with many times being up a piece or an exchange , but then comes that one moment when i lose focus or make that one move without really thinking ( sometimes due to time troubles ) and just throw the game away because of it. anyway great video i can't thank you enough for the amazing chess content you presenting on your channel , your videos about calculation and always thinking about the opponent threats already helped me improve alot !

    • @Dr.CansClinic
      @Dr.CansClinic  Před 5 měsíci +2

      I am extremely happy to hear this, thank you so much for sharing your own story too! Indeed, consistency is such a key determinant of our chess strength! I plan to make another video on consistency actually :)

  • @davidbatchelder85
    @davidbatchelder85 Před měsícem

    I did see and find the queen trade. I did see the threats. You did say look at the threats from your last opponents move. Very good advice.

  • @aniseedtwist
    @aniseedtwist Před 5 měsíci +2

    loads of positive comments and rightly so, these videos and Dan's chessable courses make you feel you are indeed learning to play chess, every so often somebody comes along and brings some common sense to the table, Dan Heisman is certainly one that comes to mind, here we have it ,another Dan and another class teacher, don't get lost in the forest of chess spoon- feeding what you need is here, so far i have 3 of dan's chessable courses , well worth the money .

    • @Dr.CansClinic
      @Dr.CansClinic  Před 5 měsíci

      I am honored to read your words, thank you so much! Really motivating! Just a small correction. My name is Can and not Dan :) It is pronounced like "John" though :)

    • @aniseedtwist
      @aniseedtwist Před 5 měsíci

      @@Dr.CansClinicsorry Can, my bad

  • @davidbatchelder85
    @davidbatchelder85 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Just what I needed. You told me about my pit falls

  • @3Slippers
    @3Slippers Před 5 měsíci +4

    Simply ideal content on this channel,please, keep going. Huge thankyou. Heading to your chessable courses.

    • @Dr.CansClinic
      @Dr.CansClinic  Před 5 měsíci +1

      Thank you so much for your motivating comment! Great that you will get my courses. Please do not hesitate asking any questions while studying them!

  • @ermanevcil
    @ermanevcil Před 5 měsíci +1

    Great video series ! Thank you

  • @Jonalexher
    @Jonalexher Před 5 měsíci +1

    This was really really helpful. Thanks a lot. I subbed and saved 5 of your other videos to watch later. Great stuff man 👍 (I'm 1200 rated right now and I feel like this was the exact video I needed to watch to start thinking like a stronger player).

    • @Dr.CansClinic
      @Dr.CansClinic  Před 5 měsíci +1

      Awesome! Thank you so much for your motivating words my friend! Please do not hesitate asking any questions along the way!

  • @uygarbaksi
    @uygarbaksi Před 5 měsíci +1

    you're talking about me, dude. thanks!

    • @Dr.CansClinic
      @Dr.CansClinic  Před 5 měsíci

      Haha the doctor has diagnosed your issues!

  • @gulabrathod4484
    @gulabrathod4484 Před 5 měsíci +2

    Very nice educative video. Thank you Sir.

  • @shlomolaufer
    @shlomolaufer Před 5 měsíci +1

    Thanks. Great videos!

  • @timwoods3173
    @timwoods3173 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Thank you for all the reminder.

  • @Mikejones011990
    @Mikejones011990 Před 3 dny

    08:05 I'm usually cognizant about trading on my own terms. I got it wrong this time because I'm still not sure when doubled pawns are strong. But my first choice was Bb6 or Re8 or Nd7->c5->xe4->xf2 if white's mouse dies. "Occupy outposts with pieces, not pawns." I want my N to move in, not just visit...how do I convince my opponents to quit kicking horses? I still screw up trade orders sometimes. Still miss too many forks. What's worse: committing blunders, or forgiving them?
    12:10 I learned chess just before computers did. It took 6 years to learn there's more to the game than calculating. Using the pin to attack the Q to gain a tempo to maneuver the N to the f6 outpost was natural long before I knew those words. (Btw, I'd keep the Qs. [Connect black's isolated pawns, let 'em pass, AND give his R an open file? "For free" ain't a good enough reason to turn all his weaknesses into strengths.] I admit I didn't know what the best move was. I wasted time considering a N sac on h5 then Rg3+ and Qd2. I lost for fancier reasons?)
    14:10 and black to move. How on earth did I get into this mess? Never mind. Up 2 pawns with the bishop pair, but my whole army is asleep. White hopes BxNe7...Bxe7 Qxc7+, winning the rook and everything else. Is the disappearing Qs trick still on the table? No? Well, what can black do?
    ...Rc8 stops the shenanigans for the price of an isolated pawn. a2 is lollygagging across the board from the action anyway; will it really miss its head? Ok move, but time is free.
    ...0-0 gives up c6 pawn after BxN.
    ...Kd7? Can my man defend everything and prove castles are outdated? My Q is lazy. After Ra1c1, what can she do? c5 is falling and c6 is next. Castles aren't outdated yet. I'm missing a resource. I know this because it's a puzzle. My Q has to wake up, but I have no checks.
    ...Qb4? Qa6, still coming for that Qb7+ fork. Qb6...Qb4, is it a draw by repetition?
    I gave up on my Q too quickly - one day I'll learn to check new move orders before new lines. 1. Bg5 Qb4! and timing is everything. Also, no chance I'd find that with a timer going.
    Why was Qb4 so hard to find? I didn't discard it initially, I just didn't consider the possibility.
    15:22 The R endgame trade down was natural. Just like we drew it up, complete with the pretty R sac for the cherry on top.
    18:06 What threat is white facing? Re1, pinning the N to the Q, and winning a piece with f3 and/or Bg5. Black is lucky if he only loses a tempo.
    20:30 Consistency!? We haven't met, which extra dimension are you from? Yeah. You were beautiful, but divorce is inevitable, and I only play 10 minutes max, no bonus time for no one.
    21:32 I got the right answer for the wrong reason. I thought it would isolate the pawns. It would. But I didn't take the N invasion seriously. I'm still not sure why it's a big deal after NxNd4. This might be the biggest lesson for me so far, but don't discount tactics. "The Art of Awakening Pieces." Heard, understood, and acknowledged.
    24:16 "Ya really can't go wrong by lining up your R with the opponent's Q." -Simon Williams's dad, I think. But I understand the mental lapse: it's not about material count - it's my K pawn! (I can only count to...FOUR. My five year old insists it's quality music.)
    25:15 1...Nxc6 2. Qf2/g2/h2...Ne2+ and thank ya kindly. Ok, you went Ng3 instead of Ne2+. Please tell me my way good too. At least I didn't win a rook. Oh wait! You came back to check on that move. Whew. What are these "plies", again? I thought we're supposed to run 'til our vision gets blurry and hope for the best.
    27:57 The biggest problem with chess is you have to think, and thinking is hard sometimes. I would like it if our rooks could trade places - if we shake hands, does that make it a legal move? Re4 or Re5. Centralized as centra can be lized. Maybe Re3 is better, because ...Rd3 cuts off Kh3, and my K prefers his options unlimited. Which square? I want to push c4. I don't want to allow ...c5 forcing doubled pawns.
    Re5...f6 gxf6+...kxf6 and suddenly his K has opinions.
    Rc6...f6 and the position is complicated. I think the R is fixed on f6, the white k has just enough help to defend, and we can eventually trade or push the b pawn. I don't like thinking if I can help it, but it probably does win.
    Re4...same thing? ...Rd3 Rc4. Your move, hot shot.
    Re3 doesn't work. We don't want our rook behind those pawns.
    Re5 or Re4? Again, we don't want our rook behind those pawns. We know our pawns are marching, and we know the K can't stop it, and we know our opponent isn't a gentleman who'd agree to let our rook hop fences like we all know he's physically capable of doing quite easily even if he is 35 or so. That is not middle aged, and that is the lesson I hope we've all taken away here.

    • @Dr.CansClinic
      @Dr.CansClinic  Před 2 dny +1

      I love your comment. Every word of it. Seriously. Please keep on commenting ❤️

  • @remic_s2775
    @remic_s2775 Před 5 měsíci

    Beautiful content 🎉🎉🎉🎉

  • @blundergoat
    @blundergoat Před 5 měsíci

    Thanks! 👏👏

    • @Dr.CansClinic
      @Dr.CansClinic  Před 5 měsíci

      Thank you so much for your support! Much appreciated.

  • @PatrickRecordon
    @PatrickRecordon Před 4 měsíci

    I received a good advice that helped me on the long term. 90% of the time, to take is a mistake. If you can allow it, keep the tension.

  • @user-ot8bb3ng7o
    @user-ot8bb3ng7o Před 5 měsíci

    Absolutely great fantastic information 🎉💯👏 exchanging ON YOUR OWN TERMS 🎉🎉I saw this concept occur in a game,kamsky v Karpov,caro kann 1996 elista,was taken by suprise,on move 9Be8 ,a retreat of bishop,and move 11Nf6 not exchanging but retreat🤔 the retreat proved good eventually,the new challenges am facing as chess knows increase,is one of DECISION making.where we becomes confused by having options that clash with each other,to be or not to be,🤔double pawns or no double pawns ect one chess principle vs another principle,great video👏👏💯

    • @Dr.CansClinic
      @Dr.CansClinic  Před 5 měsíci

      Thanks for your input! Those trade-offs between principles make chess a difficult game!

  • @firerook
    @firerook Před 5 měsíci

    Great video, for which level you would recommend each of your chessable course?

    • @Dr.CansClinic
      @Dr.CansClinic  Před 5 měsíci

      Many thanks! These are the rough numbers:
      Chess Crime and Punishment & Fundamental Chess Calculation Skills: 1000-2000 ELO
      The Art of Series: 1200-2000 ELO

  • @bakrob99
    @bakrob99 Před 5 měsíci +1

    Thanks for this video.

  • @chesslover8829
    @chesslover8829 Před 13 dny

    Sometimes, I miss the forest for the trees. That is, I can do a 10-ply calculation on the wrong move candidate or miss an important branch in the calculation tree, which might cause me to abandon the entire sequence. On another topic, it might be helpful if you were to offer a sequence of courses on Chessables that takes a rank beginner all the way to 1700. Many people might find such a course offering useful.

    • @Dr.CansClinic
      @Dr.CansClinic  Před 12 dny +1

      Thank you for this honest feedback. Long variation, wrong variation! I have just finished a course on climbing from 700 to 1200 ELO. I modeled it on my rating climb series. It will probably be published around July/August! :)
      If people like it, I may continue towards 1500 and even 1800!

    • @chesslover8829
      @chesslover8829 Před 12 dny

      @@Dr.CansClinic Outstanding! Thank you so much!

  • @joeperry1188
    @joeperry1188 Před 5 měsíci +1

    This is a really excellent video

    • @Dr.CansClinic
      @Dr.CansClinic  Před 5 měsíci

      Thanks a lot! 😊

    • @joeperry1188
      @joeperry1188 Před 5 měsíci

      @@Dr.CansClinic honestly, I think this is exceptional content. Especially with the way you revisit your points with examples. I really like the way you structure your videos. Definitely subscribing and I'm surprised I've not encountered you before

    • @Dr.CansClinic
      @Dr.CansClinic  Před 5 měsíci +1

      Thank you so much for the subs! Yes, I believe in good instructional methods to deliver material. Please do not hesitate sharing the channel with your friends. It is still very much unknown in the chess world.@@joeperry1188

  • @davidbatchelder85
    @davidbatchelder85 Před měsícem

    I once read, one of the grand masters stated, Russian I think. You find a move, find another. So I appreciate you giving a real live example. That is the key, its great to say things. But to show in order to make it concrete. Just like my old industry, construction, I have had the privilege to train hundreds of men in the realm of building. A good teacher show great examples of the situation being discussed at present. Thus anchoring the lesson. May Jesus bless you for you are sharing your talent from him. Amen Thanks

    • @Dr.CansClinic
      @Dr.CansClinic  Před měsícem

      Thank you so much for this beautiful comment. 🙏

  • @nolsterbuckr4833
    @nolsterbuckr4833 Před měsícem

    I always see stuff like this in my games, even as a 1200 player (on a good day). Outposts are always an important consideration.

    • @Dr.CansClinic
      @Dr.CansClinic  Před měsícem

      Thank you for your kind feedback! Now I am working on a course about raising your chess floor, and I will include such positional exercises in 1200 ELO section.

  • @DaydreamVacations
    @DaydreamVacations Před 3 měsíci

    I think you nailed it!

    • @Dr.CansClinic
      @Dr.CansClinic  Před 3 měsíci

      Thank you! ☺️

    • @DaydreamVacations
      @DaydreamVacations Před 3 měsíci

      @@Dr.CansClinic When will you release the next level? 1800?

    • @Dr.CansClinic
      @Dr.CansClinic  Před 3 měsíci

      Still working on it :) Not any time soon I believe, but it will surely be published!@@DaydreamVacations

  • @mrnelgin
    @mrnelgin Před 5 měsíci

    At 18:44 I don't get it. After Re1 why not Bf5 to protect the knight since c6 is protected by pawn on b7. If Rxe4 then Bxe4 it has a direct line to g2 right in front of the king. If rook doesn't take then move your queen and life is good. Finally if white advances pawn to g4 the bishop can always drop back. It starts to get messy but it could delay things long enough for your opponent to make a mistake rather than just losing it without a fight (and no, don't do "wishful thinking" :) ) Am I missing something?

    • @Dr.CansClinic
      @Dr.CansClinic  Před 5 měsíci

      Thank you for this question! But can't White still go f2-f3 against ...Bf5, and win that pinned knight?

  • @user-ot8bb3ng7o
    @user-ot8bb3ng7o Před 5 měsíci

    Perhaps you may one day consider a book especially for beginners,so beginners can get dlunders out ones games, EARLY like myself still struggling with ideas i should have know when I started chess years ago,and now trying to remedy💡

  • @ItsKyleMang
    @ItsKyleMang Před 5 měsíci +1

    If you did a rating climb, I'd watch it! 😊

    • @Dr.CansClinic
      @Dr.CansClinic  Před 5 měsíci +1

      I am writing that down to my video ideas list 😀

  • @thelosts9940
    @thelosts9940 Před 5 měsíci +1

    To reach 1400 fide just wait until january first and youll get there for free if you are 1000 bc of those new changes propositions.

    • @Dr.CansClinic
      @Dr.CansClinic  Před 5 měsíci +1

      Haha yes indeed. Although I was talking about chess.com ratings here :)

  • @brutusjack4911
    @brutusjack4911 Před 3 měsíci

    Nice

  • @Socrates...
    @Socrates... Před 5 měsíci +5

    can't wait until you get to 2000, 2200

    • @Dr.CansClinic
      @Dr.CansClinic  Před 5 měsíci

      Thanks. These episodes take a lot of time to produce, so you have to be patient. 😄

  • @lastcraft
    @lastcraft Před 5 měsíci

    1200 to 1500 is a big jump. Was hoping for a smaller step, as I'm coaching some 1200 and 1300 players.

    • @Dr.CansClinic
      @Dr.CansClinic  Před 5 měsíci +2

      Thanks for the feedback. I am now underlying the general contours of chess development. Once this project ends, I may dig deeper in those smaller margins too. But I guess you can imagine how time consuming it is to produce one such video :) But I am not going anywhere, so stay tuned!

  • @josephsalmonte4995
    @josephsalmonte4995 Před 5 měsíci

    I need this. I quite often beat people WAY above my level (even a couole of 2000's) but I can lose to 900's. How os this possible? 🤷‍♂️😭

    • @lastcraft
      @lastcraft Před 5 měsíci

      Post an example?

    • @Dr.CansClinic
      @Dr.CansClinic  Před 5 měsíci +2

      Consistency is the key word! I will make a seperate video about it. As I mention in this video, some 1500 ELO players play an amazing chess and then they blunder all away with a single move.

  • @davidbatchelder85
    @davidbatchelder85 Před měsícem

    yes chess is very cruel but life is the same but you do not get to reset the board of life and give a new start. But yes, chess is brutal