Jan Cervenka vs Jan Netolicky - Czechoslovakia 1991
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- čas přidán 6. 10. 2014
- This game is taken from the book: The King Hunt:
www.chessschool.com.au/king_hu...
Answers to FAQ:
chessschoolsa.wordpress.com/ab...
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Please watch: "First Victory Against Carlsen"
• First Victory Against ...
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Mr. Mato thank you for all the entertaining videos. I have been studying your videos for a few months now. I hold chess games twice a week at my house with a few competitive friends who also enjoy chess. My chess has improved to the point where my friends are shocked at my combinations and friendly win record.
They don't understand how my chess has improved to such a degree in a relatively short period. When I pause the videos I usually see the killer move, and this is the reason for my improvement. Thank you very much for all your help and please continue the entertaining videos.
Yo, Mato. I like your game breakdowns. Short enough to keep our attention but still covers the game well. Keep up the good work.
For once I saw the killer move! Thanks Mato!
great game and great and deep lecture. your lectures are always better, the best on youtube! compliments Mato!
thanks Mato u are the best :)
Found the move :). Thanks for the lecture :)
I found the whole continuation for once!! Woot
i love mato the best!!!!!
fantastic
9 minutes. Great! :)
Yay found both "killah" moves :)
Another killer move can be bishop to g5 if pawn takes bishop then queen to g5. After this continuation will be if black queen to d8 to prevent check then then queen to e5 ..check then black king g8 then rook to g1. Checkmate!!
What say guys??
I found the killer move, but i didn't know why it just felt like the right move hahaha
I saw the KILLER move :D
I saw the second killer move with the continuation but I didn't see bishop b2 after the exchange sac because I wanted to move my rook to g1 right away wich would be loosing...
Always trying to double up rooks and queen on open file. Qd2 disallows Kh6 flight square and no protection defending f6 makes the 1 ply mate threat work. Adding it to my repertoire now.
ha! i saw the 5.26 exchange.
At 8:26, why can't black play bishop to g6?
White would take with f pawn and close the g file...wouldn't that prolong the game for black?
***** From the position at 8:26, black can't play Bg6 because it's literally impossible in the position; but if ...Bg4, white mates with Qg5.
Note that black has no defence at all. Any attempt to cause Qg5 to not be mate (moving the f8 rook away, or Bf5, or h6) is answered by Qh6 -> Qg7 mate. And no, Qh6 doesn't unleash any sort of counterplay by black, as as there's no credible threat against c2.
Hmmm... why didn't king take pawn on b2? 2:57
because white knows it can hold the center long enough to transition safely to the endgame when the pawn will surely be captured safely and before any mating threat could be carried out. Black must unpin before attacking -- white knows that any time spent snatching that pawn gives black a free turn to maneuver. With this in mind, the white king is actually safe with the pawn there; there is no middle game mating threat that cannot be easily parried.
Josh Myer I get the part from "white know that..." onwards, but why must white wait till a safe endgame to capture pawn? Capturing it still looks pretty safe to me. And what must black unpin before attacking?
Vora Z it's not about safety. Its about prioritizing limiting black's attacking potential by forcing him to defend.
Josh Myer But white can still force black to a defensive game anyway, even if he took the pawn... Sorry if I'm being stupid, but I still don't quite see why white would evade a free pawn.
Vora Z You aren't being stupid, the choice not to recapture pawn just represents a perspective on the game. I can't computationally prove k-b1 is the best move in the situation but I suspect it is at least safer than it looks. I'll explain my analysis.
For the pawn to be a mating threat it has to either be able to advance, capture a piece or cover squares preventing the black king from escaping. The second possibility is absurd and the other two require more material than black has readily available. So what can black do to attack the white king on b1?
Lets begin by eliminating possibilities. Do you agree that bishop takes pawn is the right move for black? If so then rook takes d6 presents black with a conundrum. Mato discusses this well. Examine each of the three options Mato presents; none of them result in conditions wherein the pawn becomes a mating threat. I agree that the queen for queen scenario is black's best option, but I suspect the game will draw once the pawns advance; neither king can leave cover, niether side can do without one of the pawns in front of their king,
jan will win
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