3 SECRET TIPS To Stop Blunders in Chess
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- čas přidán 31. 05. 2024
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Blunders in chess happens almost all the time at the club level. It doesn't really matter how many tactical puzzles you've solved, or how many chess openings you know, or how good your calculation skills are, or even how many games of Magnus Carlsen you've studied; none of them matter when you keep blundering your pieces.
In this video lesson, GM Igor Smirnov shares with you 3 practical tips to stop blundering in chess (or make less blunders). Learning these 3 tips will help you prevent blunders and skyrocket your results instantly!
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► Chapters
00:00 Key Idea To Improve in Chess (+300 Rating Points)
00:16 Example-1: How Chess Players Blunder
02:08 Example-2: He Sacrificed The ROOK!
03:18 Example-3
03:53 1st tip to avoid blunders
05:26 THE TWIST
06:19 BUT, how to find such good moves?
06:58 Example-4
07:49 2nd tip to prevent blunders
09:13 Example-5
09:39 3rd tip to make less blunders (anti-blunder check)
10:54 Quiz: Test your knowledge with this puzzle
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Puzzle move is Nf6+ gxf6 gxf3+ and you can win their Queen after they take your Rook
Didn't even see the rook X-ray against the king, impressive stuff!
Awesome bro. I was thinking about bishop e3. That's why I am still under 1500 😅
Oh nice, didn't see that
Oh wow, you're awesome! 😮🎉 very nice 🙂👍
@@myo1608 Haha, me too Be3 was the only thing I could see
Appreciate this pep talk Igor. I do resign mentally. It always seems as soon as I place the piece the scales are removed from my eyes and I see the blunder and wait for the opponent to abuse it. They do and then I ask myself why I always see it the split second after it's made and not before, then i mentally check out. Working on resilience is something I will add to my practice. This video helps me know it is not only me that does this.
Saaaame. The amount of times I play a move thinking it’s a great move and immediately regret it as soon as I played it’s so high
its the focus on what you are trying to accomplish at the moment. Once you've done that you do the normal assessment of the position using your "free time". I think the only way to counteract that is continue to be aware of it and remind yourself to visualize the position after your move. What else is there to do? I speak as someone still trying to solve this same problem.
I TOTALLY relate to what you wrote.
BROOOOO THAT'S MEEE! THAT'S LITERALLY MEEE!
🙌
Best chess teacher on CZcams, hands down. Thank you so much !!
🙏
Puzzle Answer!
Be3, Qxe3, Qf8+, Rxf8, Nf6+, Gxf6-forced, Gxf3+, QxG1+, Rxg1#.
"Do not resign mentally". thank you igor ❤.
Why it
Always great content presented in a concise manner. Your comments regarding mentally resigning after losing a piece were spot on and something all of us can do by at least fighting on since most of us are not playing Magnus Carlsen! Thanks Igor!
Puzzle moves: Nf6+, gxf6, gxf3+, queen is forced to capture rook and lose the game.
This is the best chess channel on CZcams. GM Danya is 2nd. 🎉🎉🎉
Chess is wonderful.
► Chapters
00:00 Key Idea To Improve in Chess (+300 Rating Points)
00:16 Example-1: How Chess Players Blunder
02:08 Example-2: He Sacrificed The ROOK!
03:18 Example-3
03:53 1st tip to avoid blunders
05:26 THE TWIST
06:19 BUT, how to find such good moves?
06:58 Example-4
07:49 2nd tip to prevent blunders
09:13 Example-5
09:39 3rd tip to make less blunders (anti-blunder check)
10:54 Quiz: Test your knowledge with this puzzle
Great advice, as always. Just had my opponent blunder his queen, even though I think he still had a chance for coming back due to superior tactical position, but chose to resign as soon as he blundered, without even waiting to see if I would catch it.
Very good video buddy...Highly motivating.
Igor shares alot of good stuff. Easy to understand.
Great video.
Avoiding blunders is the most important skill that I hope to learn.
I hope you do some more on this topic. Thanks 🙏🏼
Yes!
Suggestion for a future video: how to win a winning position. I observed that you often stop the analysis after one side win material. I'm not proud of it, but I've sometimes lost while I was in completely winning position. What's your take on this?
+1
I’m not proud of it, but I ALWAYS lose a winning position.
@horacelidenbrock3905 When you win material, many will just stop thinking. Instead, you have to keep focus on the game and keep charging forwards. For example, the way stockfish refutes a lot of gambits which calls for the attacking side to give up a piece or an exchange is simply to start wildly attacking. You have to have the mentality that you're winning to be confident that your attack will work out, rather than having the mentality that you won material that you might again lose. There's a subtle yet distinct difference in those two mentalities.
As for actual tips, I'd say look at any opposing pieces on your half of the board and neutralize them, look for weaknesses on your opponent's half of the board and attack them, and watch "A secret mental trick to calculation - The Amateur's Mind" from ChessCoach Andras.
just trade peices and reach an endgame as fast as possible as you will be up peices and convert pawns into queens
What truths you speak and demonstrate. Thanks to you, as always.
I appreciate that
I blundered my queen today. But I had watched this video yesterday. I remained calm and came back to win.
I blundered so much in the opening that I got so mad and started marching my king up to the opponent base, snatched 3 free pawns, a knight, and a bishop, and won! If I hadn't watched this vid I would have definitely tried to play more defensively lol
Ig it's true that you should create counter attacks cuz ur opponent might blunder too-
Another great video with what I consider a couple of good "puzzle positions" to help cement correct analysis with likely obvious moves by opponents taken into consideration. I guess doing this often is the way GM's are able to see so many moves ahead - something I have trouble with for now. I prefer classical Vs bullet or blitz as I often lose a winning position on time lol
Great advice! You're absolutely right. Fight to the (sometimes) bitter end.
Great video Igor. Here is a question... in order to improve at chess and learn strategies rather than just tactics, do you think it wise to play a SLOWER time control? On Blitz, 5-0, I just cant think well enough because there is no time. 10-0 Rapid, I tend to do a lot better and I am around 2000 level. Bullet... dont even ask how bad I am!
One thing that really helps is reviewing every game later and making a mental note of every blunder you've made. These build up in the background of your mind and you blunder less and less that way.
I played a game yesterday where I won easily due to piece activity (mate with three minor pieces and a rook while the enemy was completely undeveloped). A later analysis showed he also handed me over a queen for free at one point and I missed that because I relentlessly pursued aforementioned piece activity. I won a pawn and two monster knights in the queen trade, but Stockfish says a straight queen would be better. It's ... hard to disagree with that.
On the upside I got a nice checkmate in the end, instead of a resignation. It was more entertaining that way, so that's a plus. But I'll try not to miss something like that ever again.
Hi Igor, just found your channel, great tips! I have a questions - I've been told that a great difference between a 1600 and a 2000 player is that the stronger looks for a better move when he finds a good one. Do you know of any book that help you training with games and positions that at first look an interesting move can be seen, but it takes a longer analysis to find a second and better one? Thanks a lot!
There is that famous quote by the second World Champion, Emanuel Lasker: 'When you see a good move, look for a better one.' Some interesting books that might help you with this are Grandmaster Preparation: Calculation by Jacob Aagaard or Perfect Your Chess by Andrei Volokitin and Vladimir Grabinsky.
Thanks
Igor really teaches well!
Puzzle: bishop to e3. BQueen is forced to take bishop or loses queen. Nf6+. Black takes with pawn. White takes knight with pawn, discovered check with rook. Only move is queen takes rook. Use other rook to take queen. Checkmate.
Qh4 would be possible, too, which destroys Nf6.
Be3 (Qxe3), Nf6+ (gxf6)
For the quiz, I guess Nf6+ is the right move, since the queen is controlling the f8 square, the king cannot run and is forced to play gxf6, then white can play gxf3+, with the discovered check to black's king. Again black's king has no square to dodge and is forced to play Qxg1+, then Rxg1 will be checkmate
Correct moves, but I think you missed the Bishop on c1 that means you can’t take back with the Rook
@@IAmAdamTaylorSo KxQg1 and white wins, no?
@@EightBit72 Yep thats why I said correct moves and only pointed out the Rook can’t take. There is no checkmate just a strong position for white.
@@IAmAdamTaylor Oh, yes, so the final move should be Qxg1, which wins a queen for a rook
Thanks. I was thinking: White Queen to C5. Have you explored that option?
enjoy the honesty. "don't worry, you/they will mess up again." haha! so true to stay into the game though. I've won so many games that seemed hopeless at the time.
I have been stagnant at 1400 - 1500 level for well over a year. I play for fun but it sucks being stagnant for so long, plus I am super competitive. Thanks for your perspectives Igor! Hopefully it helps me break through.
🎯 Key Takeaways for quick navigation:
00:00 🏆 *Importance of Avoiding Blunders*
- Blunders occur frequently in chess games, often unnoticed by opponents.
- Continuous blunders hinder improvement and impact overall chess results.
02:17 🔄 *Blunders by Strong Players*
- Even strong Grandmasters make blunders, showcasing that blunders are a common aspect of chess.
- Highlighted a game where a Grandmaster blundered by sacrificing a rook, and the opponent resigned, unaware that they were still winning.
04:39 🛡️ *Mental Resilience After Blunders*
- Players often resign mentally after a blunder, impacting their gameplay.
- Advises to continue playing aggressively after a blunder, creating threats and exploiting opponent mistakes.
07:26 ⚔️ *Counter-Attacking After Blunders*
- Emphasizes the importance of counter-attacking when in a disadvantaged position.
- Provides examples of counter-attacking moves, such as Knight to H5 or Pawn to A6, to turn the tide in the game.
09:46 🤔 *Prevention of Double Blunders*
- Urges players to ask themselves if the intended move allows the opponent to enter their half of the board and cause trouble.
- Demonstrates a position where castling led to a dual blunder, illustrating the need for cautious consideration before making moves.
Made with HARPA AI
This highlights one of the most classic and frequent blunders, the *lateral* movement of the queen from one side of the board to the other. That's a blind spot for many people. How many times in an opening has your opening moved their queen diagonally, from its original square, usually Qh5+ or Qa4+, and then captured a hanging piece on the opposite side of the board? Very common!
The other very common blunder is failing to see how your opponent's knight can move *backwards" and fork your attacking pieces.
Nf6+ forces xf6, which allows xf3+, provoking Qxg1+ Kxg1.
Most chess videos make me want to give up the game. This game gives me a bit of hope so thanks for that! LOL
At 2:50, I don't think whites king ever takes the bishop on g6 before upgrading the pawn. Surely that is why black resigned. Or am I missing something here??
How would Qc5 work out?
Although 441K is an impressive number of subscribers, your channel deserves to have more than 1M. This is without a doubt one of the top chess channels on CZcams.
Qf6+, rook takes queen, Nf6+, black pawn takes knight to avoid smother, then white pawn takes knight and the g file is open. Black can sacrifice the queen but can't stop checkmate.
Yep, That is the answer! - its all forced...
Puzzle -- move white bishop to attack queen. Then rourke is protected by the other rourke. So the queen must move away or take the bishop. But if queen takes bishop then the white pawn takes knight. Then even if black bishop takes pawn and produces check, it can be blocked by the rourke; and the black queen can't attack the king due to the other rourke sitting in the corner.
After Bxf3+, Rg2, Qxg2#
I'm 1300 and I noticed that when you are significantly down Material you should:
1) open up the board
2) create as much chaos as you can
3) go for the king
There was a tournament game where I blundered very early one, and I was really fighting for a draw, when suddenly my opponent blundered and I checkmated him being 10 points of material down. Queen was literally my only piece remaining so I just decided to get it as close to the enemy king as possible, because you never know, then he was giving checks, I ran my king into the opponent's half of the board when suddenly his rook gave me a check leaving the backrank, I found a place where he couldn't check me, and it was a backrank checkmate.
Nf6+ gxf6 (only possible move) gxf3+ Qxg1+ Kxg1 and white has a Queen against a Bishop and a pawn!
- Stay mentally resilient and keep creating threats (3:55)
- Think about counter-attacks instead of just defending (8:01)
- Before moving, check for opponent threats on your half of the board (9:39)
I think the occasional jab at Gotham Chess is hilarious.
I thought I heard that too...
Thanks for reminding me 😂👍
8:36 Doesn't g5 give up another pawn and pin the knight? Unless you blundered intentionally to feed the algorithm.
Puzzle move is Qf8 Rxf8 Nf6+ gxf6 gxf3+ and black is mated
It took me a while to notice that rook on g1 is x-raying the black king. Once that is being noticed the answer to puzzle was simple.
Nf6+ gxf6 gxf3+ and Queen is forced to capture the rook there by white has queen for rook advantage.
I doubt ever i will see such a tactical brilliance in an actual game.
isn't the g pawn pinned
@@sauravgarg2822 no.
1. Nf6+ gxf6 2. gxf3+ Qxg1 3. Kxg1
Never Resign Mentally.
❤
When playing games for fun or learning you should always carry through to the finish because it will give your opponent the opportunity to learn to finish, and you to learn to try for stalemate.
If it was me I'd have played Qc5 and force their queen to take me in which case I'd take their queen with the knight, or force it to move to take my rook, which would lead to Nxg1 Kxg1. This is probably why I still suck at chess :) The other option would be to sac the bishop so I could take the knight. Either way, the game drags on. I need to look more for the win.
puzzle: develop the bishop to b2 or just move it from the first file
Nf6+
Ohhh that’s a nasty little Knight sac on F6… ouch 🤕 Hard to notice when you’re focused on your King getting buried alive!
Qf8, Rxf8 only move
Ne7 checkmate
fantastic idea, but... no knight able to reach e7 in this position
Mm one of the best way to reduce blunders is, to keep regular practicing until you feel that you are aware of whats going on at the whole chess board..
For a long time an even occasionally now I mentally resign a game if I miss a blunder or lose even a pawn. Recently I played a game where I didn't know the opening, made what I thought was a winning move only to discover I blundered a piece. I played on and instead of consolidating his position he allowed me to launch an attack against his king. Here's the game full of errors and blunders we both made. 1.d4 e6 2.e4 d5 3.Nc3 Bb4 4.Bd3 Nf6 5.Bg5 de 6.Bxe4 c5 7.Nf3 cd 8.Nxd4 Qa5 9.Bxf6 Bxc3+ 10.bxc3 Qxc3+ 11.Ke2 gxf6 12.Re1?! Ke7 13.Nb5?? Qe5! 14.Qd3 f5 15.Qa3+?! Kf6 16.f4?! Qxb5?! 17.Bd3 Qe8 18.Kf1 Nc6 19.Qc3+ Kg6 20.g4!? Ne7?! 21.g5 Nd5 22.Qe5 h6?! 23.Bxf3+ Kh5?? 24.Qe2+ Kh4 25.Qg4mate
So even if you've blundered play on, take your time and look for your chances as your opponent thinking he's won will likely make a mistake as my opponent and we've all done.
Knight F6, they must recapture with the pawn, then pawn F3 taking thier knight with your pawn revealing a discovered attack on the queen. To eliminate the mating threat they must trade thier queen for your rook on G1.
Great 👍
That queen materialised out of thin air
Be3 qxe3, Df8+ Txf8, Cf6+ gxf6, gxf3+ Dxg1, Taxg1++
The final puzzle is a funny one. Nf6+ must be met with gxf6. From here, gxf3+ wins the queen and the game on the next move. However, white can start with Qf8+ and then achieve the same checkmate, so there is a pointless but completely viable queen sacrifice here.
think again, there is no checkmate for white, only big win of material. For checkmate you have to connect the rooks first.
@@michaeljarmuzek9325 You’re right. I missed Qxg1+.
Am I wrong, or is castling illegal
if the rook is already under attack?
No, it's fine. Since a rook can't be in check, it isn't restricted in the way a king is. Obviously the king can't castle into, out of, or across check, but a rook can do what it likes, provided it hasn't already moved. Even if it has already moved, it's still legal to castle with the other rook, so long as neither that one nor the king has moved and that nothing is in the way.
5:48 in that position white could just take the D8 rook and win.. ignoring the queen capture
Nf6+ gxf6 (forced) Be3 (Attacks Qf2 as well as Ra1 now protects Rg1) Qxe3 (Queen is deflected) gxf3+ and now 2 lines 1) Qxg1 Rxg1# or 2) Qg5 (protected by pawn on f6) h4! Bxf3+ Kh2 (and White wins the queen and knight for bishop and knight and pawn).
Thank you❤
😊
I am here because of a chess game I had where I was 10 points of material up but I long castled and blundered mate in 1.
Isn't bishop h7 the move
Opening the kind side and connecting rooks
Knight to f6 is better. Opens up the rook-king line. After pawn takes f6, pawn takes f3 with a check. And then soon checkmate.
1.Nf6+ gxf6 3.gxf3+ Qxg1+ 4.Kxg1 and Black had to trade his Queen for a Rook!
I noticed after watching this , i have a problem with horizontal path of the queen
Suggested White move - Queen to C5 instead of resigning?
Puzzle spoiler
Nf6+ is the correct move, white is forced to capture on f6 and then we can play gxf3+ (now it works bc is check) and all black can do is to give up their queen for a rook therefore white is winning
1. Nf6+, gxf6 (is forced)
2. gxf3+, Qxg1(is forced)
3. Kxg1(is forced), Bxf3
....3 points of material won at the end...
I have days when I don't blunder anything end up rating goes up 100 then another day blunder every game,
1. Nf6 - g7xNf6 2. g2xNf3 - QxRg1
Move white queen to C5 square to exchange the queens I think.
bishop a3 since now the rook covers the other rook and it's mate in 1
❤❤❤❤
👍
move Bc1??
The rooooookk !!
Qc5
❤
QC5
1st? 12s sgo?
1. Nf6+ gf вынужденно. 2. gf+ Q:g1 3. K:g1
I have made so many bad resignable blunders early in a games, but actually won them because my opponents blundered later… Hahahahaha!
Also C1-A3
It all starts with Nf6.
What about Qf8 check? 😁 RxQ, Kf6 check, gxK, g2xK check? 😆
knight check to f6
lost 300 elo thanks man
I hate this video, bcz its too short, imma dig in your channel 😂
After watching this video I went up 526 points
pawn g2
Forcing moves / counter-attacks for the last puzzle: Qf8 -> Nf6 -> f3 mate [10:54]
its not mate
Ba3
I need to stop playing while tired then.
Moving the bishop away instantly saves the game for white lmao
Moving it to c2 might be a good idea since it also creates pressure towards Black's king
U still lose a rook for a knight though.
Be3
The white knight to f6
Queen to C5?
Q to E1?