Pirc Alert by Lev Alburt & Alex Chernin Compiled by howardb86
Black defense against 1.e4 published in 2001 games listed in their book
Here is what Vladimir Kramnik has to say:
"Botvinnik's example and teaching established the modern approach to preparing for competitive chess: regular but moderate physical exercise; analysing very thoroughly a relatively narrow repertoire of openings; annotating one's own games, those of past great players and those of competitors; publishing one's annotations so that others can point out any errors; studying strong opponents to discover their strengths and weaknesses; ruthless objectivity about one's own strengths and weaknesses."
"Reading can take you places you have never been before." — Dr. Seuss
Q: Why can't you explain puns to kleptomaniacs?
A: They always take things literally.
(to the tune of "Did I Remember," hit song from 1936) by beatgiant
Did I remember to tell you I play chess,
and I am livin' to kibitz alone?
Did I remember to say I'm here all day,
and just how carried away with GMs' play?
Chess was on my screen and that was all I knew,
Posting a mate in 2, what did I say to you?
Did I remember to tell you I play chess,
And pray forever more the site's online?
Q: What do you call a blind dinosaur?
A: A do-you-think-he-saurus.
"I went frantically mad with chess. I bought a chess-board. I bought Il Calabrese. I shut myself up in my room and spent days and nights there with a will to learn all the games by heart, to cram them into my head willy-nilly, to play alone without end or remission. After two or three months working in that fine way, and after unimaginable endeavours, I went to the Cafe with a lean and sallow face, and nearly stupid. I made a trial, playing with Monsieur Bagueret again. He beat me once, twice, twenty times." — Jean-Jacques Rousseau
To kill a French vampire, you need to drive a baguette through its heart.
Sounds easy but the process is painstaking.
13xp smellow yellowz rnot waht u sthink it thru the bluking glass of window cleanr than hay bathin suit zanzi tie
"Playing with less space is one of the hardest things to do in chess."
– IM John Watson
* General tips have exceptions: https://academicchess.com/worksheet...
* All Openings: Game Collection: Chess Openings: Theory and Practice, Section 1
* Beat the QGD Exchange: Game Collection: Queen's Gambit Declined: Exchange Variation
* QGD, Vienna: Game Collection: QGD: Vienna
* Black Victories: Game Collection: Dutch defense Hopton attack
* Beauty Prizes
Game Collection: Les Prix de Beauté aux Echecs (I)
* Chess Terms: https://chessmart.com/pages/chess-t...
* Double B sacrifices: Game Collection: Double Bishop Sacrifices (dedicated to Anatoly K
* Evolution: Game Collection: # Chess Evolution Volumes 51-100
* FIDE Laws of Chess: https://rcc.fide.com/2023-laws-of-c...
* Fine's Passion: Game Collection: Passion for Chess (Fine)
* Forney's Collection: Game Collection: Brutal Attacking Chess
* Fred Reinfeld could've written this if only they had cell phones back when: https://socialself.com/blog/how-to-...
* KG Video: Game Collection: Foxy Openings - King's Gambit
* Lasker's Best: https://thechessworld.com/articles/...
* Lasker Matters: Game Collection: Why Lasker Matters by Andrew Soltis
* Morphy pounds Philidor's Defense: Game Collection: White - Philidor: Morphy
* Play Stockfish 1-10: https://labinatorsolutions.github.i...
* Russians - Chernev: Game Collection: The Russians Play Chess by Irving Chernev
* Shirov miniatures: Game Collection: Shirov miniatures
* Smyslov Brevities: Game Collection: Smyslov brevities
* SMG Miniatures: Game Collection: Brrilant ideas
* Tactics Explained: https://www.chess.com/article/view/...
* Wonders and Curiosities: Game Collection: Wonders and Curiosities of Chess (Chernev)
* GoY's 40 Favs: Game Collection: GoY's favorite games
NIÑO GENIO nos da UNO de los MEJORES MOMENTOS de la HISTORIA del AJEDREZ: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5ps...
"Dancing Queen" by ABBA (1974): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xFr...
New Best Game of 2023: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C2Q...
"Bloody Mary": https://www.historyhit.com/facts-ab...
Q: What did Blackbeard say when he turned 80?
A: "Aye, matey."
"The chess heroes nowadays should not forget that it was owing to Fischer that they are living today in four- and five-star hotels, getting appearance fees, etc." ― Lev Khariton
Q: What's the most terrifying word in nuclear physics?
A: "Oops!"
<Principles of Chess
01. Develop your pieces quickly.
02. Control the center.
03. Try to put your pieces on squares that give them maximum space.
04. Try to develop your knights towards the center.
05. A knight on the rim is dim.
06. Don't take unnecessary chances.
07. Play aggressive.
08. Calculate forced moves first.
09. Always ask yourself, "Can he put me in check or win a piece?"
10. Have a plan. Every move should have a purpose.
11. Assume your opponent's move is his best move.
12. Ask yourself, "why did he move there?" after each opponent move.
13. Play for the initiative and contolling the board.
14. If you must lose a piece, get something for it if you can.
15. When behind, exchange pawns. When ahead, exchange pieces.
16. If you are losing, don't give up fighting. Look for counterplay.
17. Don't play unsound moves unless you are losing badly.
18. Don't sacrifice a piece without good reason.
19. If you are in doubt of an opponent's sacrifice, accept it.
20. Attack with more that just one or two pieces.
21. Do not make careless pawn moves. They cannot move back.
22. Do not block in your bishops.
23. Bishops of opposite colors have the greatest chance of drawing.
24. Try not to move the same piece twice or more times in a row.
25. Exchange pieces if it helps your development.
26. Don't bring your queen out early.
27. Castle soon to protect your king and develop your rook.
28. Develop rooks to open files.
29. Put rooks behind passed pawns.
30. Study rook endgames. They are the most common and most complicated.
31. Don't let your king get caught in the center.
32. Don't castle if it brings your king into greater danger from attack.
33. After castling, keep a good pawn formation around your king.
34. If you only have one bishop, put your pawns on its opposite color.
35. Trade pawns pieces when ahead in material or when under attack.
36. If cramped, free your game by exchanging material.
37. If your opponent is cramped, don't let him get any freeing exchanges.
38. Study openings you are comfortable with.
39. Play over entire games, not just the opening.
40. Blitz chess is helpful in recognizing chess patterns. Play often.
41. Study annotated games and try to guess each move.
42. Stick with just a few openings with White, and a few openings with Black.
43. Record your games and go over them, especially the games you lost.
44. Show your games to higher rated opponents and get feedback from them.
45. Use chess computers and databases to help you study and play more.
46. Everyone blunders. The champions just blunder less often.
47. When it is not your move, look for tactics and combinations.
48. Try to double rooks or double rook and queen on open files.
49. Always ask yourself, "Does my next move overlook something simple?"
50. Don't make your own plans without the exclusion of the opponent's threats.
51. Watch out for captures by retreat of an opponent's piece.
52. Do not focus on one sector of the board. View thw whole board.
53. Write down your move first before making that move if it helps.
54. Try to solve chess puzzles with diagrams from books and magazines.
55. It is less likely that an opponent is prepared for off-beat openings.
56. Recognize transposition of moves from main-line play.
57. Watch your time and avoid time trouble.
58. Bishops are worth more than knights except when they are pinned in.
59. A knight works better with a bishop than another knight.
60. It is usually a good idea to trade down into a pawn up endgame.
61. Have confidence in your game.
62. Play in as many rated events as you can.
63. Try not to look at your opponent's rating until after the game.
64. Always play for a win.
(If a win is no longer possible, then play for a draw.)>