An unexamined life is not worth living.

Friday, January 30, 2015

Recommended for Watching: Magnus Carlsen Reviews World Championship Game 2 Victory Over Anand

I followed the Anand-Carlsen  struggle rather closely, especially their first match, so it was interesting to see one of the games from Carlsen's perspective:

Friday, January 16, 2015

Keeping Focused – On and Off the Chess Board

The issue of focus is an ever constant problem for anyone in the current society, but for chess players addressing it is particularly important. As Garry Kasparov once wrote – being able to concentrate fully on what’s happening on the board during a game and ignore everything else – is perhaps the most important skill for a chess player. That was written more than 25 years ago, and is true today more than ever.

When starting to study chess, I also read that chess, among other things - helps kids to improve their attention span, and I found that to be true at the time, but that was before computers, internet, mobile phones and other distractions came along. Maintaining focus during the game is easier because old habits kick in, and we are not allowed to use computers during tournaments, but during preparation – it is a challenge. If Anatoly Karpov was known to prepare for his Candidate Match games with the TV on, what can the mere mortals do? I’d like to suggest the following strategies for focus and motivation:

  1. set up clear study plans with definable objectives over longer term
  2. create habits that involve at least minimal daily chess study (e.g. solving 3 puzzles a day)
  3. set up routine for regular longer chess sessions when you can dedicate an hour or two of uninterrupted time
  4. get a study buddy or coach involve to keep yourself responsible to someone
  5. turn off internet or blocking distracting websites
  6. spend time away from the computer, with the chess board and books
  7. emulate playing environment while training – using chess clocks when looking for a move, having a board in a quiet room, etc
  8. during the tournament games – be mindful or where your clock time and attention goes – during your turn and your opponent’s
  9. during longer games – have regular breaks to make sure you have blood flowing to the brain and you don’t play a “blackout” type of move that you later can’t explain yourself
  10. arrive for tournament games a bit early, so that you can get into tune before the game starts, and don’t accidentally play a wrong opening move because you are still thinking a traffic jam you were in on the way to the game

Sunday, January 4, 2015

Best Combinations – December 2014 (Monthly Chess Tactics Book 12)

December edition of the Monthly Tactics series is out with 50 puzzles for you to solve, added to my collection in the Amazon ebook store. 

December 2014 saw Anand winning the London Chess Classic Tournament, and in Beijing - Grischuk, Gunina, Hou Yifan and Nepomniachtchi were victorious in several categories; the combinations from both editions are well represented in this ebook. This December edition wraps up the series of 12 monthly tactics ebooks for 2014.

Going forward I plan to likely switch for the quarterly updates, primarily for efficiency reasons. I’d like to hear feedback though if anyone thinks that “monthly tactics” is a better paradigm.

Kramnik – Nakamura, London 2014

diagramWhite to move

The book contains the solution, but if you follow the chess news elsewhere, you probably already know what move Kramnik played.

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