Why You Keep Losing | 15 Chess Principles You MUST KNOW

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Chess Vibes

Chess Vibes

День тому

Welcome to Episode 1 of this "Book Club" series where we are currently going through the book: Logical Chess - Move by Move by Irving Chernev
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КОМЕНТАРІ: 521
@waltervondervogelweide4638
@waltervondervogelweide4638 Місяць тому
1. Knights before bishops. 2. You should try to defend and develop at the same time. 3. The principles are guidelines, but there are exceptions. 4. The best attacking piece is the king's bishop. 5. Place each piece on the best possible square as quickly as possible. 6. Don't move your pieces more than one time in the opening. 7. Castle early (better on king's side). 8. Two pieces are worth more than a rook and a pawn. 9. Develop all pieces before attacking. 10. Deal with threats first before continuing development. 11. Each pawn you move in front of your castled king weakens your position. Try to keep all 3 as long as possible. 12. Developing a piece that ALSO attacks is a good move. 13. Open lines are to the advantage of the player with more development. 14. The best defender of white's king side is the knight on f3. 15. Whoever controls the center has better chances of attacking.
@maritm3154
@maritm3154 Місяць тому
Tanks
@MrSupernova111
@MrSupernova111 Місяць тому
Thanks!
@geethuvarghese9103
@geethuvarghese9103 Місяць тому
5, 11, 15 are my favorite 3! 😊
@personalaccount1515
@personalaccount1515 Місяць тому
Thanks
@user-xz9xw1ll1g
@user-xz9xw1ll1g Місяць тому
@pakasokoste
@pakasokoste Місяць тому
That principle with the three pawns and the f3 knight, and how moving them gives chances to the opponent, that was new and very valuable information to me. Thank you Nelson!
@bosspoke
@bosspoke Місяць тому
Just important to keep in mind that for lower elo players, keeping the three pawns unmoved opens the possibility for back rank mates in the late game. Oftentimes even players around 1700-1800 elo get so absorbed by what is happening elsewhere thinking that their king is safe behind 3 pawns, suddenly get checkmated or lose a tempo because they are forced to defend against that threat.
@Rammbock
@Rammbock Місяць тому
Nelson, you are the best chess channel and ACTUALLY teach very efficiently, rather than make a big show. Bravo!
@rmwTAG
@rmwTAG Місяць тому
totally agree... kudos Nelson! Keep up the amazing content.
@gracelebleu7216
@gracelebleu7216 Місяць тому
Agreed! Nelson is a great teacher! explains why a move/concept/etc is both good and bad
@rotidedug8883
@rotidedug8883 Місяць тому
omg i agree with you, gotham chess is such a terrible chess channel compared to this one. Nelson deserves way more appreciation than levy
@dusty333
@dusty333 27 днів тому
Come
@dusty333
@dusty333 27 днів тому
@@rotidedug8883bit more boring
@JF-iq1yx
@JF-iq1yx Місяць тому
I've gone from 900 to 650
@jaimegames595
@jaimegames595 Місяць тому
It happens
@Mager4537
@Mager4537 Місяць тому
chess moment
@KQHD6000
@KQHD6000 Місяць тому
Just get better 😂
@nielsvermeiren6179
@nielsvermeiren6179 Місяць тому
Don't play when tired/anxious/frustrated or when on a losing streak and never accept rematches
@loindici8836
@loindici8836 Місяць тому
Me too 😢
@JustAnotherCommenter
@JustAnotherCommenter Місяць тому
That last part there really shows that the best defense is a good offense, a.k.a. counterattacking.
@ammarkhan7371
@ammarkhan7371 Місяць тому
What's wrong with just simply moving our king? The took will soon join the f8 square which will win either the bishop or the knight on f3, in my opinion best move for black after that will be d7 or d8 I will prefer d7 if queen checks just move our c pawn the knight will be hanging our king will get open but I guess it will be fine we won't get checkmated our king will be little exposed but we will get lots of material in return
@OrlandoBillyBob
@OrlandoBillyBob Місяць тому
This is going to be a great series for the channel. Every two weeks to start is probably fine but I will definitely be looking forward to the next one. Great job!
@bosspoke
@bosspoke Місяць тому
One thing that you didn't mentioned about weakening the king side through moving pawns forward is that it can potentially for lower elo players be a weakness to keep the 3 pawns unmoved. I haven't been back-rank checkmated myself much, but I've done it multiple times in the elo range of 1300 - 1900. People in this elo tend to forget the crucial danger of getting checkmated on the back row so they continue what they do, thinking they have an advantage but suddenly they get checkmated or forced to sacrifice pieces to avoid the back-rank mate. It's probably obvious to higher elo players how to avoid the back-rank checkmate, even if you didn't move a pawn, but to lower players they are either unaware of the danger or forget it. I'm not particulary good at seeing these kind of lines where you abuse the weakness, so it often prevents me from doing stuff like sacrificing bishop to create attack. And it rarely happens to me as well when I weaken the king pawns. It is great advice, though just to keep in mind the potential of back-rank mate that people like me and lower elo players tend to ignore.
@Christian_counsel
@Christian_counsel Місяць тому
This was just thinking that I always give the king room to breath by moving that rooks pawn
@JackPine100
@JackPine100 10 днів тому
Nelson is a natural-born teacher. Many thanks for clear, concise, easy-to-follow lesson. I'm never overwhelmed with too much, too fast information as with many other UKposts presenters.
@boomshanker61
@boomshanker61 Місяць тому
What a fabulous idea for a series. I have just blown the dust of the book, which I have in the old descriptive notation. Your video lessons will compliment the ideas of the book and bring it more up to date. Great work Nelson, very much looking forward to game 2 - thanks
@Alex9501950
@Alex9501950 Місяць тому
Obligatory UKposts algorithm comment.
@criscrisan8569
@criscrisan8569 Місяць тому
Obligatory UKposts algorithm reply
@notsus8537
@notsus8537 Місяць тому
Ok
@alexiongonzalez
@alexiongonzalez Місяць тому
Algorithm
@GameFAC
@GameFAC Місяць тому
Allahgorythm (SWT)
@lqztee
@lqztee Місяць тому
​@@GameFACwhat
@user-dj1lj6tn4l
@user-dj1lj6tn4l Місяць тому
You got me 😍 ❤❤ Channel is becoming better day be day🎉
@aliteralperson2137
@aliteralperson2137 Місяць тому
Love the new series Nelson! You present the chapter in a really instructive way.
@sirenbrian
@sirenbrian Місяць тому
This is a really nice distillation of chess wisdom, thank you! I've played many games where I'm on the receiving end of these attacks and I didn't really know what I'd done wrong. This is a very helpful collection of simple ideas.
@stekikun6854
@stekikun6854 Місяць тому
Thanks Nelson, this series is a great idea! So I had read the 1st game in the book, and as I did I thought that black's attack, although very strong, was a bit premature because black's king was still in the center.. I had an eye for moves like Bxf7+ or Qa4+! Even without seeing the perpetual in full, I would not have resigned with white after Bxf2.. nothing to lose at going for a few checks to see where they lead to 🙂
@CharlesWolfeSkate
@CharlesWolfeSkate Місяць тому
Thank you!!! Great of you to go over this book
@sheltersteve
@sheltersteve Місяць тому
This is so cool. Years ago when I got back into chess and needed to learn better this was one of the books I picked up at my local bookstore. I really like the idea of telling the "why" behind the moves. Looking forward to the rest of the series.
@Ray-ku1sj
@Ray-ku1sj Місяць тому
You did a good job on this video, Nelson. Logical Chess-Move by Move by Irving Chernev was the very first chess book I bought, way back in the early 70's, I still have it, and enjoy going through the moves, one at a time. My other favorite chess book is entitled: "Chess World Championship 1972 Fischer vs Spassky by Larry Evans and Ken Smith. The unique thing about this book, is that it takes you through the '72 World Championship, one game at a time, with a diagram for every move, and an explanation for each move. I feel these types of chess books are really valuable for the average chess player, and answer many of our questions on why certain moves were played. Keep up the good work. Ray
@itsFnD
@itsFnD Місяць тому
This is very informative video, looking forward into this series!
@ambassador1022
@ambassador1022 Місяць тому
Great first video in this series! Really enjoyed reading the first game and then watching your analysis of it. Thanks for the great insights as always. I feel every week might be a bit better since each game isn't too long to study, but will be watching regardless!
@andyclark8991
@andyclark8991 Місяць тому
Chess Vibes, always love your videos, always look forward to them mate.
@carlamartinez7559
@carlamartinez7559 Місяць тому
I’m really looking forward to next lesson. Love this content, thank you Nelson!
@marzianeri8372
@marzianeri8372 Місяць тому
Great content! Thank you, Nelson!
@louvoodoo
@louvoodoo Місяць тому
You have so many creative ideas for this challenge, keep up the outstanding work!
@markstubbs4716
@markstubbs4716 День тому
Thanks, great idea and book selection. Subscribed and notifications on! 🙏
@hangbronsink2131
@hangbronsink2131 Місяць тому
Thank you for the lesson :) enjoyed it!
@lourensnvanderheijden8853
@lourensnvanderheijden8853 Місяць тому
thank you Nelson, this certainly has added value, good job👍!
@johnmctavish1021
@johnmctavish1021 Місяць тому
Love the idea to cover books, Nelsi. Keep it up! Learning a lot through this.
@prdoyle
@prdoyle Місяць тому
Great timing! I was given this book for Christmas and hadn't got around to reading it yet!
@quarter-lifecrisis5127
@quarter-lifecrisis5127 Місяць тому
looking forward for the rest of the series 👍🏻
@davidatkinson2282
@davidatkinson2282 Місяць тому
Thank you Nelson, we're moving up the ranking slowly, from beginner to (almost) advanced. I'm holding my own against 1000 ELO Bots. I find your videos most informative.
@3Ponds3
@3Ponds3 Місяць тому
Nelson - that was so clear and easy to follow. Thanks. Looking forward to the next one.
@richardlee-shanok5578
@richardlee-shanok5578 Місяць тому
Great lesson! Looking forward to the next one!!
@robinb1451
@robinb1451 Місяць тому
Love this Nelson! Thanks for all you do!
@TheChosenOne._.
@TheChosenOne._. Місяць тому
Amazing video. Super important points and clean delivery. I love it
@JungleScene
@JungleScene Місяць тому
Great video... that was brimming with great conceptual stuff. I've had a bad habit of playing a3 prematurely to deter knight b4 stuff but it's gotten me in trouble, and now I understand why.
@AcesulfameGaming
@AcesulfameGaming Місяць тому
Finally got over my anxiety to play real games after doing 2k puzzles, from review it seems the middle game is my weak point, when there's a lot of options to choose from. Thanks for all of your videos you explain things very well
@kimbirch1202
@kimbirch1202 Місяць тому
The principle is always to look for weaknesses and attack, if possible. Otherwise improve your position by developing the least effective piece. Always look at the whole board , and don't get bogged down in one particular area of the board, is my advice.
@TobogganBumb
@TobogganBumb Місяць тому
Opening and endings can be studied outside of games, but middle game comes from a lot of practice. Having done a lot of puzzles will help you improve quickly
@learningisfun2108
@learningisfun2108 Місяць тому
I still carry my anxiety to play real games LOL. But I love learning and Nelson’s channel is my favourite.
@leroydanny4072
@leroydanny4072 Місяць тому
Try and stay solid in the middle game and you'll be fine
@hvp69
@hvp69 Місяць тому
I had already read the chapter but this was a very valuable recap, thank you!
@kjaslow
@kjaslow Місяць тому
Awesome idea, Nelson! I actually had the book, and have yet to crack the spine, so really psyched to read it with your commentary!!
@rauntaft7753
@rauntaft7753 Місяць тому
Awesome information!!! Thanks, Nelson!!!
@ericengels2116
@ericengels2116 Місяць тому
Awesome lesson, Nelson! Keep up the great content.
@poeda6637
@poeda6637 Місяць тому
Thanks very much! Ordered the book immediately and looking forward to the nest lesson
@garyarnold3141
@garyarnold3141 Місяць тому
This series is great for me. I got the book as it was recommended to me but I never got round to going through it properly. Looking forward to the rest of the series.
@tottenvillelegend826
@tottenvillelegend826 Місяць тому
Great tips, thanks for sharing!
@fearlv1rattata
@fearlv1rattata Місяць тому
Awesome video. Love translating a book into video format. Will stay tuned to this series.
@trombonemunroe
@trombonemunroe Місяць тому
Great illustrative analysis. Thanks for this!
@mehome4163
@mehome4163 Місяць тому
Great lesson Nelson! Thank you!👏
@huydo8387
@huydo8387 4 дні тому
Thank you Nelson for such a helpful lesson. I'm reading the book and found your explaination informative. Hope to see more videos in this serie.
@here4thebeer
@here4thebeer 21 день тому
love this content/book club concept. Awesome idea for the channel.
@sevenwhatuknow
@sevenwhatuknow Місяць тому
I've just recently started getting into Chess without knowing any principles and im glad to say some of these things I've figured out on my own. First chess lesson video ive watched and youve definitely helped alot. Much appreciated
@Vein76
@Vein76 Місяць тому
Love this "book breakdown" of a chess classic. Looking forward to future episodes and other books being covered in the future.
@brioma33
@brioma33 Місяць тому
As far as moving the frequency up to every week rather than every 2 weeks. At least at this point, short games that last only 4 or 5 pages, every week would probably work fine. If anybody needed more time , they could watch the corresponding video at their convenience.
@karlbe8414
@karlbe8414 Місяць тому
Nelson the masterful explainer, strikes again! Outstanding stuff!
@s1mon_234
@s1mon_234 Місяць тому
Great video, i love your content. Very instructive
@learningisfun2108
@learningisfun2108 Місяць тому
So happy to see your channel approaching half a million subscribers. You’ve been my favourite since I found you, way back when you had a few thousand subs. I guess I need to thank the almighty algorithm for recommending your vids. Keep up the great work of explaining chess to us knuckleheads 😂
@adriantenbrink1450
@adriantenbrink1450 22 години тому
Great structural video. I really appreciate it!
@matttomlin4331
@matttomlin4331 Місяць тому
Great lesson and beautifully paced. Thank you 👍
@sarrystylesofficial
@sarrystylesofficial Місяць тому
Great series, already looking forward to game 2
@calmsyy
@calmsyy Місяць тому
great summary and extra value with the perpetual in the end. I personally see the series going weekly, since reading through 1 game shouldn't take long :)
@ratunkuuu
@ratunkuuu 23 дні тому
Thank you for your clear explanation, and time stamps, see you tomorrow for more
@deepskywest3633
@deepskywest3633 Місяць тому
Outstanding instruction. The real deal.
@sagecreekwitt3301
@sagecreekwitt3301 25 днів тому
Thank you Nelson for this great video! Much of this is intuitive, but it's good to hear you describe it.
@user-vb6zm9qh9k
@user-vb6zm9qh9k Місяць тому
Grat content! You & naroditsky are the best
@Collin-H
@Collin-H Місяць тому
Thank you for your informative videos Nelson, your calm and precise explanations have really helped me elevate my chess play You're a great teacher, and I really appreciate what you are doing Take care, and I wish you the best🙏
@Fitness4London
@Fitness4London 4 дні тому
hi Nelson, thanks for this awesome tutorial. I can't wait to put these principles into practice in my next match. I feel like a stronger player already.
@abhisadventures9498
@abhisadventures9498 Місяць тому
Great vedio. I learnt a lot of key concept in kingside attack. Thanks
@levistepanian5341
@levistepanian5341 Місяць тому
Very instructive. Thanks!
@istariknight1
@istariknight1 Місяць тому
I definitely missed the perpetual counterattack when going through the book, I'm glad you pointed it out! Don't resign unless it's forced mate!
@martin688ify
@martin688ify Місяць тому
Capturing the bishop isn't forced and there isn't an immediate follow up check so it's perpetual check if you blunder it
@soodsona
@soodsona Місяць тому
What an instructive video, thank you so much
@jeremyalvarez619
@jeremyalvarez619 Місяць тому
This is great, I've been working my way through this book for about a year now and it's very instructional. This is what I needed to push through and finish it.
@under_rower9829
@under_rower9829 Місяць тому
Start to a great series!
@Five-Star-General
@Five-Star-General Місяць тому
Thank you sir, excellent work
@viktorvondoom9119
@viktorvondoom9119 Місяць тому
Principle number 14 is new to me. Thanks Nelsi
@Vlasje79
@Vlasje79 Місяць тому
Very nice explanation dude. keep up the good work ❤
@dewaldprinsloo5994
@dewaldprinsloo5994 Місяць тому
Awesome video, thank you.
@mrnelgin
@mrnelgin Місяць тому
Good information. Sounds like a good book but I'm generally too busy to sit down and just read a book. Family like and such, so this "recap" is really useful and a good reminder of what most of us should already know.
@prdoyle
@prdoyle Місяць тому
You should try it! He has assigned 4 pages of reading over two weeks. Not all that demanding.
@BobMenziesMusic
@BobMenziesMusic Місяць тому
Great video series. I order my books from Amazon Canada, so perhaps you could add the link for the Canadian site. Thanks again and I look forward to this series. Your videos are always excellent. Your explanations are clear and lucid.
@blakeburroughs7721
@blakeburroughs7721 Місяць тому
Very valuable information. Thank you so much.
@shadow234LOL
@shadow234LOL Місяць тому
This is a very great video! Me and my friend struggle to play chess even in the opening due to our lack of knowledge In principles, so this definitely helps! Thanks, Nelson! :D
@ld77abt
@ld77abt Місяць тому
Hi really like this idea of a series. Please proceed with that!
@francesgoulart3379
@francesgoulart3379 Місяць тому
I don't have the book yet...but can't argue with any of these principles...and you presented them with great clarity...appreciate the unrushed step-by-step!
@oskarkrzesiak2581
@oskarkrzesiak2581 18 днів тому
Great video, thanks!
@tomhartl6330
@tomhartl6330 Місяць тому
Nelson, I’m so glad you’re doing this book! I have the original (1957) book in hardcover, that uses old notation (e.g. P-K4). I went through this book in the 1970s, and it had a HUGE impact on the quality of my game. I recently bought the newest edition with modern notation.
@romodavidmgl
@romodavidmgl Місяць тому
Loved it... so effective aand clear
@r.f.catempire3482
@r.f.catempire3482 Місяць тому
Great series!
@yannimon10
@yannimon10 4 дні тому
great analysis! very helpful
@dustingibson2591
@dustingibson2591 Місяць тому
Super stoked for this series
@florincodreanu1716
@florincodreanu1716 Місяць тому
Great video Ready for next chapter 😊
@brettdrk
@brettdrk Місяць тому
Great video! Keep it up!
@garrettrusselm135
@garrettrusselm135 26 днів тому
Actually an insanely helpful video thank you
@mightysunmanpro
@mightysunmanpro Місяць тому
This is a really great video. Thanks
@dyukonsuku2335
@dyukonsuku2335 Місяць тому
Great vid man
@ahmadjan2031
@ahmadjan2031 Місяць тому
Great video❤. I would love every week .
@PatIreland-tw9lr
@PatIreland-tw9lr Місяць тому
Thanks for a great video!
@Swopher
@Swopher Місяць тому
Great video! ❤
@chintanbarbhaya6857
@chintanbarbhaya6857 29 днів тому
Fantastic lesson.. Thank you
@andrewmitchell7592
@andrewmitchell7592 12 днів тому
Thanks a bunch! At least half of these are new points for me.
@Pinaskaladaa
@Pinaskaladaa Місяць тому
You are my motivation to continue playing chess💯
@neerajkapoor1050
@neerajkapoor1050 25 днів тому
Effective fundamental principles to keep in mind... well explanation
@dnthymamai
@dnthymamai 24 дні тому
Perfect lesson. Thank you Nelson for making us better players
@amospal441
@amospal441 29 днів тому
Amazing content!
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