WEBVTT

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Hi there in this, I want to show you what the king's Indian defense is, so on defo you might play,

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might have sense.

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This is a very, very popular move against one day, for it's in the hyper modern tradition.

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It's not convincing Appaloosas.

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You know, it's a much more flexible.

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They're not as irreversible as pawns.

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When you move a pawn, you can't reverse it and it can be reversed.

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So this is one of the top moves that professionals play nice.

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Have a sense of the CIFOR, which is quite often played the king's Indian defenses end to end.

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Firedog six of the 94 you play Bishop G-7 so you don't play anything to try and occupy the center.

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And this is more Grunfeld defense.

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But you play Bishop G7 here.

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This is King's Indian Defense Secretary.

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You let White take up the center aisle.

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That might seem a bit odd, but it's one of those hyper modern openings where the idea was sometimes

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you let the opponents initially occupy the center at least, but then you undermine their center and

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you try and take over later.

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So if all we have these things and there's a whole bunch of variations here which are named, so the

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classical variation, if you look at that.

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So Neutze have Frank, for example, this is the classical variation.

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And here, you know, move seven, there are these particular variations.

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One of the main names, ones, as you see on that list, is defined the Petrosian variation names off

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the telegram chosen possible champion.

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There's Bishop Avery, named after the French, a fantastic player in his own right.

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And that, you know, branches out into unstuff details as though the exchange variation.

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But you need to know what there a little bit if you want going to play the King's Indian.

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The King's Indian has books devoted to it.

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Chess is such a vast game.

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And you might ask, well, how on King Squasher, why would I want to play the King's Indian defense?

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Well, Bobby Fischer play the King's Indian defense later.

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Garry Kasparov play the King's Indian defense.

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It has been a fighting weapon of choice and still is for many grandmasters.

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Mark Hampton plays the King's Indian fans up and coming grandmothers play.

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It's a very, very dangerous weapon of choice, especially on the fourth time controls, especially

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online.

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It's a very, very interesting weapon of choice.

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If we go rewinding back just to show these other names, variations that move five, they don't have

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to play might have frame.

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There's so much variation named after Friedrich's Himesh.

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There's the other botheration, which is Bishop Itou Omae five and then G5.

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There's the aggressive four --'s attack which no Bradberry and honorary I am of Bonnett Chess Club

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described it as one of the most aggressive variations in chess for --'s attack.

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Those names, those things with the word attacking them, often very, very aggressive.

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And if you're more inclined, you might actually not play efore in fact, you might actually or move

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free instead it sort of nicely fades play for E4.

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You might have an intention actually to play a quick Catoe.

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So there's the incarceration as well.

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You don't always have to try and construct the center.

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So this keeps that diagonal clear.

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You don't want to pawn necessarily on A4 blocking in your friend Catoe.

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So that's positional.

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We're playing it as well, very much more positional, not going to the occupation of the center with

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a broad front.

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So yeah, the king's inJune, the fence.

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It's been one of my absolute favorite weapons of choice, especially in Blechacz.

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So I've had a huge amount of fun and entertainment with it.

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And I have for you a model game which I stumbled across when I studied Bobby Fischer's games is really

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a sweet, sweet, so sweet game to show you.

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It's against Victor culturally in the nineteen seventy Herceg No Blitz.

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So let me show you this game.

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So starting with defo.

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So, Fisher, I have six weeks before she thinks, let's see Frank Due, 74, desex Bishop Eita.

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So this is kind of the classical you know, the classical well, playing in classical variation on castling.

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Jeffrey A5.

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An important thing to note is you can't really win the pawn here with whites if you try and win the

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pawn here in this position.

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Blacks Sympathy Plays 1984.

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Blacks can be doing very, very well.

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So this is absolutely fine for black.

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And even worse, you can exacerbate what you're doing here with this desperado tactic and you end up

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losing a piece because Black actually plays Bishop Tate, Seefried Jack and King takes F7.

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This is a very well known trap within the King's Indian defense.

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So this is a way just to piece up here.

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So Black is deliberately leaving that pawn in the Thracian and why it doesn't usually go for that white

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usually.

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Actually, believe it or not, just Castles ignores the E5 form.

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So very well-known tribe.

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So we have 90, 65, 97, 92.

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And now Fisher kind of puts himself beyond the fray on the queen side.

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In a way, he closes up the the the queen side before active operations on King side.

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This is very, very interesting, precautionary move.

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So we see a free 98 before he sinks rugby one, an official starts the attack.

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And this is one of the powers of the kings.

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In the time, you can still play like a caveman.

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So as a Kings Cross, you're like me.

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That's why I enjoy the Kings Indian defense.

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Quite often you're pushing your pawns aggressively on the king's side, getting quite vicious attacks.

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And, you know, for those dynamic, aggressive world chess champions, they scored so many wins going

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for King attacks with this kind of King's Indian style attack, Fisher and Kasparov.

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So Fisher closing up now f4 g5 another rook swings across Brook have six BTC finals play.

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This is a mistake because perhaps one should have carried away some more points here with eight first.

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So for example, this and it would have set back, you know, some more problems than the game.

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Taking out loans quite bishop is often very important for way to take out the sting of the attack.

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But he didn't do this.

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It's only a blitz game after all, anyway.

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And in Blitz, the you know, if you if your parents don't play accurately, you can often get completely

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crushing attacks if they don't play the accurate defensive moves or precautions needed.

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So here we see night be free.

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Rugy Sex Bishop detA Night have things King one.

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And now you know Bishop goes for it.

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This is one of the absolute beautiful things I find about the Kings in the attack.

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You can just go for it, you know, quite often.

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So opening up the lines against the king and the stronger you are tactically, the better, because,

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you know, here it's just a vicious possession.

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After twenty six kings, you on the night goes back to.

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Aw thanks Bishop.

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He won and now a beautiful night retreats.

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Believe it or not, 99.

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This seems ridiculous, but it's going to reemerge with a vengeance and combined forces against the

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target age free.

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We have free tonight at 7:00 every night you five.

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So a lot of pressure on once Kingside six.

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So direct friends with that pin point now in 1993 for example with that pawn.

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So Kuzma tries to m10 but now takes a try anyway ripping apart of the bishop takes a free kick have

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to Vishwas about blunder apparently here in overexcitement.

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Maybe that's the one thing you've got to watch out for in such positions.

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Fisher did find the right move though so one is the right move here.

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If I give you five seconds pause video, how would you finish one off?

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You've got a lot of attacking pieces around the opponents.

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King the king is lacking escape squares.

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So what's the best move here?

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If I give you five seconds, pause video blacks play.

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OK, it's night for Jack opens up that queen's account for after Bishop takes G4.

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Bishop, thank you for the game ended here.

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If it continued with, say, Queen detA, then the queen comes in and it's just vicious.

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You know, this is all it's all pretty devastating.

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You know, Jack Hanna's come here and the king has just no defense and animated.

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So fish is near blunder.

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By the way, in this position was he was about to play apparently 1934.

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Jack, this would be a big mistake.

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It gives the king an escape.

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Squire of the queen takes the form.

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The king would be given the heir to escape square and so on.

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The Queen.

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And for Jack, you need to, you know, once actually got the advantage, their king is able to run

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for the hills.

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So essentially the night before, Jack, you can see perhaps why I can consider this a sweet, smooth

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game, very, very smooth without too much an issue that essentially we have this lovely rolling attack

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on the king side, which kind of almost like that is natural.

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I'd like to open up lines with that kind of avalanche of pawns.

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So I love that kind of stuff in general.

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And that's why I also recommend you to check out the king's engine attack system with Y, which is kind

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of leveraging many of the ideas of the Kings in advance, but just with the white pieces.

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So sometimes getting a vicious attack, it leads to quite different games, usually than than the Kings

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are the fans.

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OK, so I hope you enjoyed this mobile game and maybe try out the Kings Indian defense.

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So it's Diphone Lefsetz Psephology six ninety three, your outrageously letting your opponents occupy

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the center.

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So this is the main opposition of the action.

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Very, very interesting legacy from the hyper modernists.

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They found useful exceptions to establish Ferring and thus extended very usefully in all directions.

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But it's a hyper modern opening.

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It's not placing a huge emphasis on literally occupying the center.

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It's more about inviting the opponent to occupy the center initially and then hitting it hard later.

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OK, and with the center closed in general, were centers closed?

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Such flank operations are more justifiable sometimes.

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You know, if it's an open center and you try and flag attacks that more easily go wrong and backfire.

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But with the center closed in this game, black was more justified for such a powerful storm, as it's

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sometimes called.

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OK, that's so much.
