WEBVTT

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Hi there.

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In this example, this initially looks actually a little bit tricky if we prioritize downforce moves

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and looks at all the checks, we see that our checks are pretty harmless in 1995.

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Well, they can actually just take here is even worse, because when they take and we take, we actually

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lose our queen.

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So the checks don't seem to do anything.

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So if we prioritize forcing moves through checkable checks, chacal captures or check or major frat's

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like a one in two is my favor, then that doesn't seem to ruleville anything forcing.

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And yet there is something pretty forcing reply.

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You can often substitute checks for the king to check the opponents.

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Queen is actually kind of check the opponents queen.

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I know it's not illegal, but it still limits the opponent's reply severely so we can use the process

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here.

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And actually this turns out to be a forcing move solution anyway.

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And the first move, I wonder if you can spot it.

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How can we actually attack the opponents?

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Queen, sometimes we also need to recognize our own keta common squares from the outset, not as they

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emerged during the process of calculation.

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We actually have a kind of a common square from the outset here to make use of to get a pretty forcing

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move and that move.

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So you might want five seconds.

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Viniar So do we have a common square to make use of to actually make a forcing move which we can usefully

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calculate?

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And then from that we can actually calculate another Forese move, and that might imply a wait of the

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last move, which is devastating.

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So here we do actually have a commonality.

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The queen is looking at the one and the rookie is looking at this one.

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And this gives us a license to use this square.

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I love to call them Kelo Commons because we've got a telecoms grant from the outside.

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So we play the one.

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And where is the queen going?

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It's very, very limited.

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Employees can't go there.

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It can go to ESX, so the queen goes to sex and now here look are forcing moves again.

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If we can't see Cheque's the opponents King can we see checks in a way to the opponents queen and look

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at the inherent weaknesses of the last move.

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So you're back home and looking at the ceiling and you're looking at checked for the queen and you want

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to see Hohnen desex and then it takes.

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But you're not interested in just the board.

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You're looking at the golden opportunities.

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So they take and what's the golden opportunity?

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What's the weakness of the last move?

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If they took if they take a bit of the desex, what's the weakness of the last move?

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What was the bishop covering?

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What is it no longer covering?

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So we can use again the free golden rules of calculation.

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So hopefully you see rooked these six and you see Bishop takes these in your mind's eye.

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And what is the weakness of the last move?

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Every move takes energy.

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You do a nightmare if you just neglected this, you know, you plan here, you've just neglected before

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you plan to move here, you've just weakened.

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D5 an F5, you plan to move to a four.

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You've just weakened, you know, before every move you play in chess is like what I'd call, you know,

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a weakness of the last move.

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And there's literally, you know, major tactics around that, like deflection and remove the thunder

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are basically trying to get the opponent by force to weaken, you know, squares.

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When the opponent plays a move, it's like that naturally, you know, weakening squares, taking energy

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from one place to another.

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It's like in boxing or karate.

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If someone goes to land you, you know, a punch, you know, they're neglecting.

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And I don't recommend, you know, I'm not an expert.

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But, you know, you can see that, you know, you're supposed to keep the defense.

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Yeah.

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And any adversarial game, if if you lose your God, it can be exploited.

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And here it's like losing the guard of G5.

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And what can we do with G5 chacal checks again?

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And all of a sudden, you know, we have this golden opportunity which which wasn't there before.

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Ninety five check, because also we recognize hopefully that any pin pieces or pawns, the power of

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the pen piece of foam is illusionary.

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It's not really controlling the G5.

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So we've actually forked now the opponents king and queen.

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So yeah.

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What, what was seemingly this position has got nothing going for it as actually it is actually not

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the kind of win by force.

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And that's the the thing about chess.

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If you use this strict process of calculation.

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Yeah.

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Look for the weaknesses of the last move, the killer common squares, even from the outset where your

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pieces cooperate, they give you a license, the squares as well when you progress wins.

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So lost when they're giving a license to squares.

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When you look at the effects of the whole possession, that's the most subtle effects on the whole board.

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And also in general, I do like to identify the pins, pieces or pawns to the king, these absolutely

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absolute pins that there are great things to absolutely recognize because there's mobility.

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That pawn is not actually controlled, will not be on the board.

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It's not really controlling G5, but we create that real weakness of the last we've brought.

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These six were forcing this neglect of G5.

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So I hope you you're becoming a little bit more aware of this process, which can be extremely useful,

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even if you didn't know any tactical patterns whatsoever, this rigorous process of calculation and

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identifying the golden opportunities every step of the way in your calculations.

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OK, that's suppose.
