I’ve already established what I have been doing consistently
in my previous blog post, so it would be pointless to go over those things
(unless, of course, there is something of importance that happens, which in the
case of Friday, there wasn’t). However, we did do something exciting (for me at
least…)!
After doing some chess puzzles like Math problems (read blog
post 1 for reference), I was able to actually analyze a couple of my games with
my mentor! We took some games that I played recently at the 2011 Ohio Grade
Level Championship and looked at them. Since it’s been six months since I’ve
played those games, I don’t remember every move that I played that tournament.
Luckily, I dug up pieces of paper where I annotated the games on. Without
getting too specific, we definitely found some errors in which I could have
improved my play. For example, we looked at my first game where I was in a
losing position where my pieces were basically doing nothing and I was about to
drop a pawn because I didn’t have enough defenders. However, when we looked at
the game again, there were two moves in the opening that set my position behind
my opponents (one was taking a pawn, which opened a line up for my opponent’s
bishop; the other was pushing a pawn that blocked a developing square for my
knight). Even though I was behind, my opponent gave me an opportunity to
actually have a great position, but at the time, I did not see it. It involved
a tactic called skewering (where one piece attacks two pieces in a line, but
the more important one is in front), which would had let me either win a piece
or have a really nicely positioned pawn-bishop pair. When we found that move, I
was like, “Duh…”, but that was probably because I was just starting the section
on skewers in the book so the pattern was easily recognizable to me. Anyways, we
did that for some of the games before moving back to the chess puzzles.
GLHF,
Anthony
You are going to have to show me some pictures of these moves some day. I am having trouble visualizing them. This is a sign that you are far smarter than me, despite making some obscure chess errors that I probably make all the time.
ReplyDeleteI find the whole deal about strategically sacrificing pieces one of the more interesting facets of chess. It applies to real life in many situations. You make compromises to pull ahead. Some of our politicians need to learn this lesson. Maybe they should take up chess as a hobby.