Monday, February 21, 2011

Slow Month

I haven't played much this month, although I am continuing to do tactical problems. My tactical vision seems to have gotten worse over the last month as I have dropped a significant amount of ratings points on both of the sites I do problems on. Quite often I just am not seeing the continuation and the other problems I tend to second guess myself on. I'll actually talk myself out of the right move.

Here is a game from a while back that I thought I played fairly well. I did miss a mate in two, but over all I thought I did well.







A B C D E F G H
8 8
7 7
6 6
5 5
4 4
3 3
2 2
1 1
A B C D E F G H

gypsy13@chesscube.com - ViltaireChesscube
0-1, 2/1/2011.
[#] 1.e4 c5 2.g3 d6 3.Bg2 Nf6 4.Nc3 g6 5.d3 Bg7 last book move 6.Bg5 O-O 7.h4 Qb6 8.Bxf6 Bxf6 9.Na4 Qb4 10.c3 Qa5 11.Ne2 Bd7 12.b3 Bxa4 13.bxa4 Bxc3 14.Nxc3 Qxc3 15.Kf1 Nc6 16.Rc1 Qe5
[16...Qa3 17.h5° ]
17.f4 Qd4 18.Rc4 Qb2 19.Bf3 Nd4 20.Be2 Qxa2 21.f5 a6 22.g4 b5 23.g5 bxc4 24.dxc4 Rab8 25.f6 Rb1 26.fxe7 Rxd1
[26...Qxe2 27.Kg1 Rxd1# ;
26...Qxe2 27.Kg1 Rxd1# ]
27.Bxd1 Re8 28.h5 Rxe7 29.hxg6 fxg6
[29...fxg6 30.Rh3 Rf7 31.Rf3 Nxf3 32.Be2 Nxg5 33.Kg2 Qxe2 34.Kg3 Qf2 35.Kg4 Qf4# ]
[0-1]

Monday, January 17, 2011

The hardships of chess and the panic of bullet games

I've been studying quite a bit of chess. Tactical puzzles, reading a book on calculation and working on better visualizing the board as a whole. I can say with a fair amount of certainty that thinking is my problem. The ability to think positionally and improve my position while keeping my pieces active and coming up with a definite plan is not a strong suit of mine. I have been working on it somewhat, but I think I need to find someone to play some skittles games with in order to get my thought process analyzed and to see what their thought process is during a game. When I do come up with a plan I have a problem executing said plan as well. This means either my plan is faulty or my calculation is faulty. Well, it is probably both. I do seem to miss replies when I try and calculate and this is definitely a vision problem. I either forget a piece is there, miss a piece that is long range that is affecting that area of the board, or miss a reply by the opponent that I did not think he could make. Needless to say I will continue to work on these areas as well as continuing to do tactical puzzles to try and help sharpen my vision.

I haven't worked too terribly much on the endgame. I know I need too, but I am still looking for that book or website that explains it in a way that I can understand. I'm not an idiot mind you, just sometimes it takes a few different ways of explaining something for it to finally sink into my mind. Like opening play. I don't study openings by looking at variation after variation. I look at the first few moves of an opening I think I might want to try and then I try to learn through trial and error and trying to figure out what works best for that opening. Since my memory is terrible why should I try and memorize an obscene amount of variations? Besides, what does memorization really teach you about chess?

On a final note I have played a few bullet and blitz tournaments on www.chesscube.com. My results are terrible of course, but I'm not playing them to really learn about chess, especially not bullet, but merely playing them for fun. I tend to lose on time a lot. I even managed to get a huge material advantage on one opponent only to lose on time since he had a significant clock advantage, but what can you do.