When To Exchange Pieces? 🤔 Grandmaster’s Thinking with GM Davorin Kuljasevic

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 21 ต.ค. 2024
  • Wish you could think like a grandmaster? 🤔 GM Davorin Kuljasevic shares the secrets of Grandmaster Thinking and reveals the exact step-by-step blueprint for making good moves. Get instant access with 35% off. ►ichs.co/2PB01cy
    One of the most important things in chess is to know when to trade pieces and when not to. After all, once a piece is removed from the board, the move can't be undone. The piece is lost for the rest of the game, and you have to live with the consequences.
    It is crucial, then, to learn how to evaluate a position and the results of a piece exchange. There's more to exchanging chess pieces than simply their material value. For example, a bishop and a knight are roughly valued as equal, but if the position is open, a bishop can dominate a knight! Likewise, if the position is closed, a bishop isn't very effective while a knight comes into its own.
    When the game is in the early stages, a knight is more valuable because it can jump over other pieces. But as the game progresses, the bishop becomes the more valuable piece because it can cover and control many squares on the board.
    A rook is not as valuable in the early stages of the game but can be deadly as the game progresses and lines get opened up. It is important to remember that a piece’s importance fluctuates during the game.
    A great piece of advice is to assess the situation from the opposite angle. Instead of only looking at which pieces will be removed, look at the pieces that will be left on the board! Many good players will give up a good knight versus a poor looking bishop. If after a trade, you are left with an active piece and your opponent's bishop is stuck behind a pawn chain, it is like you're a piece up!
    In this video, GM Davorin Kuljasevic analyses some games from his own career in order to evaluate the piece exchanges that occur. it's a highly instructive look into the mind of a grandmaster and what they are thinking when they play their games.
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ความคิดเห็น • 3

  • @lionelwitherspoon5410
    @lionelwitherspoon5410 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Compare with Shilperman v Yermolinsky 1997 Philadelphia

  • @playerx-s4v
    @playerx-s4v 5 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Thank you. Make more videos like these they are very helpful :)))