Happy to see the great Maroczy (born 1870) here today. Often a relatively overlooked master, despite having been very strong and around the 1904-07 period considered to be the world’s highest ranked player (during the WC Lasker’s typical inactivity for other pursuits). This lovely tournament he tied for first with Janowski (Maroczy +7 -1 =7 & Janowski +9 - 3 = 3). Maroczy struggled on for 96 moves in his final round game so he could tie for first with Janowski. The following year a title match with Lasker was to be played, but unfortunately never materialized. The great positional master Maroczy had numerous first place finishes in very strong tournaments and played quite well even into the 1920s. This game predates Capablanca’s famous 1929 Karlsbad game against Treybal where very similar strategies and a final breakthrough was employed. Thanks again as always
This is one of the most instructive games I've ever seen, and your breakdown of the reasoning behind every move and the players' strategies is top-notch!! Thanks for showing us this masterpiece! Keep it up, Chess Wisdom!
I like the way he plays on both wings. This is sth I still find hard to do. I often find myself not knowing how to exploit my space advantage. I will try to remember this lesson.
How can I reach 1500 + right now my rating stuck in 1200 elo I solve daily puzzles and play games and analyse them still not improving which opening is best for me how can I improve my game and rating
Happy to see the great Maroczy (born 1870) here today. Often a relatively overlooked master, despite having been very strong and around the 1904-07 period considered to be the world’s highest ranked player (during the WC Lasker’s typical inactivity for other pursuits). This lovely tournament he tied for first with Janowski (Maroczy +7 -1 =7 & Janowski +9 - 3 = 3). Maroczy struggled on for 96 moves in his final round game so he could tie for first with Janowski.
The following year a title match with Lasker was to be played, but unfortunately never materialized. The great positional master Maroczy had numerous first place finishes in very strong tournaments and played quite well even into the 1920s.
This game predates Capablanca’s famous 1929 Karlsbad game against Treybal where very similar strategies and a final breakthrough was employed.
Thanks again as always
Great way to start my day! Thanks from Virginia Beach
My pleasure!
@@chesswisdom Very nice(My audio was distorted/I don't care)TYSM.
I wish I had these videos when I was learning ... they are great at explaining strategy which is where all the fun is.
I like how you formulate clear rules (dont move pawns on your inferior side, dont open lines there) without oversimplifying.
Me too. Wish I had these videos and all of TH-cam for that matter growing up .
Very instructive
What a game, wow. Thanks a lot!
My pleasure!
Very patient and calm play by white -- prompting ever more frantic rescue efforts by black!
I like the way he analyse very clear and informative.
Incredible game.
Very instructive game, and very well explained! Thanks to share your thoughts on it!
My pleasure!
Nice game with nice analysis ❤, thanks.
Thanking you all.
My pleasure.
@@chesswisdom Thanks Sir.
Thank you very much for the brilliant analysis. Best wishes from Hungary, Maróczy's country! ❤
My pleasure! Thanks for watching.
This is one of the most instructive games I've ever seen, and your breakdown of the reasoning behind every move and the players' strategies is top-notch!! Thanks for showing us this masterpiece! Keep it up, Chess Wisdom!
My pleasure! Thanks for watching!
Marcozy has his own engine in his head 👍
Beautiful game, very nice coverage (first time i see one of your videos, but i think I'll watch more after this one)
Thank you very nice do u have fide rating
Yes
@@lukemarks3281 howuch
I like the way he plays on both wings. This is sth I still find hard to do. I often find myself not knowing how to exploit my space advantage. I will try to remember this lesson.
Well done, thank you!
My pleasure!
Nicest positional play, best illustrated. Nf3 came late from white sir, is that the line?
Yes, White could have also played Nf3 earlier.
Thank you for your excellent presentation! 🙏 The Pachman you used, is it in algebraic notation or descriptive?
My pleasure. It's in descriptive notation.
We don't see sutch masterpiece in these days !
What if black took a-file himself with ...Qa8 instead of ...Re8?
How can I reach 1500 + right now my rating stuck in 1200 elo I solve daily puzzles and play games and analyse them still not improving which opening is best for me how can I improve my game and rating
..sure-footed or what…?🎉😊
6:10 castling was better ❤
Gosta Stoltz vs Herman Steiner Stockholm Interzonal 1952
[Event "Stockholm Interzonal"]
[Site "Stockholm SWE"]
[Date "1952.09.19"]
[EventDate "1952.09.15"]
[Round "4"]
[Result "1-0"]
[White "Gosta Stoltz"]
[Black "Herman Steiner"]
Need this explanation
@@abhijitkarmakar991 Agree. Me too....
h6
Yep, was screaming for black to play h6 to kick that bishop for ages...
Hm, don't know about it. It kicks the bishop, yes, but it completely gives the light squares to white.
@@gaopinghu7332 h6 by white not black for queen g7+# 2 moves later.
All in one game? But didn't that occur in every famous game?
Morphy at the Opera... Fischer vs. Byrne... Kramnik defeating Kasparov...
Sorry, you're way too fast. Couldn't follow.
You can click the settings button and reduce the playback speed. Strange though, I find the commentary measured and clear.
Kind of boring
Worst ever advice from Pachman
Why? Because it ist more precise to say the right plan is attack the weakest point of the pawn chain?