This is wonderful. Clear view of the physical board and the clock, no commentary, and no fancy graphics to distract from the game. This is how professional chess should be presented.
Erm....the fancy graphics do you mean a board to give us a better view of the action? Because if every game is presented like this I'm sure less people would watch chess
I happen to agree with your comment. Just enjoy watching the 2 people play their game, Without all the other distractions & talking. It takes away from the Game their playing & in it's self is rather a Huge DISTRACTION.
Evgeny Sveshnikov, Grandmaster and Theorist of Chess, Dies at 71 (R.I.P) , he made significant contributions to the theory of the game, particularly the openings, one of which is named for him.
The engine is still reading equal until eric plays 27. Rd3, which allows b4, trapping the queen and forcing a trade with a pawn sac. Black then enters a winning endgame.
What I observed in the game was : The enemy troops slowly approched a bit closer towards white's army with every single move and all white has to do was to defend from behind instead of attacking. Came from Eric Rosen's channel's latest video
At 16:31 wasn't Rh6 better? Holding the knight and preparing to push the f pawn. White rook would be displaced and there wouldn't be much room for second rook to play.
Trades rooks, loses a pawn, he no longer has center control, weakens the pawn structure around his king, the rook on h3 is trapped (can't help with the center) and it's also now unprotected.
@@Sosa40706 If he took the knight with his h3 rook that would leave the f5 rook undefended. Then if black retakes the rook that just captured the knight, white can grab the f5 rook for free. If black decided to capture the e5 rook with his f5 rook instead, white could just recapture with the pawn with tempo on the queen, and after the queen moves white can simply move his h4 rook out of the way so it wouln't be captured by the pawn. At the very least its would be a free knight. Unless I'm missing something.
At 17:56 black blundered here I think... g3 would win th black ♞ because it has nowhere to go... I saw it while eric was thinking for 45 seconds. Am I missing something? I haven't checked the engine yet.
If anyone is wondering why Black can't win a pawn with cxd4 after nbd2, it is because cxd4 exd4 nxd4 nxd4!! Bxd1 Bb5+ and Black is lost. Might be obvious to some stronger players, but a subtle idea to less advanced players.
What was that loud noise in the background? Sounded like gunfire or construction. Not a great setting for a chess game. Loved the camera angle showing the clock.
White played it way too conservatively in the middle game. A pawn push in response to Black's audacious g5 move would have been in order as well as doing more to open up the h file. Black played very well though.
Eric, you played Nf3 too soon before black played e3. That allowed his bishop to become active ending in the exchange of bishops, which stopped your King's side attack. Wait for e3, then play Bf3. Play c3 instead. Wait.
I belive that IM rosen made a mistake according to London system of course, he should play Sbd2 instead of Nf3 in the beginning. You can play Nf3 only when black play e6, so black white coloured bishop has no funky play like Bg4 or Bf5. He played Nf3 and after Sveshnikov Bg4 he was thinking, it means he was unprepared and confused. still disappointing that Rosen is not playing the best book moves in London, he was teaching how to play that system.
1) You can play Nf3 (there are different approaches about how to play the London) 2) It was in 2017, you can look how he won a Arena King by playing only the london with white pieces against strong players and by playing Nf3 3) That's not because you are giving lessons about a opening that you are invincible with it, there is middlegame then and endgame then ^^
@@vladimirnabokov4414 Hey I aldo won a tournament playing only london but it was on amateur level with rating performance 2200. I was speaking by GM Simon Williams analysis and also my thought about classic al London. I Still Think that you should play nf3 ony afer black e6. Magnus carlsen also develops first his bishop on d3 delaying his kings knight. But thats only my opinion you can play whatever you wants. We are speaking strictly about opening not middle game or ending.
th-cam.com/video/K35bLF9K_RA/w-d-xo.htmlm16s to me Rfe1 is Eric's first mistake ; he should've played Rae1 and retain the option of pushing f4, to stall black's onslaught and establish his knight on e5. He must have regreted this move at several points in this game! Great one though, perfect camera and very instructive game. Just when I thought black was going to play e5 he went for the kill with Nh4! The years haven't tamed the Sveshnikov beast!
Свешникову - брависсимо за монолитную партию. а Эрику минус=насколько ж не уважать соперника, тем более гросса, что двигать 10 ходов в уже давно проигранной партии, очевидно даже для второрозрядников. Куда котится шахматный мир?
Писец! Международный мастер якобы, играет против международного гроссмейстера, настоящего, нелипового, а не умеет сдаваться. Последние ходов пятнадцать было просто стыдно сиотреть.
dear Eric ...you could play better the London system ..and better calculate but i think you did not attention to middle game about this opening ..and just answered your opponent plans and was not active ...for example ...the last move about rook ...why ..d3 ? and ETC ..ok ..not important this lose ... good luck ..
Psychologically, playing a more rated opponent is intimidating... Though it may be boring to some but it is instructive for some... If you can play a GM (if you have the luck), I don't think you can get any further with your knowledge. Unless you're a GM yourself...
Oh dear. How strong are you? Sveshnikov is about ELO 2450. I'd be amazed if you didn't have lots to learn from this game - more than from eating a limp biscuit certainly :-). I think you're having a laff.
His highest rating was 2610 in 1994. At age 69 (I think) this year, he will naturally have slowed down a bit - it happens to all of us. I wonder what your rating is - and what it will be when you are his age. I think you should do some research into his career. He is one of the legends of the game and deserves a bit more respect.
Booooring! No fantasy in these two. Just exchanging and moving neutral because they had no attacking strategy. Exchanging the bishop pair just after the opening, waiting for the opponent's mistake... booooring.
first time i have seen Eric Rosen play a game in real life
Yup
Same
This is wonderful. Clear view of the physical board and the clock, no commentary, and no fancy graphics to distract from the game. This is how professional chess should be presented.
Erm....the fancy graphics do you mean a board to give us a better view of the action? Because if every game is presented like this I'm sure less people would watch chess
I mean a camera that close would probably be distracting
I happen to agree with your comment.
Just enjoy watching the 2 people play their game, Without all the other distractions & talking.
It takes away from the Game their playing & in it's self is rather a Huge DISTRACTION.
this is great, you can see the position and the clock throughout. no camera bouncing around just a steady view.
25:16 You can hear Bobby Fischer move a piece.
I had a good laugh at that one
😂😂😂😂👍👍👍
Evgeny Sveshnikov, Grandmaster and Theorist of Chess, Dies at 71 (R.I.P) , he made significant contributions to the theory of the game, particularly the openings, one of which is named for him.
I knew Eric was white when I saw the London
So not from the hand's hair?
is Eric Rosen doing Morse code with his eyes?
GM Sveshnikov. A historical character! I watch all of his videos. Thanks for this video @Rapid chess.
The engine is still reading equal until eric plays 27. Rd3, which allows b4, trapping the queen and forcing a trade with a pawn sac. Black then enters a winning endgame.
Squash in the background?
GM Sveshnikov, despite his age, showed a great technique and understanding. The a pawn was the hero..
the first time i actually followed through with every move and knew exactly what was going on!
This IS a high quality video.
What I observed in the game was : The enemy troops slowly approched a bit closer towards white's army with every single move and all white has to do was to defend from behind instead of attacking.
Came from Eric Rosen's channel's latest video
Interesting play against London system...worth further study. Thanks for showing this game!
Anyone here from Eric Rosen's channel for shouting this video out?
Eric exaggerated a bit in saying that he got destroyed by his opponent...
@@haveaseatplease yeah lol i expected a complete positional space advantage/crush or a crushing attack. The attack wasn't really crushing lol
Checking in from Connecticut
Go check out ginger GM. he has good opening theory on the London...
Trading his good knight for blacks bad knight was a bad idea...
I noticed the same
What other options does he have? Doing nothing would lose a pawn and going back would just allow black knights to become better anyway
He could have forked the queen and the rook, and have the e-file for himself if the black knight took the white knight of course
Not pushing g4 and having a great outpost for the knights to control e5 was a bad idea.
why ?
There is simply not enough firepower to the queen side.
GAME MASTER the object of the game is checkmate the enemy king. He’s playing white, he should be thinking offensively.
At 16:31 wasn't Rh6 better? Holding the knight and preparing to push the f pawn. White rook would be displaced and there wouldn't be much room for second rook to play.
Not only that, it opened up mating possibilities on h2 when the pawn is pushed.
After Rh6 Re5 would have been even stronger.
Sveshnikov casually dismantling Eric Rosen's pet opening with some offbeat sideline.
What was the offbeat sideline? I'm fairly new to Chess and have started playing the London.
@@nabalienalien bg4 is very infrequent. Usually bf5 is preferred for black as it is a much stronger diagonal
Why did he not play g3 at 18:58
Trades rooks, loses a pawn, he no longer has center control, weakens the pawn structure around his king, the rook on h3 is trapped (can't help with the center) and it's also now unprotected.
gm's blunder too
It provokes nf3 check, forking the rook on e5. And if you take with queen, g4 forks the queen and rook
Two key points I think, rook lift prematurely and good-bad knight exchange
White should not take Rxf5, Qa5 instead. And if black captured the Rook by Rxe5 then exe5 by White followed by Rxa4 and advantage for white.
Why didn't white resign after Nxg2? It is dead lost position and black has around 2 mins on the clock, more than enough for a GM
ChessLessons There was no button "resign" there and white continued to play I mean.
It's not an English opening as in the notes. That would be 1. c4. It is a London system as stated in the title.
10:57 why not knight c4?
at 19:05 shouldn't Eric have taken the knight with his rook? Wouldn't that make the other rook undefended and at the very least he gets a free knight?
how can he capture the g6 rook?
@@Sosa40706 If he took the knight with his h3 rook that would leave the f5 rook undefended. Then if black retakes the rook that just captured the knight, white can grab the f5 rook for free. If black decided to capture the e5 rook with his f5 rook instead, white could just recapture with the pawn with tempo on the queen, and after the queen moves white can simply move his h4 rook out of the way so it wouln't be captured by the pawn. At the very least its would be a free knight. Unless I'm missing something.
@Nicholas Sergay oh yeah you're right. I didn't notice that
At 17:56 black blundered here I think... g3 would win th black ♞ because it has nowhere to go... I saw it while eric was thinking for 45 seconds. Am I missing something? I haven't checked the engine yet.
Nevermind black is winning after that
Black replies g3 with fxg3 and opens f3 square for his knight.
If you go down that path, you will lose the rock at e5, after pawn exchange and knight f3. Not that difficult to see ;)
fg, then Nf3 with check if white takes with any pawn and R:e5 if white takes with rook on g3
I see now even a better response: Nf3+, if Q:f3, g4! and you lose the rook. If you go Kh1, N:e5
Anyone here from Eric's stream or TH-cam Channel's mention of this game? We could just rename this video: "The Systematic Beheading of the London".
If anyone is wondering why Black can't win a pawn with cxd4 after nbd2, it is because cxd4 exd4 nxd4 nxd4!! Bxd1 Bb5+ and Black is lost. Might be obvious to some stronger players, but a subtle idea to less advanced players.
14:00 Qg5 was best move there or not?
Nf3+ gf
Rg6 winning
I saw that too the knight is over extended
What was that loud noise in the background? Sounded like gunfire or construction. Not a great setting for a chess game. Loved the camera angle showing the clock.
That happened because white gave up the center, an early f4 would have helped to mantain the tension and therefore stop black atack on the kingside..
Review this game!
lefthanded?
Glad to see the pioneer of one of my favorite openings is still in fighting form. I need to try out 2... c5 against the London one of these days
White played it way too conservatively in the middle game. A pawn push in response to Black's audacious g5 move would have been in order as well as doing more to open up the h file. Black played very well though.
Eric, you played Nf3 too soon before black played e3. That allowed his bishop to become active ending in the exchange of bishops, which stopped your King's side attack. Wait for e3, then play Bf3. Play c3 instead. Wait.
I can hear my Dad now! Is it my move? Oh! You haven't moved. My bad.
Why are there so many ADS.
Sveshnikovs hands looks so young, I thought it was hands of someone else.
was thsia draw or win
I belive that IM rosen made a mistake according to London system of course, he should play Sbd2 instead of Nf3 in the beginning. You can play Nf3 only when black play e6, so black white coloured bishop has no funky play like Bg4 or Bf5. He played Nf3 and after Sveshnikov Bg4 he was thinking, it means he was unprepared and confused. still disappointing that Rosen is not playing the best book moves in London, he was teaching how to play that system.
1) You can play Nf3 (there are different approaches about how to play the London) 2) It was in 2017, you can look how he won a Arena King by playing only the london with white pieces against strong players and by playing Nf3 3) That's not because you are giving lessons about a opening that you are invincible with it, there is middlegame then and endgame then ^^
@@vladimirnabokov4414 Hey I aldo won a tournament playing only london but it was on amateur level with rating performance 2200. I was speaking by GM Simon Williams analysis and also my thought about classic al London. I Still Think that you should play nf3 ony afer black e6. Magnus carlsen also develops first his bishop on d3 delaying his kings knight. But thats only my opinion you can play whatever you wants. We are speaking strictly about opening not middle game or ending.
I can't handle rapid I like to calculate too much :(
(26:54) b4!
Why Evgeny svechnikov not push e pawn, eh?
Too bad he can't pre-move here :P
I hear squash 😈
Here's the score www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1912381
Thanks for showing this...
I can study the game on my own pace and faster...
Wait he plays offline chess !!???
th-cam.com/video/K35bLF9K_RA/w-d-xo.htmlm16s to me Rfe1 is Eric's first mistake ; he should've played Rae1 and retain the option of pushing f4, to stall black's onslaught and establish his knight on e5. He must have regreted this move at several points in this game!
Great one though, perfect camera and very instructive game.
Just when I thought black was going to play e5 he went for the kill with Nh4! The years haven't tamed the Sveshnikov beast!
GG yo
10. Nf1?!
What who won
Joshua Knott Black wins by resignation. No way to stop the A pawn from queening.
Imagine him saying "dah"
I knew it was eric by his nose
Свешникову - брависсимо за монолитную партию. а Эрику минус=насколько ж не уважать соперника, тем более гросса, что двигать 10 ходов в уже давно проигранной партии, очевидно даже для второрозрядников. Куда котится шахматный мир?
eric rosen on board
anyway who is eric white or black...?
Moved the white knight too early blocking your queen
Wow Eric just getting crushed by a 70 year old man
Писец! Международный мастер якобы, играет против международного гроссмейстера, настоящего, нелипового, а не умеет сдаваться. Последние ходов пятнадцать было просто стыдно сиотреть.
Waaayyyyy too many ads.
Who was white? Rosen I assume from name placement but....
Rosen
Hard to see the board.
*who came from eric rosen channel*
The London't
Il nero ha aperto male..non sa...
Cf1..... Ma dai..
bishops look at each other like faience dogs
g3
Toggi Toggi Toggi Toggi Toggi Toggi Toggi Toggi Toggi Toggi Toggi Toggi Toggi Toggi Toggi Toggi Toggi Toggi Toggi Toggi Toggi Toggi
dear Eric ...you could play better the London system ..and better calculate but i think you did not attention to middle game about this opening ..and just answered your opponent plans and was not active ...for example ...the last move about rook ...why ..d3 ? and ETC ..ok ..not important this lose ... good luck ..
you speak good england :)
why N H4,,,,Qg5 come back home nooooooo nf3!!gxf3....RG6!!!!win the queen
I never knew professional chess was played on a racketball court. 🤔
Pgn provide us
Withe london = plays standard moves without idea and logical loosing easily without fighting ; poor chess from rosen
A*d6......poi 0-0..ma daiiii....arrocca e via o fai altro,bevi Molinari
Play on plastic board, baaah. Even on our club we only play at wooden boards. That should be standard.
I love those chess mats much better than wood board, good pecies are a must though.
And people would give a crap about you or your club because...
What a boring showing of the london...
This is a GM, not some fucking random dude
Still boring.
Psychologically, playing a more rated opponent is intimidating... Though it may be boring to some but it is instructive for some...
If you can play a GM (if you have the luck), I don't think you can get any further with your knowledge. Unless you're a GM yourself...
Useless to learn/ we can not see the board in the right position and too fast to follow
Watching a weak GM play is like eating a limp biscuit.🍪
Oh dear. How strong are you? Sveshnikov is about ELO 2450. I'd be amazed if you didn't have lots to learn from this game - more than from eating a limp biscuit certainly :-). I think you're having a laff.
His highest rating was 2610 in 1994. At age 69 (I think) this year, he will naturally have slowed down a bit - it happens to all of us. I wonder what your rating is - and what it will be when you are his age. I think you should do some research into his career. He is one of the legends of the game and deserves a bit more respect.
Booooring! No fantasy in these two. Just exchanging and moving neutral because they had no attacking strategy. Exchanging the bishop pair just after the opening, waiting for the opponent's mistake... booooring.