I Did The Impossible
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 19 ก.ย. 2024
- This is recap of round 6 of the chess Olympiad where Sweden faced Paraguay, hope you enjoy :)
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Sorry for the audio issues between min 3 and 4! Something went wrong but the rest of the video should be fine. Thanks for watching and rooting for me!!!! 🙏
fantastic, it's not the drugs making me insane
Anna Doubling
Well she said she did the impossible soo :P😊
11:58 now I am under the water!!
How cool you got to see where Judit is studying as well! I am quite sure one picture was from ELTE, amirite? 😁 0:39
I hear two annas
Yeah me too I was looking if I had another window opended
@@Samuel-hb6fq I thought someone came into my room
You hear Annather one???
Lets ban them
Those are adlibs, bruh. Get woke 😎😂
I think it was Judit Polgar (or one of the Polgar sisters) who said: "Win with grace, lose with dignity." ... Anna shows us the best possible sportsmanship in chess.
Dear Anna, thanks for being a favourite chess role-model of mine. You inspire me to not only play chess better but encourage me to encourage others to play chess, and better chess, too. It's not easy having victory slip through our fingers when you lose (see what I did there, haha) but I'm always impressed with how you handle the bruises from a loss with humility and grace. I hope you burst out laughing about this game soon and continue to grow into the strongest most competent chess player you can possibly be, each and every day. Every day we can improve! Every day I practice tactics. -- I think you're playing awesome in the Olympiad and coping with the pressure of the responsibility like a boss! It makes me proud to see you pull on the Swedish hoodie and represent your nation, win or lose, it's a massive honour to bear the name and wave the flag of Sweden on a global chess stage. Imagine how young, Anna, would feel, well, she's still there inside of you, obviously, laughs! Let us never be scared of failing. We prep, we test, and we enjoy the playing!. And it's good to play against a worthy opponent, a close fights a good fight, and ratings as we've seen aren't guranteed to be reliable, especially, when people play from countries with fewer opportunties to gain rating points in chess tournaments than others possibly. I hope you keep winning. Keep losing in style, and keep kicking butt. After all, how are we going to bring our best chess to the board, but by allowng and giving ourselves permission and the safety and the security to risk losing, so that we can win greater, grander, more savage victories in the furture. It's fair trade! Let us treat hardship as discipline. Let us grow in adversity. Let us stand tall with our shoulders back ready for battle, ready to conquer. Because every loss, builds up anticipation for our next glorious victory on the black and white board of 64 squares. Go Anna!!, go get that win for team, Sweden!!! Make your parents proud!!! Be well, friend!!! Moss
Budapest was originally TWO cities: Buda and Pest, separated by the Danube River.
It's actually 3. Buda, Pest and Óbuda(Aquincum).
@@ergocaustic3473 don't be a smartazz
I would say that Budapest wasn't called Buda pest pestilence since it's actually a Stanfort mega city built by a previous civilization
Because the Danube is blue
It makes me cry
I've been drunk in both
"Probably could play a bit faster too". I believe. It will happen. It might take a while, but it will happen.
I know a strong player, > 2000, who's played chess for over 5 decades. He never learnt B+N endgames, and he's never had a B+N endgame.
some info: those are ñanduti earrings! (ñanduti being a traditional paraguayan embroidery technique), honestly one of the coolest gifts ever. Saludos! 🇵🇾
Most difficult thing is to loose and still behave like a winner! Well done!
Great commentary! What I learned from this game is that in a sharp position, a single bad move can cost the game. But in this game, it's several less-than-best moves, going from mostly clear win, to big edge, to small edge, to almost losing, to dead lost. Give the opponent hard choices, where the best practical moves are hard to find and burn opponent's clock time. Wait, that's what black did. And she did it so well.
you are awesome, i basically started playing chess 3 weeks ago because of some vids from you popping randomly in my yt and now i feel i need to play chess :D
I got a bad feeling when GM Hammer told us that the Paraguayans were over-performing. But at least it was a good result for Sweden. Good luck tomorrow!
Hi Anna. You asked, "Do you know how to checkmate with King, Knight & Bishop vs King?"
Yes 🙂
I've never had it in an over the board game, but decided to learn it the first time I had it in a game against my chess programme.
What I've found is that the king tries to go the corner that has the opposite colour to my bishop, because it can never be checkmated there. There's a certain position I find I need to get my knight in(d4, d5, e4 or e5), to deliver check when the king is in the 'wrong' corner and then it's coordinating the pieces to drive the king to the other corner along the edge of the board where my bishop eventually delivers checkmate.
There is one aspect I haven't mastered yet and that's when the king can escape from the edge of the board and I have to drive it back to the edge. My chess programmes always keeps the king on the edge of the board, which I think makes it easier.
Good luck for your next game!! Looking forward to seeing what defence to White's opening you adopt!
Because I had made it such a priority when I was young, I have played the B+N endgame so many times online deliberately "for fun" (Older Life Master USCF 2243) and taught others how to play this. I had an 11 year-old genius student wherein she "insisted" on learning this endgame because she had heard so much about it from others ... and in a 3-hour lesson she had learned it(!) ... including what I call the the "19-move W knight pattern" (aggressive King pinning down the enemy king in the "wrong" corner and knight on f2/f7/c2/c7 depending on which corner) and the W pattern for corralling the enemy king ... even with the aggressive king on the edge of the board with the enemy king helping to pin down the aggressive king(!). :) I hope your Swedish team (including your GM Mom Pia?) finishes well against Bangladesh Anna! :)
Lol that's what lack of time management gets you. I had that sinking feeling...
Yes, so many games Anna plays where she ends up in a time problem. It seems to me that spending too long looking for the best move often causes a loss through time pressure. May have been better to move more quickly even if it is only s good move as a result and not the best move!
Even 300th know how to win with a knight and a bishop: You hope that the oponent resigns, runs out of time or that his internet connection fails 😂
As a beginner my biggest struggle is the endgame.
In a game where I had more pieces than my opponent, I lost on time because I couldn't checkmate with a knight and bishop.
to play chess is to have a continual lesson in humility
The analysis of this game is poor. Anna played a really solid game. Even after she blundered she made all the right moves. It wasn't obvious for Paula how to reply cause, as Hammer analysed every position/move yesterday, there were some difficult and unique winning moves and she did them all. Ok, in the end game there were some bishop sacrifies that would give Paula some beautiful checkmates but either way she handled to get a win. It was an amazing game not because anna blundered. It was because Paula played extremely accurate after a point against a stronger opponent. Kudos to both and epsecially to Paula
That's how chess works. Nobody cares how many "right moves" you play, a single blunder often loses the game.
The problem is at this level if you don't play a solid game you've lost 9/10 times anyways, she was playing very well but she blundered at a crucial point sadly
Great recap. Chess is hard. Not only do you have to make good moves, but the good sequence of moves as well as all the other things. We were so much hoping for a knight and bishop checkmate attempt by your opponent. To answer your question, "No, I do not know how to make a knight and bishop checkmate." I'm glad that you had a chance to sight see a bit of the beautiful places you visit when traveling for chess. P.S. Cute earrings (nice of your opponent Paula to give you the gift). Good luck Sweden!
NEVER underestimate Conmebol. Never
I have played about 100 rated tournaments with classical time control and maybe the same amount of blitz and rapid tournaments. Never ever did I have a bishop and knight endgame or was nearing one. I won''t invest any time in learning this.
Nice game by both of you! Also Hammer smashed it behind the commentary mic.
B and N vs K is pretty easy after you learn the basic technique, good to practice it
I played a similar game today but I goofed earlier and was slaughtered by the opponent's queen. Sad day.
"I was panicking. My mind was going 'brrrrrrrrrrrt'... " EXACTLY how my mind responds after making the first blunder at move 5 !!!
Moving the king to h3 was the turning point instead of the middle of the board, as Hammar described.
Riveted with every minute of this game yesterday. Watched every minute.... Could not get back to my work. So bad. Bad Bad Bad. But the guy talking through the options was amazing. Honestly embarrassing that I don't remember his name. The Hammer or something like that? He was all over Paula moving knight to g-4 and then coordinating with the white bishop. You were so vulnerable all through the middle game. Wow. Every minute. What a game! Whooo Weee! You are a superstar. 🤩
Gotta get more devious and aggressive with your knights midgame. You're sitting on them too much too long, until the board is too clear for them to be at their best. Knights have max relative value in the traffic jam, swinging across the board blocking and forking stuff, disrupting the adversary's formations. Once the alleys clear up, they are almost sacrificial.
Thanks for the reminder!
It's a good point you make here, but it's somewhat abstract. It's very difficult to let something like that dictate your choice of best move in a real game under pressure.
@@ChannelYusuf Uh, yah sure, but in a real game under pressure you don't have time to take advice anyway... so general strategy advice is probably more useful than "You should have captured at C5 there!" because it's way too bloody late to capture C5 now.
Next time, maybe it won't be too late to sling that knight out there drawing blood backed by the bishop, pin the queen back, then get a check/fork and take the queen or a rook for it as well. Knights skipping laterally with sorties in and out (the way actually cavalry did) can wreak absolute havoc.
If you sit back with the horsies and try to use them to back the bishops on a crowded board, you just limit your bishop's range and they are likely to get trapped and snapped.
glad you finally got to see Budapest and meet Judit. Its one of the pleasures of chess tournaments to meet people and see new places.
From 0:57 to 1:19 it reminded me of the training montage in Rocky 🥊 including the sneeze 🤧
I don't know how to checkmate with knight and bishop.
I know how to checkmate with knight and bishop. However, it is laborious.
I don't know how to checkmate with a knight and bishop
True character comes after defeat. The way you handle and and respect your opponent in the analysis is a lesson much appreciated
Forgive me if I'm wrong here, I'm no chess competitor, but looking at that position, when she moved her King to g7, could you not have just pushed your pawn runner to c6, if she checked your King on light squares, move down staying within the box to catch her pawn, staying on the dark square matrix, you should be able to catch it. But more importantly, I can't see a way for her to both try block your advancement on c1, whilst preventing your King from stopping your king from reaching and blocking her pawn. Again, forgive me if I'm not seeing something, am just trying to learn from watching all your vids and others online. I tried putting the position in a board versus Stockfish 3, and could get a draw, but that's only garbage machine algorithms, so don't know if it's possible to force a draw or even get your promotion somehow. Just keen to learn.... So much to learn.
Thank you for the recap and a brilliant Olympiad so far.
Heia Sverige!
“I got a rest day” sounds almost exactly like “I got arrested.” Very different meanings.
She must have 50,000 lessons by now 😂
Regarding knight and bishop endgames I have no clue how to force checkmate and I've managed to swindle a draw from a lost position by assuming my opponent doesn't know how to do it either more than once!
Whats up with background noise? Your Hotel seems very "hellhörig"
Nah, it's some kind of echo in the software. It lags behind some two seconds.
After Bxb7 time for white to resign but amazingly black didn't just play h6 and bring out the knight, tried to mate which was needlessly complicated. White was in fact in a mating net but black either didn't see it or just chickened out
You didn't point out what Hammer was talking about in the analysis. He was sure that your opponent played Ba8 as a setup to Ng4! and if you go fxg4 then she has Qb7 threatening mate and the N on b3. He kept saying 'she must see Ng4 otherwise Ba8 makes no sense'. Better to focus more on tactics and not so much positional play
I agree, I think the positional playstyle is maybe not the best for Anna. I think she performs so much better in a strategical playstyle
Yesterday was in another game in the women section a B+N endgame. She won after 53 moves, but only because the opponent didn't call the draw.
I tried once the B+N Endgame vs Stockfish with 1 minute and I succeeded. But of course it's something different doing it at home against a computer than in a tournament.
This was a very interesting game with difficult to see good moves in the mid-game. Paula played awesome and your analysis was educational as always. Best of luck in the rest of the tournament. We are rooting for you
Chreckmate with N & B. Yes. You do have to herd the K to a corner that the B moves on.
Her opponent farmed her for a lot of rating. In that one game alone, she went back to almost 1900s.
I've commented many times but I'm sure you already know, it's all about REALLY bad time management, wasting time at the beginning when it's not so crucial, then blundering in time trouble
I'm sure she realizes that Phil, but it's difficult. It may very well happen that she plays too fast in the opening and then rue her decision and wish she had played more slowly and deliberately.
Getting better at finding the best moves in as little time as possible is a difficult skill to master, and it's much easier said than done - especially in a tournament game.
@@ChannelYusuf not to be too critical of her, but when a GM takes a long time on a move it's because he/she is actually analyzing complex variations with many lines to consider. I think Anna's not really doing that, look at her game against Germany when she took so long yet still made a horrific blunder of Qxa3 missing white's rather obvious (I thought) response of Qe2 after which her queen was lost. So I think more focused and disciplined analysis is what she needs to concentrate on
How to share information without being condescending and demoralizing, (not unlike learning best time management in chess) is something that One can practice and practice. Sometimes it’s teachable and sometimes it’s not.
Such things happen, i had a similar game 40 years ago.
My opponent was much lower rated then me and i thought i must only wait until he make mistakes...
Very bad idea, he kicked my ass as i deserved it for such behavior.
Was a great lesson for me, in game and in life....
Bangladesh cracks me up.
It's the 8th most populated country in the world, and..it's smaller then Florida.
I could not checkmate with knight and bishop in a time pressure situation.
Anna, I dont know a lot about chess at all but of 'most' not all of your losses seems to be that you know which moves to play but you end up waiting sometimes because you think you can wait. Every time you have ever explained this it's because in fact you should not have waited. I'm excited to witness you become a GM someday because I believe you absolutely can be. You are one of my favorite people on youtube. Not just the chess world. You are such an amazingly happy person and we need more people of you on the planet :)
First rule of chess....get up and make your bed. You have great ears.
little did you know i have foreseen this scenario and actually learned how to do it years ago xD
Good luck Sweden Chess Team! Good Luck Anna!
Good evening everyone 😅😊
Good morning😊🌞
Son aros de Ñandutí (en guaraní, tela de araña) es un encaje de agujas que se teje sobre bastidores en círculos radiales, bordando motivos geométricos o zoomorfos, que imita el diseño de la telaraña. Que lindo detalle!. Gran juego
I was in a game where I had a King, a Bishop and a Knight to my opponent’s King and a Bishop. We had a draw after the 50 move rule,😢
I dunno why I laughed my ass out of her sneeze ahahahahh
God bless her on that sneeze.
All I know is in a Knight and Bishop checkmate you're supposed to drive their king to a corner of the board with the color of your bishop, but I'm not for the life of me able to do it lol. Best I can do is two bishops hehe
I'm so excited that you got to meet Judit Polgar. That would be so awesome - she looked amazing!
Although Black is only a candidate master she played very well ... I would have liked to see the endgame K vs K Bishop and Knight ...
She calculates so good, sometimes you can hear her thoughts too. 💛😂💛
the "noise" is audio of this video 2-3 seconds ahead,it seems.
I used to practice the night and bishop endgame and I was pretty good at it. But that was years ago. I don't know if I still could if I had to. The one time the situation came up was a few years ago, and I managed to win. But I don't think my opponent had ever practiced it.
The sound is still borked at 12:18
GO SWEDEN!! i think another lesson is never underestimate an opponent. i believe anyone is beatable on any day!
guess you would not have made that move with more time on the clock. so maybe this was more about time management then you think
Moet er wel bij zeggen tegen Josefine dat was echt hard. Met dame die 2 pionnen weg ging slaan. Daarna ging het wel wat minder. Blijkbaar. Zou ermee te maken kunnen hebben. Elke dag fris weer eruit. Elke dag weer een nieuwe dag. De tegenstander van gisteren. Het is 6 uur sochtends. Dus tegen Bangladesh had gewonnen moeten worden. Net zoals deze partij die je nu analyseert.
Playing Bangladesh for round 8. Anna and Pia have the black pieces. Anna's performance rating has been going south this tourney Hopefully she can turn it around. It will be interesting to see if Pia can destroy Walijah (although she did draw against a 2176 rated player)
Pia Cramling (2425) vs Walijah Ahmed (1936)
Inna Agrest (2197) vs Alo Nusrat Jahan (2033)
Anna Cramling Bellon (2066) vs Ahmed Wadifa (1988)
Margarita Zaritovskaja (2009) vs Rani Hamid (1900)
I dont have any ideas how to checkmate with knight and bishop
I never learned how to checkmate with knight+bishop. I think the idea is to drive your opponent's king into the corner with the bishop's colour. But my knowledge ends there. Thankfully, I've never needed it.
No point learning it
Yes, you can only force checkmate when the lone king is in a corner that the bishop can control. So it usually heads for the other corner, so it needs to be forced across.
@@MrDanielfff777It IS worth knowing about the “W” manoeuvre to force the king from the wrong corner to the one where you can give checkmate. Once you know that trick, it’s easy to work out how to win the endgame. Plus you get to coordinate a knight and bishop, which should be useful for your general play!
Yeah the W manoeuvre was how I was taught, but since I’ve never needed to do it in an actual game I’ve pretty much forgotten what that entails 😅
Really anyone should only bother learning it if they have loads of free time on their hands or want to be good atar expert at chess!
@@bensandstrom239 Well, there’s not much to learn! I read about it about 35 years ago and it’s stuck with me ever since. That said, according to the board orientation, the W manoeuvre could end up rotated into an M, E or 3.
I did win this endgame once, but can’t take any credit for doing so as my opponent had about one second left when we reached K+B+N vs K and lost on time after a move or two (no increment).
girl ur so optimistic.ROLE MODEL!!!!!!
I'm 2300 Blitz and I do not know how to checkmate with Knight and Bishop. I've done it against engines but not against humans.
Luck! Based on every game you "gave away", I strongly suggest you set strict time limits on every move. When you are rushed you are outstanding. Over thinking leads you around in circles. Best wishes! BTW my mother's side was Swedish!
N,B,K. VS KING. KEY IS USING YOUR KING TO CORAL THE KING . IF YOU KNOW THE THEORY , IT'S AN EASY WIN.
I can with like 5+ minutes on the clock in classical with +30. I would need time to remember exactly and hope I don’t hit the 50 move rule
Knight & bishop is a draw for 99.9% of players
Good luck, Anna!
Cuando leí de hacer lo imposible, pensé que habías ganado con una hora en el reloj, jajaja.
I don't know knight + bishop out of hand. I might hope to figure it out but that probably doesn't work or else this wouldn't be a thing people learn.
Embarrassing defeat
A ray of sunshine in world of chess ❤
Succes vandaag Anna. Good luck Anna!
She played great! Win!
I feel bad for 2nd Anna , She lags behind 😂
I cannot checkmate with knight and bishop *lol* -- Something to work on when I stop blundering pieces.
I dont think I would be able to chckmate with knight and bishop in an important Tournament game, like with the nerves with everything
Move and get ready for tomorrow. Chess Princess
i have no idea the theory of knight-bishop checkmating. im assuming that its extremely challenging in a long endgame and low time. im curious if i could do it though!
So I have a little input from the military world - we have adaptive plans for when the enemy does something unexpected or a target of opportunity materializes, but we need a reason to change the plan. That way we don't have to say "I don't know why i decided to deviate." Always play the plan, or know why you didn't. Love you and your posts!
Im 1600 standard and ive never studied how to checkmate with knight and bishop, or any other ending 😅
idk how exactly you're supposed to checkmate with the knight and bishop but I would think you use your king as a wall and use your minor pieces to go for the kill.
I have learned how to checkmate with a knight and bishop, and then I never get to do it in a real game so I forget how and then a year or two later I relearn it and on and on it goes! So it depends on when it happens if I can do it or not😂
Just a few errors against the Paraguayan..but that’s all it takes!!
You don't normally have gifts for your opponents
I see some kind of rule here. You do a solid analysis of a plan and then you decide to deviate from it on a whim. Either because you think (without looking into the details) that it doesn't matter it because it of some kind of curiosity what might happen.
However, I like this. 😊
I don't think I could checkmate with a knight and bishop if someone paid me to haha.
Are the other Swedish players camera shy? If not, would love to hear a little bit from how they are experiencing the tournament so far, as part of the BTS. Otherwise great content! Love Hammer's commentary too.
This girl is so lovely and charming
Anna is still very young, but too old and experienced to be underestimating an opponent. Hopefully, this sticks with her.