I've bought two courses of yours today: the chess crime and the calculation skills. I am looking forward to having fun with it. Nd7 attack the rook and the rook has to go Rc6 to keep the bishop protected. Then Nb8 will fork the pieces, and the bishop will be two times attacked so it can't be guarded any more.
What happens, when an excellent course is made even better? A new degree of comparison is needed. This course was great even as it was before, but the new video instructions make it undeniably awesome! We get to have first-rate guidance to themes that are vitally important to fully understand, if we are to improve as chess players. For those of us who do have that goal in mind, Dr. Can presents a reliable method, 3-ply calculation, with which many obstacles in our path can be tackled. Now we only have to put our thinking caps on and give this marvellous course and its creator a chance to make us better players!
Thanks for making the new positions available to existing owners of your excellent course. I have really put some effort into the course as the positions are so instructive. Homework. The white rook is a bit hemmed in. 1...Nd7 White rook must protect the bishop so 2 Rc6...Nb8 forking rook and bishop so we win material.
I might be a great player in Dr. Kabadayi's book, but last Saturday I lost to a 1700+ player from a very sharp (but winning according to computer) middlegame position, with many people watching. Some calculation training certainly wouldn't hurt. P.S. In the final position I would play ...Nd7! It not just attacks the rook, but also shields the king from a potential Rb7+, which would force a rook trade. Then if White wants to keep defending the bishop, he can try Rc6, but ...Nb8! blows that away.
Great news. I already liked your course without the video, but I‘m sure that the video will further accelerate the learning effect. I significantly improved with accurate 3ply calculation! I wonder if you also plan a video upgrade for your Opponent‘s Last Move course.
@@Dr.CansClinicThank you for updating this already great course with video across the main chapters. I will be purchasing the upgrade later today bc your courses have helped my chess understanding and performance improve. Thank you.
Your channel is an absolute godsend. My tactical awareness has gotten much better and though my positional play is still suspect you're the first to make me understand WHY certain moves are good or bad in the middle game. The first course I buy will probably be one of yours.
Fantastic video as always-clear, focused, and incredibly effective! For the homework, I believe the solution is Nd7, forcing the rook to c6, followed by Nb8 to fork and capture the bishop. However, I’ve been having a general issue. I’ve reviewed many of your videos and learned a lot of tactics and strategies, but during actual games, it feels like I forget everything I've learned! Even though I can solve most of the examples in your videos correctly, it just doesn’t translate to my games. Any advice on what might be happening and how I can improve? Thanks so much!
Thank you so much. Excellent answer to the hw. Your question is a complex one, and probably we need a coaching session to figure out the reasons. But generally, how often do you play high stakes otb games? What is the time format for your games? You are learning new concepts, and it is normal to initially see a drop in performance (J-shaped curve is the norm). Perhaps you should trust the process and look at the larger picture. Perhaps you need to play slower games to implement these new concepts, e.g. basic thought process checklists, etc. Are you using spaced repetition of the crucial patterns and chunks? That may also help internalize these lessons. Are you analysing your games to spot what sorts of mistakes are recurring and whether there are some basic things you keep missing?
Thanks for the lesson Home work If we look at the position we have a loose piece that is bishop which is defended by the rook also attacked by rook And we can see that rook has q square to protect his loose piece if we attack the roook that js nd5 which attack the rook Rook moves to c6 then we put more pressure on the rook by playing nxb4 In this process we win a piece But white has a resource here that is to trade the rooks after nd5 rb7 rxb7 bxb7 nxb4 and we win a pawn
@@Dr.CansClinic Wow I didn't even see that I look at the forward moves backward moves are hard to nd7 rc6 nb8 and we win the bishop ok backward moves are hard to see I will keep this in mind thank you for pointing out Thanks 😊
Yes, thank you. Homework: The solution seems to easy to me, but it works. The knight goes to d5, and threatens the rook, which is overloaded in defending both the pawn on b4 and the bishop. The rook can go to c6 in order to still defend the bishop, but after hitting the pawn, the knight will fork both pieces. Better for the rook is to check on b7, so the rooks will be exchanged and white will have to continue with a pawn less.
Nice mini lesson, your three ply calculation technique has helped me know end in my games and the pawn breakthrough pattern is one I've not seen before, thank you for sharing 👍
Dr. Can, if you would have added “Evaluating Positions” to your course or please make a course dealing with evaluating positions at the end of calculating them would be helpful. Thanks🙂
Hello! It is difficult to measure evaluation in MoveTrainer. But I created one course that comes very close to testing it: "The Value of Pawns: Evaluating Material, Quality and Time".
@ I know. I haven’t purchased it yet because it seems to be more about pawns. Thanks for your time and thanks for all the helpful chess improvement information!🙂
Dear Sir...gr8 instructional video...for that matter, all your videos r very instructive....gives lot of values...more so as we are able to iron out our fundamental flaws...wch is very important as at higher level w/o strong fundamental foundation, we will not be able progress ...thanks again for such wonderful work....no doubt reflects ur passion for chess & teaching at the same time👍
First thoughts on the homework: Difficult to hold, two connected passers, pawn down. Need some trick somewhere to hold. Any forcing moves? No checks, taking the B looks really bad, Nd5 is an active move attacking the Rook. If Rc6 we happy, if Rb7+ Rxb7 Bxb7 Nxb4 and we have N vs B and outside passer with B on the right color. Looks almost as bad with the reduced tricking chances and that Knight is completely dominated. Never mind, that's even worse than the original position. Can I do this another way? Nd7, and I don't see any defense for White. Piece up against double protected passers, but no real need to evaluate much deeper, it's definitely not worse than the current position as with other moves after b5 by White all tactics are out of the position and we are much worse.
hi, thank u for lesson, homework- 1...Nd7. 2. Rc6 Nb8 3.... Na6 and i have big material advantage; does not work 1... Nd5 because of Rb7 check! and rook exchange and i am pawn down and loosing :)
I have some catching up to do on your videos. Excellent one, Can. Until I started watching your videos, I didn't realize the importance of positional play. Also, I used to think that positional play is for tournament players who do serious reading all the time. You proved that mortals like 1500s can also think positionally. Your passion is impressive. Thank you. On homework, 1....Nd7 2. Rc6 Nb8 wins the bishop?
Thank you! Please let me know how woodpecker works! One student recently had great success with woodpecking tactical and positional puzzles in combination.
I've bought two courses of yours today: the chess crime and the calculation skills.
I am looking forward to having fun with it.
Nd7 attack the rook and the rook has to go Rc6 to keep the bishop protected.
Then Nb8 will fork the pieces, and the bishop will be two times attacked so it can't be guarded any more.
Amazing, thank you so much for studying those courses! Excellent answer to the hw!
Dr. Kabadyi, your subscribers are soon to come, just keep creating excellent content like you are!
So nice of you! So motivating! Will keep the grind.
Perfect 👍.
Yes this channel deserves much more subscribers and views.
@@VihaGowda-z3m ❤
I bought the course a month or so ago and was already loving it, so this is a fantastic update. Thank you, Sir!
That is amazing to hear, thank you!
What happens, when an excellent course is made even better? A new degree of comparison is needed. This course was great even as it was before, but the new video instructions make it undeniably awesome! We get to have first-rate guidance to themes that are vitally important to fully understand, if we are to improve as chess players. For those of us who do have that goal in mind, Dr. Can presents a reliable method, 3-ply calculation, with which many obstacles in our path can be tackled. Now we only have to put our thinking caps on and give this marvellous course and its creator a chance to make us better players!
I am so humbled by your motivating words ❤️ Wishing you all the best. Hope the video will help!
Thanks for making the new positions available to existing owners of your excellent course. I have really put some effort into the course as the positions are so instructive.
Homework. The white rook is a bit hemmed in.
1...Nd7 White rook must protect the bishop so
2 Rc6...Nb8 forking rook and bishop so we win material.
Thank you so much for your kind feedback! Excellent answer!
I might be a great player in Dr. Kabadayi's book, but last Saturday I lost to a 1700+ player from a very sharp (but winning according to computer) middlegame position, with many people watching. Some calculation training certainly wouldn't hurt.
P.S. In the final position I would play ...Nd7! It not just attacks the rook, but also shields the king from a potential Rb7+, which would force a rook trade. Then if White wants to keep defending the bishop, he can try Rc6, but ...Nb8! blows that away.
Excellent answer! Two knight retreats in a row is not so easy to spot! You are a great player. Keep on grinding, studying and playing.
Loving this news! What a fantastic addition to an already brilliant course! Thank you, Can 🙂
Loving this feedback, hope you will benefit greatly from it!
Fantastic as usual! Thanks!
So humbled to see your generous support! Thank you so much! ❤️
Great news. I already liked your course without the video, but I‘m sure that the video will further accelerate the learning effect. I significantly improved with accurate 3ply calculation! I wonder if you also plan a video upgrade for your Opponent‘s Last Move course.
Thank you so much! If there is demand, I may also video upgrade that course. It should be good as it also contains positional + tactical puzzles.
@@Dr.CansClinicThank you for updating this already great course with video across the main chapters. I will be purchasing the upgrade later today bc your courses have helped my chess understanding and performance improve. Thank you.
@@courageousknight So nice to hear that! Thanks. Please ask me anything while you study the course.
@@Dr.CansClinic yes please!!!!
I doubt if you’ll regret adding video to that course. You can bank on it being a success, Coach. Let’s go.🙂
@@battlescard213 Motivating words! Will really think about it.
Your channel is an absolute godsend. My tactical awareness has gotten much better and though my positional play is still suspect you're the first to make me understand WHY certain moves are good or bad in the middle game. The first course I buy will probably be one of yours.
That is such amazing feedback to me. Thank you so very much ❤️
Fantastic video as always-clear, focused, and incredibly effective! For the homework, I believe the solution is Nd7, forcing the rook to c6, followed by Nb8 to fork and capture the bishop. However, I’ve been having a general issue. I’ve reviewed many of your videos and learned a lot of tactics and strategies, but during actual games, it feels like I forget everything I've learned! Even though I can solve most of the examples in your videos correctly, it just doesn’t translate to my games. Any advice on what might be happening and how I can improve? Thanks so much!
Thank you so much. Excellent answer to the hw.
Your question is a complex one, and probably we need a coaching session to figure out the reasons. But generally, how often do you play high stakes otb games? What is the time format for your games? You are learning new concepts, and it is normal to initially see a drop in performance (J-shaped curve is the norm). Perhaps you should trust the process and look at the larger picture. Perhaps you need to play slower games to implement these new concepts, e.g. basic thought process checklists, etc. Are you using spaced repetition of the crucial patterns and chunks? That may also help internalize these lessons. Are you analysing your games to spot what sorts of mistakes are recurring and whether there are some basic things you keep missing?
Thanks for the lesson
Home work
If we look at the position we have a loose piece that is bishop which is defended by the rook also attacked by rook
And we can see that rook has q square to protect his loose piece if we attack the roook that js nd5 which attack the rook
Rook moves to c6 then we put more pressure on the rook by playing nxb4
In this process we win a piece
But white has a resource here that is to trade the rooks after nd5 rb7 rxb7 bxb7 nxb4 and we win a pawn
Thank you! Winning a pawn is good, but what if there is a better option? On the very first move, have you looked at ...Nd7?
@@Dr.CansClinic
Wow I didn't even see that I look at the forward moves backward moves are hard to nd7 rc6 nb8 and we win the bishop ok backward moves are hard to see I will keep this in mind thank you for pointing out
Thanks 😊
Yes, thank you.
Homework:
The solution seems to easy to me, but it works. The knight goes to d5, and threatens the rook, which is overloaded in defending both the pawn on b4 and the bishop. The rook can go to c6 in order to still defend the bishop, but after hitting the pawn, the knight will fork both pieces. Better for the rook is to check on b7, so the rooks will be exchanged and white will have to continue with a pawn less.
Thank you. If you see a good move, look for a better one :) 1. Nd7! is the best move, but can you see the followup?
Nice mini lesson, your three ply calculation technique has helped me know end in my games and the pawn breakthrough pattern is one I've not seen before, thank you for sharing 👍
Glad it helped! Thank you for your continuous support, Gary!
Dr. Can, if you would have added “Evaluating Positions” to your course or please make a course dealing with evaluating positions at the end of calculating them would be helpful.
Thanks🙂
Hello! It is difficult to measure evaluation in MoveTrainer. But I created one course that comes very close to testing it: "The Value of Pawns: Evaluating Material, Quality and Time".
@ I know. I haven’t purchased it yet because it seems to be more about pawns. Thanks for your time and thanks for all the helpful chess improvement information!🙂
brilliant, as usual , many thanks.
Thank you too!
Dear Sir...gr8 instructional video...for that matter, all your videos r very instructive....gives lot of values...more so as we are able to iron out our fundamental flaws...wch is very important as at higher level w/o strong fundamental foundation, we will not be able progress ...thanks again for such wonderful work....no doubt reflects ur passion for chess & teaching at the same time👍
So nice of you!
Nice video sir, keep growing💙
So nice of you, thanks!
First thoughts on the homework: Difficult to hold, two connected passers, pawn down. Need some trick somewhere to hold. Any forcing moves? No checks, taking the B looks really bad, Nd5 is an active move attacking the Rook. If Rc6 we happy, if Rb7+ Rxb7 Bxb7 Nxb4 and we have N vs B and outside passer with B on the right color. Looks almost as bad with the reduced tricking chances and that Knight is completely dominated. Never mind, that's even worse than the original position. Can I do this another way? Nd7, and I don't see any defense for White. Piece up against double protected passers, but no real need to evaluate much deeper, it's definitely not worse than the current position as with other moves after b5 by White all tactics are out of the position and we are much worse.
Thank you! ...Nd7! is a great start, but we have to go 2-plies deeper: Rc6 and now what to do?
Thanks Sir very very much
So nice of you, thanks!
1...Nd7 2. Rc6 Nb8 3.Rb6 Nxa6
Thank you!
hi, thank u for lesson, homework- 1...Nd7. 2. Rc6 Nb8 3.... Na6 and i have big material advantage; does not work 1... Nd5 because of Rb7 check! and rook exchange and i am pawn down and loosing :)
Excellent, thanks!
I have some catching up to do on your videos. Excellent one, Can. Until I started watching your videos, I didn't realize the importance of positional play. Also, I used to think that positional play is for tournament players who do serious reading all the time. You proved that mortals like 1500s can also think positionally. Your passion is impressive. Thank you. On homework, 1....Nd7 2. Rc6 Nb8 wins the bishop?
Great to hear back from you Satya, I hope you are in good health. Thank you for your kind words. Excellent answer to the homework!
Homework should be Nd7 avoiding the rook trade, Rc6 and then Nb8, winning the bishop:)
Perfect!
Teşekkürler.
Cok tesekkur ederim guzel desteginiz icin ❤️
With you, Dr Can, we don't need to read Nimzowitsch's My System. You break it down for us in video form 🎉
Haha, Nimzowitsch Decoded!
Please create a playlist will help us to find related topic to view!
There are already plenty of playlists on my channel, including one on calculation!
Nd7, Rc6
Nb8, Rb6
Nxa6, and black wins material
Is that correct 🤔
Excellent!
Nd7, attacking the rook, Rc6 and then Nb8 forking rook and bishop and finally win the bishop
Excellent!
i will say it : Dr. Can is better than Dr. Dre !
😅 Yo!
Ne4?
What is the point behind that move?
Took the course...
It was good...
Will delete my data and repeat the course aka woodpecker method style...
Thank you! Please let me know how woodpecker works! One student recently had great success with woodpecking tactical and positional puzzles in combination.
kd5, it seems that whatever white does, black wins a piece?
...Nd5 will be answered by Rb7+ and White saves the piece.
Mr Anderson,welcome back...i see you have updated a few things,it was inevitable.
I did it Mr. Anderson. I will be taking you to that rabbit hole.
@@Dr.CansClinic And i clicked on that buy button instantly without thinking.Thank you so much sir.
@@AgentSmith-w8s Matrix did the thinking for you, sir!
@@Dr.CansClinic lol :)