When possible, I just sac a light square bishop with Bf7+, check with the pinned knight with Nb4+ after king takes, and pick up the bishop with the queen as long as I've already taken care of the knight on f6 that is usually defending the pinning bishop on b5. I loooove playing that way but I guess Magnus and Ding don't fall for that stuff.
That reminds me on many games like StarCraft or Heroes III of Might and Magic, you often need to sacrifice army or something to get progression, crystals, gold, map coverage or so. My mom like strategy games, and my father play chess "professionally". When ever I tell him to try once one of this games, he completely ignores me, like Carlson attack on the queen. But I noticed new generations play only games as CS GO, Fortnite and so, so I am happy that at least chess is still popular, or I would be really worried about next generations.
I wanna say that I appreciate how much effort you put in this video. I mean a database and having notes and all that? Sheesh man. That's dedication. Glad I subbed.
This analysis doesnβt make sense. You have varying different scenarios where he unpins his piece. For this to make sense you need to keep the setup constant and look how he got out of it. In other words you have two variables. In your first example moving the queen is the only viable option.
It is similiar to real life, when there is something pinning you down, the best thing to do is to ignore it and try to make your life better through the things you can control. Or at least, that is how Magnus's brain wokrs… I think
I feel like Magnus has been dropping the ball a bit. I mean, no offense to him, he's got the world title and all that, but let's be real – the man's getting on. Maybe he's misplacing his glasses more often or something, because it seems like he just keeps overlooking those pins.
In my book, there's a golden rule – never ignore a pin. When the opponent pins your knight, you turn the tables and pin BOTH of their knights. Then, march your pawns forward like they're going for the last piece of pizza. And boom! You capture their knight while they're still scratching their heads, wondering if they've accidentally walked into a game of checkers.
Sometimes i realize a pin too late, and in those situations just trade or attack on the other side of the board. Basically trying to make a mess with the board. It works out sometimes
That is a lot of work but the presentation is worth watching. Thank you.
You must have put in many hours in analyzing all those situations, thank you so much for yet another amazing video!
Grrreat information thank you!β€!β€!β€!
Nice to hide the labels of the pie graph to make us waste our time.
Youtube, dont recommend this channel to me.
Note the βignoreβ play happens in Q gambit w the pawn gone so no double pawn in recapture. Major factor.
Great research.
the goat
My God you are dedicated
thanks for putting in the work on this video. I used to always either immediately break the pin or threaten the bishop. Now I try other things first
You came here for 9:17 , thank me later
Great videoπ
What a great idea for a video. Thanks π
Magnus 55% times be like :Eat 5 star do nothingπππ
Ignored the pin and now I need some first aid
"More easily"…the comparative of easily is "more easily"
ππ pawn huntingπππππππππππππππππππππππ
I am fan of your efforts man
Thanksgiving for putting this beneficial analysis together
Great stuff!!!
When possible, I just sac a light square bishop with Bf7+, check with the pinned knight with Nb4+ after king takes, and pick up the bishop with the queen as long as I've already taken care of the knight on f6 that is usually defending the pinning bishop on b5. I loooove playing that way but I guess Magnus and Ding don't fall for that stuff.
That reminds me on many games like StarCraft or Heroes III of Might and Magic, you often need to sacrifice army or something to get progression, crystals, gold, map coverage or so. My mom like strategy games, and my father play chess "professionally". When ever I tell him to try once one of this games, he completely ignores me, like Carlson attack on the queen. But I noticed new generations play only games as CS GO, Fortnite and so, so I am happy that at least chess is still popular, or I would be really worried about next generations.
This is what I usually do.
Iβm in data analytics so I love this
Everytime i ignore it i endup losing that damn queen soonet or later
I have noticed you don't take requests, lol but all good man still dig your videos…
Thanks for another excellent video Nelson I have learnt alot from you!
TY for the video. Bobby fischer had the same mindset, that the best defense is a good offense.
Great video!!
I wanna say that I appreciate how much effort you put in this video. I mean a database and having notes and all that? Sheesh man. That's dedication. Glad I subbed.
So are we now Magnus lvl at defending pins?
Next: how magnus reacts to getting f**ked.
I meant 'forked'
Great content
Imagine being so good at something, that people extensively analyse the most minute details of your existence to hundreds of thousands of people.
This analysis doesnβt make sense. You have varying different scenarios where he unpins his piece. For this to make sense you need to keep the setup constant and look how he got out of it. In other words you have two variables. In your first example moving the queen is the only viable option.
Why does this feel like a boss tutorial
It is similiar to real life, when there is something pinning you down, the best thing to do is to ignore it and try to make your life better through the things you can control. Or at least, that is how Magnus's brain wokrs… I think
Does nobody notice that the position in the thumbnail is impossible
Dudes actually a watered down Dr Strange ππ
Yee
I feel like Magnus has been dropping the ball a bit. I mean, no offense to him, he's got the world title and all that, but let's be real – the man's getting on. Maybe he's misplacing his glasses more often or something, because it seems like he just keeps overlooking those pins.
In my book, there's a golden rule – never ignore a pin. When the opponent pins your knight, you turn the tables and pin BOTH of their knights. Then, march your pawns forward like they're going for the last piece of pizza. And boom! You capture their knight while they're still scratching their heads, wondering if they've accidentally walked into a game of checkers.
Bruh 7:29 magnus could give a check with bishop and could win a queen
can we just appreciate the fact that he had to find 100 games that Magnus was pinned βοΈ
DESTROYS
Awesome content, thank you!
Wow… you study too much manπ€―π€―
you have really put work in this video and its cool
Sometimes i realize a pin too late, and in those situations just trade or attack on the other side of the board. Basically trying to make a mess with the board. It works out sometimes
I will just say 2 words, danger levels
great video bro
dude, i want you to make a video on literally everything. I heart data