10/21/2011 – "Maurice Ashley scores again as favorite teacher with this DVD," writes Steven Dowd. "Ashley teaches with a entertainingly fast pace, is quick to crack a good joke, and simply relates well to the audience. If there really were a ChessBase University, Ashley would be a candidate for teacher of the year, and would be my hands-down choice to win." Review in Chess Cafe.
Winning starts with what you know
The new version 18 offers completely new possibilities for chess training and analysis: playing style analysis, search for strategic themes, access to 6 billion Lichess games, player preparation by matching Lichess games, download Chess.com games with built-in API, built-in cloud engine and much more.
Winning starts with what you know The new version 18 offers completely new possibilities for chess training and analysis: playing style analysis, search for strategic themes, access to 6 billion Lichess games, player preparation by matching Lichess games, download Chess.com games with built-in API, built-in cloud engine and much more.
Doesn’t every chess game get decided by mistakes? Absolutely. But most players never truly comprehend that they are making the same kind of mistakes over and over again.
€36.90
Maurice
Ashley: What Grandmasters Don't See, Vol 3
Review by Steven B. Dowd
This month I review two products that provide the opportunity for you to test
yourself on the knowledge gained. Thus, they train and test, which is an excellent
way to learn for any skill with a performance component, such as chess. Too
often, one may learn something of value but not have the opportunity to use
that knowledge right away. In such cases the knowledge fades quickly into the
recesses of our brains. With these two products, you can not only learn something
about the royal game, but also how reinforce how to use it in a game. Let's
go!
What Grandmasters Don't See, Vol 3 (DVD) by Maurice Ashley, ChessBase.
Playing Time: 3 hrs 45 min. $34.95 (Chesscafe Price: $28.95)
Maurice Ashley scores again as favorite teacher with this DVD. I reviewed the
first volume of this series in one of my first
columns, and I am not embarrassed to say that Steve Goldberg did an even
better review of the second volume in ChessCafe.com's weekly
review column. We certainly agree, though: Ashley teaches with a entertainingly
fast pace, is quick to crack a good joke, and simply relates well to the audience.
If there really were a ChessBase University, Ashley would be a candidate for
teacher of the year, and would be my hands-down choice to win.
This DVD does exactly what it sets out to do: it summarizes the content in
previous DVDs, including pawn protected squares, discoveries involving what
he calls higher-level tactics (involving multiple pieces), and his mantra, "What
you don't see can hurt you." Of course, GM Ashley especially
exploits our wonder at the things grandmasters – some of them even super-grandmasters
– miss in games. The combinations and continuations are not that
hard to find. Yet in the heat of battle, even those hundreds of rating points
above us do, at least on occasion. There's an opportunity to learn something
even a GM doesn't see? Sign me up!
Let's look first at what he covers in the summary. The introduction does a
great job of summarizing the first two DVDs, and explains that this one will
go into trickier tactics than we normally focus on, as well as looking at piece
protected squares and pawn protected squares. There are eighteen grandmaster
level games or game fragments. Again, as in previous volumes, Ashley shows some
of his own discoveries, and on occasion, when he was, as Steve Goldberg put
it, the "discoveree" rather than the discoverer. Readers of this column
will know I respect a presenter or author who can show his losses as well as
his wins. You know you aren't getting just the fluff games.
My favorite game from this section was one against Sofia Polgar early in his
career, a match he managed to draw and almost won. This game shows discovery
nicely, as well as the idea of protected squares. What interested me even more
was that Ashley noted he was unaware of these ideas he has now coined, of pawn
and piece protected squares, and that it was in his pursuit of the GM title
that he became aware of these concepts. It wasn't memorization or special preparation
that brought him the title, but instead a focus on chess ideas. This little
bit of wisdom, that thinking about chess is more important than memorizing in
achieving higher levels, is something all of us can afford to chew on for awhile.
Polgar, Sofia (2445)-Ashley,Maurice (2370)
Match New York 1992
Here Polgar plays it safe with 20.Bd2, so as not to allow
20...Nxc3. Ashley notes Black already has a good active game here, with the
e-pawn being in question: is it weak or is it strong? Well, the discovery move
20...e4! shows that it is strong. The idea of course is to
exploit the long diagonal since, as the grandmaster notes, every move has a
weakness. Here that weakness is that the b2-pawn is weakened. With four pieces
in the way, he must open things up. The fact that e4 is "overprotected"
does not mean anything.
Now Polgar saw that 21.Nxe4 Nxe4 22.Qxe4 Rxf3 23.Qxf3 Qxf3 24.gxf3 Bxb2 25.Ra2
Bc3 leaves White's pawns scattered. Since that was not a good option, she chose
something else, something that also looks solid, holding the queen on e2, 21.Rf2.
But what follows? Yes, of course!
Another push! White has made a connection between the Rf2 and Bd2, and one
could argue that the two solid moves in a row were actually poor moves. After
21...e3! (yes that square is doubly piece protected!), if 22.Bxe3
Nxe3 23.Qxe3 Ng4! and the game is practically over, so Polgar chose instead
22.Qxh5 gxh5 23.Rxf6 Bxf6 24.Nxd5 exd2 25.Nxf6 Rxf6 26.Nd2,
but after 26...Rf2 there were simply too many open lines –
the exchange for a pawn just isn't going to be enough.
So a player of Polgar's caliber, seeing one potentially bad endgame, is tricked
into another by missing discovery on squares that are well-protected by pieces.
The test section contains fourteen games, fragments, and a puzzle. Spoiler alert!
This is my favorite section of the product from the test section, no players
given, simply entitled "Lifesaver." I might like this one the best
because the answer jumped out at me (well, after a minute, anyway) and Ashley
says that no one has ever found the answer to this one.
Lifesaver
At first glance, it looks pretty hopeless for Black. He can't sacrifice the
bishop for the pawn with 1...Bxe7? because he gets mated on g7. So 1...Bc8+
is obvious, as is White's reply of 2.Kh4. Now Ashley says people look at Qd4+,
many look at a possible draw with 2...Qg5+ (this appears to fail and at best
puts Black in a pretty rotten position) and everything but the winning move
2...Qxe7!! He can't take the queen, and now Black wins by force, a piece up,
and White's position in ruins.
A preview of Maurice Ashley - What Grandmasters Don't See Vol. 3
No
matter what your level, this is a fun product where you will also learn something.
And since these really are things grandmasters don't see, even higher-level
players will benefit from the information as well as the excellent lecturing
style of the presenter. If I could ever afford lessons from a grandmaster, I
would pick GM Ashley, no question. Luckily, I can have him as a teacher for
about thirty bucks with this DVD; let's hope he makes more.
My assessment of this DVD: Great (five out of six stars)
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