A comprehensive training manual for chess tactics , Ideal for all levels of player , All puzzles checked by computer engines
318 Seiten, kartoniert, Everyman, 1. Auflage 2007
Gewicht 635 g
Hersteller: Everyman
Breite 17 cm
Höhe 24,7 cm
Erscheinungsjahr 2007
Autor :Richard Palliser
Sprache: Englisch
Auflage: 1
ISBN-13 9781857445329
Seiten:318
Einband .kartoniert
All top chess players agree that to keep your tactical
muscles in shape it's imperative to continue training, and the easiest and most
fun way to do this is by performing tactical exercises. Even solving a few
puzzles for ten minutes each day can be of the utmost benefit for the aspiring
player. But where can one find the required number of suitable puzzles to
satisfy this demand?
Look no further than The Complete Chess Workout. In this
book, tactics expert Richard Palliser presents the reader with a massive 1200
puzzles, all checked for accuracy by the latest computer engines. There is
something for players of all levels here: a huge number of basic tactics -
forks, pins, skewers and checkmates - to appeal to beginners and improvers, and
several brain-teasers that will tax even the strongest of players. Palliser has
meticulously collected puzzles from practical play in recent years - a large
percentage of the exercises here will be completely new to most readers. All
the important tactical themes are covered, while there are special sections on
opening traps and endgames. Work your way through this book, and your opponents
will soon be on the receiving end of your increased tactical powers!
Introduction:
Spending as little as 10-15 minutes a day on one's tactical
ability really can reap dividends. I can certainly testify to that myself and
it's always very welcome to see a pupil regularly trying to solve a number of
tactical exercises: not only do they become more tactically alert,but they also
improve their clock handling and gain in confidence.
During the past decade some quite challenging puzzle books
have appeared, aimed chiefly at the level of the stronger club player and
above. These are a most welcome develbut are perhaps not the best tactical
training for less experienced players or even average club players. Some
attempted solving of very tough positions is a good thing, esif the solution is
then studied in some detail, but such works are unlikely to provide the budding
student with a grounding in the fundamentals of tactical and attacking play.
Wanting to produce a book that would improve the tactical
knowledge of the average player led me to drawing up categories of both the
more common attacking motifs (bishop sacrifices on h7 and knight sacrifices on
f7 being two main examples) and the less usual (such as a queen sacrifice on
h6). Thus there are a number of examples of each key theme in this work which
should, I hope, help to cement these important ideas into the reader's
subconscious, thereby improving both their attacking and defensive ability.
One cannot, of course, blindly attack in every game: the
right conditions to attack must be present, such as a chip in the opposition
king's pawn wall or the ability to quickly transmany of one's pieces to the
attacking zone. Many of the puzzles in this work deal with attacking scenarios
and should help the reader to further appreciate just when and why an attack is
likely to work.
What, though, of the many games in which we don't get to
attack? In these tactical play is no less likely to occur and it's important to
always be alert to tactical opportunities. One very handy way of not letting
these pass by is to keep in mind John Nunn's very useful mnemonic: LPDO ('loose
pieces drop off). Indeed, it's very noticeable just how many tacare to do with
a piece being undefended or poorly defended. The reader will become fully aware
of the concept of LPs while working through the large chapter on attacking
motifs, but so important is the topic that I've also included a later chapter
devoted to both it and the related theme of overloading a defensive piece.
To remind the reader that tactics are present throughout the
game, there are also chapdevoted to tactics in both the opening and the
endgame, while the fiendish puzzles of Chapter Six should challenge even the
very tactically able. I've also aimed to make things a little trickier
throughout for the reader by not following the common practice of sorting each
chapter by difficulty. Instead the order is much more like the tactical
opportunities that occur in our games, being random (sorting alphabetically by
tournament location is about as random as one can get!) and thereby simple
tactics follow quite challenging ones and vice versa. Do be aware too that by
no means every combination mates in style or wins heavy material; just as in
real life, many of the puzzles included here only lead to the win of a pawn,
while a few even see the side to move scrambling a draw through some tactical
device or other.
I couldn't resist including a few classic favourites among
the 1,200 puzzles, but even those with an excellent knowledge of the classics
should find the majority of the positions included new. No less than 585 of the
puzzles are from games played in 2007 and I've also drawn heavily on
unpublished games collections: chiefly my own I'm afraid, but I'm also very
grateful to a number of people who sent or supplied games: Chris Duggan, Scott
Fraser, Paul Hopwood, Neville Pearce, Kieran Smallbone, Norman Stephenson, Sean
Terry (editor of the excellent Oxford City CC magazine, Dislnformator), and Tim
Turner.
I hope that this work will improve the tactical eye of the
reader, while also reminding them of the many beautiful possibilities thrown up
by our favourite royal game.
Richard Palliser, York, September 2007
INHALT:
003 About the Author
007 Introduction
005 Introduction
007 1 Warming Up
024 2 Attack!
121 3 Opening Tricks and Traps
132 4 Skill in the Endgame
149 5 Loose Pieces and Overloading
181 6 Fiendish Calculation
190 7 Test Yourself
211 8 Solutions
Richard Palliser: THE COMPLETE CHESS WORKOUT
- Marke: Everyman Chess,London
- Artikelnr.: 5391
- Verfügbarkeit: Auf Lager
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20.00 CHF