Ten Ways to Chess Success
These pages go with
some
books written by
Tim Onions and
Dave Regis.
The books are for young chess players interested in improving their
game -- and for adults who know players like this!
If you haven't seen the books
there are sample pages on Tim's site:
Openings /
Middlegame
/
Endgame
/
Puzzles
1![[cool blue cat]](/x/cool_cat.gif) |
All our books have a large
clear layout illustrated with many diagrams to
make them easy to follow and cartoons to lighten
the mix. Our
rather cool blue cat is always on hand to give
you advice.
The books have had
consistently good reviews and are one of the best
sellers on book stalls for young players. |
|
Two things happen when we write books:
- We always have some things that we wanted to fit in but
didn't have room for, and
- If we recommend some other books, they go out of print
by
the time you are
reading our book.
So, we have listed our favourite
books on Tim's website, and given you the extra bits here! The
extra bits don't have the same sort of comments and layout that we put
into the books , but we hope you
will learn something from them.
You can see all the
examples and play them on your own computer using a chess programme,
then you can download: all the
Game(s) in PGN format.
![[P]](/x/wp.gif)
![[r]](/x/br.gif)
![[N]](/x/wn.gif)
![[b]](/x/bb.gif)
![[Q]](/x/wq.gif)
![[k]](/x/bk.gif)
![[B]](/x/wb.gif)
![[n]](/x/bn.gif)
![[R]](/x/wr.gif)
|
Ten
ways to succeed in the Opening: What got squeezed out
Example games to show:
All the basic ideas of how to play as White:
Taking over the centre:
Attack on the uncastled king:
Weakening the castled King:
Getting the Queen out too early:
Attacking too early:
Fischer fails against our Black opening!
The Ruy Lopez for Juniors:
|
|
Ten
ways to succeed in the Middlegame: What got squeezed out
Example games
showing typical tactics:
Fork:
Pin:
Skewer:
Net:
Discovery (jump):
Tie (undermining):
Tie (overloading):
Decoy:
Interference:
Clearance:
Intermezzo:
Mate:
Example games
showing typical strategies:
Tactics:
King safety:
Weaknesses:
Pieces good and bad:
Forcing moves (breakthroughs, initiative):
Lines (files, ranks, diagonals):
Centre and space:
|
|
Ten
ways to succeed in the Endgame: What got squeezed out
Triangulation:
How to win a Rook ending a pawn up (Lucena):
How to draw a Rook ending a pawn down (Philidor):
How to lose a Rook ending a pawn up! (Speelman):
Queen's-side majority:
|
|
Chess
Puzzles 1: What got squeezed out...
...mostly went into the second book!
But if you've come this far, here are a set of our
favourite combinations. They're much harder than anything you
find in the book, and are really to be enjoyed and not solved.
Alekhin-Feldt 1913:
Levitsky-Marshall, 1912:
Bernstein-Capablanca 1911:
Petrosian-Spassky, 1966:
Alekhin-Yates, 1922:
Torre-Lasker,1925:
Rotlevi – Rubinstein, Lodz, 1907:
|
|
Chess
Puzzles 2: What got squeezed out...
Some lessons about what sort of moves are especially
hard to spot:
Backward moves:
Long moves:
New moves:
In-between moves:
Stalemates:
Interferences:
Collinear moves:
Switchback moves:
Hesitation moves:
Some last encouragements to
keep looking:
Alapin:
Ahues:
Alekhin and the General:
Rinck:
|
Game(s) in PGN