The way I like to think about principles is "follow the principles unless you can explain why you don't"
@jorywoodis6 ай бұрын
Love it. Cool insight.
@ChessAcumen6 ай бұрын
Yeah.
@roblodocus25396 ай бұрын
The author made an interesting point as well when white plays 10.Bb3 saying that the defensive move 10.Be2, placing the bishop where he overlooks two diagonals, is preferable. It’s not something I used to consider a lot and would usually retreat my bishops to the edges of the board to stay on the long diagonals. And I’d do that without really considering/realising the central retreat as an option. And in this case white would’ve had more support on the kingside’s weak light squares.
@byronwatkins25656 ай бұрын
At 19:00, Qe6 still allows Qh3 next move. That was, in fact, my choice. Let him think I am defending the bishop; that might give me another move to attack his king.
@ryanbritt44596 ай бұрын
Same
@I3njamin6 ай бұрын
Hi Nelson, I have two ideas for videos that would be helpful for myself (1950) & hopefully many others: 1) How to flag well. The idea being avoid simplifications which help your opponent process faster & move quicker, instead looking for active moves which further complicate the position, even if they’re not the best moves. 2) When to play g5 in the Italian as black. I feel there’s little instructional middle game content for black in the Italian, so this could even be a series of plans black can go for depending on the specific setup white goes for in the quiet Italian positions. Thanks for the awesome instructional content & congrats on reaching 2300!
@siouxwarrior90355 ай бұрын
I had this book when I was in grade school (and still have my copy). It was the easiest chess book to read at the time (lot's of diagrams). I envy the current generation with access to videos that can quickly demonstrate the variations. This series is a pleasure - thanks for doing it!
@rickfakhre24005 ай бұрын
I am really enjoying this series. Thanks for making it. The only thing better would be another over the board tourney. Remember when you did one of those? Please do another one of those some day. I know it's a lot of work, but it was the best combo of entertaining and informative.
@morryDad6 ай бұрын
Took me years to realize that Ruy Lopez wasn’t actually called the Royal Opus
@christopherheckman79576 ай бұрын
There was a reporter who in the early 1970s called it "the royal opus." You can always blame him for your mistake.
@ChessVibesOfficial6 ай бұрын
😂
@kchinchilla17242 ай бұрын
😂😂😂that’s creative
@JoeSorrentino-hu7zh6 ай бұрын
Love it. Had the book sitting gathering dust for years. Nice to work along side you with this. Great stuff. Need more of these in the future.
@georgepurvis58742 ай бұрын
I love this series, and you are doing an excellent job! I know you mention the title of the book, "Logical Chess", but please don't forget to mention the author Irving Chernov. Thanks, George
@yanp90716 ай бұрын
Thanks for the great videos Nelson, I always thought your explanations are the clearest on chess youtube. 2 questions: 16:00 I and probably other lower players would be tempted to play Bh3 for the tempo on the rook. I guess it's bad because it doesn't lock the f pawn in place? 19:00 Doesn't Qe6 creates the same checkmate threat Qf5?
@trassage6 ай бұрын
I believe it does while also making the opponent think that you are defending the bishop.
@timm4396 ай бұрын
I had the exact same two questions! Bh3 also gains a tempo on the rook.
@petergeorgehill6 ай бұрын
0:37 Lmao he was about to say “too furious”
@McLKeith6 ай бұрын
This is an amazing lesson. Thanks for posting it.
@markosborn30796 ай бұрын
Great series, thank you!!
@jeremymaciejewski59335 ай бұрын
Black nf6 f4!. Looks awesome.
@adolfohuet39746 ай бұрын
I got the book some time ago but maybe I wasn’t ready for it. However, Nelson’s videos are perfect now, great series!
@derpymoose99486 ай бұрын
Good series. Thank you
@christopherheckman79576 ай бұрын
There are 33 games in the book, so it will probably continue for some time.
@박문주-u7s6 ай бұрын
Thank you. Always
@kirkmason70796 ай бұрын
Excellent Episodes I’m learning and understanding a lot more with your explanations. My question in game 6 is move 14 Qf5. Is move Qh5 equal? Is it to make opponent think you are attacking his bishop?
@mathewsamuel13866 ай бұрын
Awesome!
@hinyuchin47246 ай бұрын
17:55 I am only thinking of bringing the queen to h3 even if I have to sac a piece, so I am watching Qh5(oh I forgot that h-pawn can push forward and blocks the queen😅) and Qf5(Qe6 also works but it is not a bishop sacrifice) 20:23 not only the annoying pawn, that bishop on b5 is also pinning the d7 pawn so black can not develop their light square bishop
@randysmith85156 ай бұрын
Thank you for this series, Nelson!
@R.Akerman-oz1tf6 ай бұрын
Haven't heard the term "holes" in ages. So glad for Nels' refresher.
@cwp246 ай бұрын
17:48 here there’s no need to defend that bishop, there’s a checkmate threat here. Qe6, Qf5 and Qh5 all threaten checkmate. Although Qh5 can get blocked by h4 so don’t consider Qh5, do one of the other 2 moves. Forget about the dark square bishop, you’ve got something far tastier in the position.
@mariosnum1fan6 ай бұрын
You lose a tempo on h5 queen move tho.
@julian73066 ай бұрын
are you watching the video????
@truberthefighter92566 ай бұрын
11:25 I guess the problem with the e6 pawn is that if you take it with the queen, queens will be exchanged and then there's this really weak pawn on d4 without any compensating attack. If you take with bishop, your bishop's placed awkwardly.
@omarwjwiippa8726Ай бұрын
Blue 💙
@Five-Star-General6 ай бұрын
Thank you NM Nelson!
@mikemck47966 ай бұрын
My problem (in that sac the bishop for mate threat) is that there’s often 1 move I’m missing that saves the position for my opponent. Or at least that’s in my head, so I play it safe and protect the bishop. I think maybe I should start flipping the board and start playing those positions as my opponent.
@pearljam_16 ай бұрын
Or stop playing blitz…
@christopherheckman79576 ай бұрын
@@pearljam_1 I don't like playing games where you have less than 30 minutes for the whole game. Rapid (10 minutes) isn't so bad, but with longer time controls, I rarely (if ever) lose on time.
@mikemck47966 ай бұрын
@@pearljam_1 I don’t play blitz. 15/10
@ChessKing-ev8km2 ай бұрын
@@mikemck4796 Neither, learning to play is better with rapid 10. You get more time to correctly learn and strategize. While also having it be quick enough to not be mentally draining to train more.
@foolmenow006 ай бұрын
In game 5, after Qxg3 - takes pawn, you suggested Bf5 yet after Qh5 White has advantage as Black can't take knight which makes Black a piece down!
@arvinderkainth98356 ай бұрын
Challenge: Game against Martin but the c, d, e, and f pawns are all flank pawns (c + d pawns are on the a file and e + f pawns are on the h file)
@jeromesolinger56565 ай бұрын
Don’t know where else to ask. Is there a directory for Nelson’s presentations of Logical Chess?
@jasonmata19006 ай бұрын
at 14:10 would it not be better to play bishop to d6 creating an immediate checkmate threat and the only way black can defend is to move the pawns in front of the king?
@SparkSovereign6 ай бұрын
I had the same thought. I kinda like having the pawn chain established first, since you can do it with tempo, but then it's the obvious followup rather than the knight. The knight can still go next to start maneuvering onto the freshly weakened squares, but going with the bishop first basically develops another piece with tempo, which seems better at a glance.
@jaivanttitus6 ай бұрын
It blocks the d pawn, and you would end up wasting moves in the future to free it
@tomermahari88296 ай бұрын
Hi, good videos, my question is on the finishing moves why not play Qe6 instead of Qf5, it will look like you trying to save the bisof and you can finish the game in two moves
@KDRao-hz2nd5 ай бұрын
Sir, if we carried out an early castling by white to avoid check by bkack queen, how we could have preserved the e-pawn ? Sincerely regards !
@anirudhrocks51526 ай бұрын
At 19:01, isn't Qe6 also fine as it threatens Qh3 anyway?
@MrBabadis6 ай бұрын
Question: at 18:45 why queen f5 so much better than quuen e6? Defending the bishop and making that treath at the same time? I can’t find the difference
@lajos-berenyi6 ай бұрын
Maybe the difference is just psichological. You show to yourself and to the opponent your confidence in your calculation, that you are sure, that your attack will go through and you don’t have to defend the bishop.
@kimbarsegyan6 ай бұрын
"When you look at this position as a h*e, what is the most important thing in the position?" Nice quotes rught there.
@MBarque6 ай бұрын
After white Nxe5, would black's pawn to g6 stop the Queen attack? It changes the order of things since if e5xg6 then h7xg6 opens the h file for the rook. It looks like g6 blunts the whole attack.
@nhn056 ай бұрын
14:30, how would the game play out if the bishop retreat to e2 instead of b3? Would the checkmate still happen or would white has better chance of defending?
@brioma336 ай бұрын
Does a fianchettoed bishop still count as weakness for king side pawn formations?
@kirkmason70796 ай бұрын
I understand the reason he move his Qf5 and not Qh5. …h4 stops the Queen attack.
@watchmanknowledge43456 ай бұрын
19:00 Personally I would go Qe6 to make it look like I want to save the bishop. Is this inaccurate?
@sadmanshafin28936 ай бұрын
After Bg4 , what about f3. It saves whites game . I think.U can also sac the rook if things get out of hand.
@lethalty60556 ай бұрын
There are a couple of theories I want to talk about. 19:39 Bc5 attacks the knight, and white still can't save the game because black takes the knight with the bishop, and still gets checkmated, but I do see that the only way white could delay it is with a queen sack on Qd1. Would there be a tactic I'm missing from here on white? Also, for the queen moves just before (right after white plays Bf4), would Qe3 work the same since the queen is still on the same diagonal?
@Anonymousgorilla6076 ай бұрын
If you take the knight on e3 with the bishop white recaptures with the f pawn and the queen protects the checkmate squarw
@nakshsinghania93426 ай бұрын
On time no: 15:10 When g3 was played to stop 🛑 checkmate the weaknesses were created but if they play Re1 We play Q_h2+ they can play Kf1 and Qh1+ king goes Ke2 there’s no mate. But you told us g3 is the only way possible to stop checkmate but it is wrong is it true though Right???
@nakshsinghania93426 ай бұрын
Though they lose a pawn
@robo30076 ай бұрын
After white castled, why didn't black set up the bishop queen battery straight away?
@1captnimo6 ай бұрын
I've been using the Scandinavian vs e4 openings to change things up since I watched one of your videos on it, but it throws me when someone doesn't take the pawn and they just push to e5. Can you do a video on how to handle that please? Thanks!
@Rad-mm5cs6 ай бұрын
Hey Nelson, I have possible move for white after black plays Qxe5. It is a3. a3 stops castling and also prevents Bb4 from black. Does it work?
@ohadcohen59506 ай бұрын
17:11 Shouldn’t white play queen d4 trying to get a queen trade and after black plays queen h5 you can play h4. And black can’t take advantage of the pawn move?
@pickaxe42486 ай бұрын
4:28 Black playing d6 misses a chance to win the knight and instead lises their knight for a pawn move
@harrygross776 ай бұрын
Interesting series, but curious about Bobby Fisherman
@90sK1dFOr3v3r6 ай бұрын
Fischer the goat
@yonishachar18876 ай бұрын
Antisemitics are not GOATs.@@90sK1dFOr3v3r
@benoist136 ай бұрын
Well, as a Jaenisch devotee, my only concern about this game is : How to cope with the annoying white piece sacrifice after : 6 dxNe5 c6 7.Nc3! (instead of Bc4) and the game is getting messy, and very difficult from the black side !!
@assassinforce56376 ай бұрын
Great explanations, very clear. Also helps when you keep the title of the video simple, normally this helps to get more views!
@AR15rules6 ай бұрын
In 17:15, wouldn't Qh5 also work out for black? It also threatens to go to h3 and checkmate the king, and if h4 is played, wouldn't g5 open up the white king?
@paulbrennan41636 ай бұрын
White would just take the g5 pawn with the bishop on e3.
@Raul_Reborn_Arc6 ай бұрын
Ole ole ole, fil de mejik in de er, odading mang ole
@mariosnum1fan6 ай бұрын
15:11 instead of pawn move to g3 why not one to f4? Even if en passant by black happens, there is a rook fork on e8 after queen takes bishop e3
@mariosnum1fan6 ай бұрын
14:27 why couldn’t white take d5 pawn? Yeah you’d be down 3 points but it’s better than having to deal with the annoying pawn structure as you said.
@kimbarsegyan6 ай бұрын
"A h*e can be easily chased by a pawn."
@NJDJ19866 ай бұрын
@15:00 since the knight was gone, what about pawn f3 or f4 to stop queen checkmate!?
@santiagocingolani24556 ай бұрын
In both cases I think there are some tactics capturing the pawn (also en passent if f4) with your own pawn, then you have a pawn a bishop a queen and a knight targeting the white king...and he also lost the f pawn
@flotto70456 ай бұрын
Becausw taking the pawn re-threatens mate and black will also take the g pawn completely exposing whites king to the attack
@farouqbaiti43156 ай бұрын
18:05 Hey Nelson, I have a question for you. Is Qh5 has the same effectiveness as Qf5?
@lethalty60556 ай бұрын
Qh5 is not the same because of h4. And besides, the bishop is already blocked.
@Jaomet6 ай бұрын
@@lethalty6055 I thought the same but with Qe6 - has the same threat and defends the bishop...
@usharajesh19676 ай бұрын
14 : 15 can white play f4
@enderyu6 ай бұрын
14:15*
@Julnain6 ай бұрын
I'd say meh because it weakens the g1-a7 diagonal with the king on it, and black can play exf4 en-passant. I'm not sure of what comes next, there are many things going on : white can take f3 with the queen, but if they keep their queen on the a rank, they can pin the black queen with Re1. Hopefully Nelson will answer this next week, I'm too bad at calculating these things :D
@usharajesh19676 ай бұрын
@@Julnain Good
@joemucchiello45426 ай бұрын
At the point of Qf5, why isn't Qh5 better? Qh5 followed by Ng4 locks up the mate doesn't it?
@jaivanttitus6 ай бұрын
After qh5 white can probably play h4. It’s still completely winning of course, but not as straightforward
@donniedarko41646 ай бұрын
Nelson is my favorite chess player and coach of all time
@BhavyTatiya6 ай бұрын
if pawn en passant we can take back with queen and bishop
@vaibhavsachdev016 ай бұрын
Hi Nelson - I'm rated around 1500 and this series is very helpful to me. Question - at 14:33, on move 10 for black, would it be better to play Bd6 instead of Nf6? Bd6 has the benefit of coming along with a threat as well as tempo and can be easily followed by Nf6 on the next move. Nf6 is also a developing move, but doesn't seem to create an immediate threat.
@Kennythepudding6 ай бұрын
15:19 why do you play g3 and weaken the king. Isnt f4 better because the dark squared bishop cant quite het to the diagonal with the bishop in the way
@lajos-berenyi6 ай бұрын
Black can play gxf3 an passant.
@JustGreendude45-vu4hg6 ай бұрын
9:25 can’t white play Qh5+ after black takes the knight on e5? Then after black moves their knight Bc4.
@lajos-berenyi6 ай бұрын
Black can save the knight with Ng6 as well.
@orenwachstock6 ай бұрын
Why didn't wight play f5 to stop checkmate
@4tysm5 ай бұрын
05:15 why not rook h6? After bishop f5
@wailyanphyo-n4c6 ай бұрын
in 18:45, is Queen h5 a good move?
@julian73066 ай бұрын
white has h4
@julian73066 ай бұрын
so here is my question: isnt it better at 14:32 to first move the bishop on d6 before developping the knight, and than go on. because, if we play Knight f6 first he has time for g3 bishop f4 no?
@AmenallahHagui6 ай бұрын
It’s because it blocks the d file pawn so the great move e5 wouldn’t be possible
@JustGreendude45-vu4hg6 ай бұрын
19:00 is there a reason why Qh5 is bad? I feel like Qh5 and Qf5 accomplish the same thing
@flotto70456 ай бұрын
Because they can block your attack by pushing the h pawn... now where does your queen go now? F5 - where it could've been in the first place
@farouqbaiti43156 ай бұрын
Yo I had a similar question.
@kzkaa.6 ай бұрын
Qh5 allows for h4, which blocks the queen. Qf5 doesn't allow that, as the queen can simply slide in diagonally.
@farouqbaiti43156 ай бұрын
There was a chance you would be inspired by Nelson next Friday. (He might answered your question) Now he's not. Or is he?
@ChessShadow6 ай бұрын
In 15:08, why not f4
@jineylixon82976 ай бұрын
Black had created a hole on d6
@Methylimidazol6 ай бұрын
Instead of Qf5, could you also have played Qe6, keeping the option to retake the bishop in case something unexpected happens?
@lilyoung13776 ай бұрын
15:05 what if he play move like f4
@mikekramer82525 ай бұрын
Thanks. In further book series, please mention the game as well as the page number. Kindle readers don't have the page numbers.
@alimollahosseini78386 ай бұрын
What about Qh5 instead of Qf5
@andyplayz37456 ай бұрын
Each like on this comment with prevent somebody from creating a push-up per like comment