How to Play the End Game in Chess [Leonard Barden]. Enter your mobile number or email address below and we'll send you a link to download the free Kindle App. Author: Karsten Muller Title: Chess Endgames for Kids Released: 2015 Format: pdf/djvu Quality: good Size: 17 Mb Download book.
The best way to learn endgames By Sagar Shah It was a lazy Sunday afternoon, the worst time in a day and a week to practise chess. I sat in my room with a laptop and chess board determined to beat the post-lunch drowsiness. I was well aware that anything heavy and tedious, like opening preparation, would immediately put me to sleep. I needed something that was interesting and would force my brain to calculate. And, of course, solving compositions/study was the best solution. I browsed through the collection of my chess books related to endgame studies.
I found one by Dvoretsky and Pervakov, there was also the book of Domination in 2545 positions by Ghenrikh Kasparyan. But my attention was drawn towards a book written by one of my favourite chess authors: GM John Nunn. 250 Brilliant and Instructive Chess Endgame Studies written by John Nunn was the perfect way to beat the Sunday afternoon sleep! The book is available from and on, where you can browse through a fair chunk of it. It is also available as a Kindle Edition ($11. Pci Ven 8086 Dev 0f18 Subsys 390517aa. 17 – the paperback version costs $20 to $25). I randomly opened a page in Endgame Challenge and the following study stared at me: G.
Kasparian, Shakmaty v SSSR, 1946 White to play and win Think over the position for few minutes and after you have a good idea about the difficulties that White faces in order to win this position, have look at the answer below. This is how John Nunn explains the answer of the study: This type of position has occurred many times in over-the-board play, and has usually been mishandled by one side or the other. Kasparian uncovered the secrets of such positions in the 1940s, and this brilliant endgame is so striking that once having seen it, I cannot imagine anyone forgetting the key principle that lies behind White's winning plan. Normally, the ending of rook and two connected passed pawns vs rook is an easy win, but what makes this position difficult is the passive position of White's rook. If White could transfer it to, say, b5, then the win would involve little more than playing the king over to support the pawns. Therefore Black has to play so as to tie White's rook down on h7.
Foreword Solve your endgame problems with Endgame Play! Every chess player faces the problem of how to study the endgame. Lennar Digital Sylenth1 Mac. Three possible approaches. Gentoo Linux Iso Torrent there. Download Ebook: how to play chess endgames in PDF Format. Also available for mobile reader.