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Maxim Blokh Manual Of Chess

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  1. Maxim Blokh Manual Of Chess Free
  2. Maxim Blokh Manual Of Chess Club
  3. Maxim Blokh Manual Of Chess Player
  4. Maxim Blokh Manual Of Chess Set
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Title: Total Chess TrainingAuthor: ChessAssistant
Language: Published: 2000
Publisher: Convekta Ltd.Homepage: http://www.chessassistant.com
Price: $ 95
System requirements: Pentium 75 Mhz, 24 MB RAM, Windows 95/98/2000/NT
Reviewed by: Søren SøgaardDate: 7/10 2001

Total Chess Training

ChessAssistant has collected 5 of their training programs and published them under the name 'Total Chess Training'. All 5 programs can also be bought as an solitary program (prizes 26 - 29$), but here the publisher has chosen to cover all aspects in chess with the 5 programs. The CD covers Opening Blunders, Middlegame (and opening), Endgame, Tactics and Strategy - and this should be about all you have to know about chess! It should be noted that no additional software is needed to run the 5 programs. Before we take a closer look at how it works, let's see what it is all about:

  • CT-ART 3.0
    CT-ART teaches chess tactics and the studies includes positions from practical games, endgame studies as well as the training examples designed by GM ICCF Maxim Blokh. The exercises are arranged in three courses:
    1) Tactical methods (1217 main and more than 1000 supplementary examples)
    2) Combinational motifs (1209 and 1000)
    3) Grades by difficulty (1209 and 1000)
  • Studies 2.0
    Studies program is intended for chessplayers with ELO 1800-2600. Studies includes more than 100 best etudes of the most famous chess composers.
  • Encyclopedia of Middlegame
    'Encyclopedia of Middlegame' & 'Strategy 2.0' are prepared by two experienced Russian Players and coaches, IM A. Mitenkov and IM A. Kalinin. These two programs are for the intermediate and advanced chess players. The program contains 2.000 selected positions.
    1) Typical pawn structures
    2) Typical plans and methods in the most popular openings (Scotch, French,
    Caro-Kann, Sicilian, Dutch...)
  • Strategy 2.0
    Contains 1.800 selected position, including:
    1) 250 instructive examples
    2) 450 typical positions
    3) 1.100 exercises
  • Encyclopedia of Opening Blunders
    The Chess material for the 'Encyclopedia of Opening Blunders' was prepared by two experienced players and coaches IM Yaroslav Ulyko and IM Aleksey Mitenkov. 'Encyclopedia of opening Blunders' presents a table of contents on common openings and has over 1.200 openings of various difficulty from practical games.

What can you do with these programs?

Open Games and French Defence by Maxim Blokh and a great selection of related books, art and collectibles available now at AbeBooks.com. Adobe dreamweaver cc for mac torrent. Maxim Blokh, Combination Art (Blokh, Moscow 1993) One of the most experienced chess trainers of the Soviet Union provides execellent traing material.! BRIEF ANNOTATION The collection of the chess problems compiled by the experienced tutor and chess-player M. Blokh (2610 ICCF rating) contains over 1400 combinations from played games.

As an example of what it is all about, I want to take a closer look at the program 'Encyclopedia of Middlegame'. You can see a screenshot of this program beneath.

There is several things you can do with this program, which main purpose is to train the student in handling 'typical pawn structures' and 'openings and middlegame'. First of all you start to create yourself as a new user, and after this the program remembers which exercises etc. you went through so far. This is a good feature both for the student and the coach who can watch how his students are doing in the different openings. After creating a new user you start studying an opening as you can see from the screenshot above. Here I have chosen to learn more about 'Catalan Opening' and I start with the category 'The Plan of c7-c6' in which there is 6 annotated games. I have chosen to look at the first game between Psakhis and Miladinovic, Moscow (Russia 1994). Other games are examined more in depth, but this one suited my purpose to show what it is all about (= a good screenshot).

Maxim Blokh has worked as a chess coach in Moscow for the past 20 years. The grandmaster-to-be Alexander Grishchuk was his pupil from ages 6-11. Maxim Blokh has collaborated with Convekta, Ltd. In creating chess software since 1992. Bibliography: '1200 combinations', Moscow 1992 'The art of Combination', Seattle 1994.

After some studying (it take some time if you are serious!) of both this and the other category in this opening 'Black captures d5xc4' I'm ready to test my knowledge. I choose to 'Practice' and go on with 45 games where you have to find the right move for both black and white. All the time you can switch to see the statistics and how your ELO is doing! I tried it out in the French Defence to see how it works, and it worked well(!) .. I started with ELO 2100 and finally I got out with an ELO of 2200, so I think I'm a star in this opening ;-) I have to add that sometimes I didn't have a clue of what to play, and still I managed to raise my ELO(!) This was mainly because I all the time got help after making 'a bad move', and this should be disabled if you are trying to do some serious training (Options + Prompts after errors). A useful option is that you all the time can play against Crafty or just use the engine to analyze a position.

Final remarks

I've got the paper book, but working through it is so much harder on paper. Looking up the answers is a pain. I'd like to see the book in Chessable. Product Description This book of chess exercises has been written by experienced coach, Maxim Blokh, an International Correspondence Grandmaster. It contains more than 600 exercises, classified by combinative motifs. This carefully planned approach aids the development of combinative vision and enables the book to be used as a chess manual.

I must admit that I had a great time going through this product, and I think that it is a great supplement to the usual sort of training. To get full effect I think it is necessary to have a coach to guide you so you know when and how to study. It is also possible to study by yourself, but it easy to become 'lazy' and just guessing the moves. But... it is possible ;-) Training with programs is still not fully developed, but Chess Assistant has done a great job with this one. I look forward to the next generation, both from ChessAssistant and other publishers like 'New In Chess' and 'ChessBase'.

Conclusion:
Total Chess Training is 5 programs from which you can learn a lot if you are a serious student with an ELO from 1800 and up to 2300. It is a perfect tool to supplement your usual way of training, and it is also worth using for coaches and chess-teachers. Recommended.
A couple of months ago, I asked an IM for advice. What should I do to get 2200? He answered ' 2200 that is easy'. 'You just train on tactics and you will achieve it.'
As most of my games are decided by tactics, I thought this could be a useful advice. So I started each day to exercise 1 hour tactics. There are many good books and online tactic servers available. You just need to make a choice what you like the most. The only thing important is to stick to 1 method. It really motivates to see how you progress x-number of tactics/ pages each day.
The IM advised 'Combinative Motifs' of Maxim Blokh so I used that book. The book consists of an introduction, index of the themes, 1206 diagrams (6 each page) and the solutions. Blokh doesn't use words but shows except the answers also why other variations don't work. The diagrams are sufficiently big to work without a board. Personally I use a timer and limit the time at 55 minutes. This allows me to solve 3-4 pages with an average success-rate of 80%. A nice bonus is that many diagrams must be solved with black as with white (often asymmetric solutions). This forces you to think a bit deeper why something works with one colour and not when the other colour is having the first move.

This training improved my game as I finally played a good tournament. TPR 1900+, 2 victories against 2000+ spelers and I was able to have a good fight against an IM, FM and WFM.
I didn't hesitate long to participate in 'Karpos Open'. It fitted my agenda, wasn't expensive, there were many strong players (some well-knowns) and good weather. [Karpos is a borough of Skopje, the capital of Macedonie]. And with the actual questions we have of our society, it definitely looked interesting to see East-Europe. It is surely no paradise but people seem often to be more happy. I think it is linked to a more simple way of life. Something which let me reflect about some things:)

I'll try by showing a few fragments of my games played in 'Karpos Open' how often we enter the world of tactics. Even if you see in advance some tactical themes, there are still some typical mistakes which I make. I don't have it about missing some patterns but more about the broader and sportive aspects in chess.

1) 'Being too focused' is a problem which I encountered in rounds 2 and 3. I mean you look at one problem on the board and forget to look at the rest. In round 2 I got excited after a discovered combination but instead of a victory against an IM, I was mated.
[Event 'Karpos Open '] [Site '?'] [Date '2016.04.02'] [Round '3'] [White 'Gottfried, Jonathan'] [Black 'IM Grigoriadis, Alexandros'] [Result '0-1'] [WhiteElo '1737'] [BlackElo '2171'] [SetUp '1'] [FEN 'r1bq1rn1/ppn3bk/3p2pp/1NpP4/4P3/3BBP2/PP1Q2P1/2R1K1NR w K - 0 17'] [PlyCount '48'] {Here I realized that I had to do something before my opponent gets active.} 17. Nxd6 Qxd6 18. Bxc5 Qg3 19. Kd1 Re8 20. Be3 {To avoid my queen getting stuck, I exchange 2 pieces for rook and 2 pawns. With 2 connected and passed pawns my plan is simple} Qd6 21. Bf4 Re5 22. Ne2 Na6 23. Bxa6 Qxa6 24. Bxe5 Bxe5 25. f4 { This improves the strength of the other bishop but my pawns must advance.} Bg7 26. Rc7 Bg4 27. e5 h5 28. b3 Nh6 29. Re1 {My rook is not useful anymore on the h-file. Better is to support the pawn and to activate my knight.} Nf5 30. Kc1 Qb6 31. Qc3 Qf2 32. Qd2 Qb6 33. d6 Rd8 34. Nc3 Nxd6 {This was a shock. We both have not much time left. I was so focused on everything around d6 that I forgot about the rest.} 35. Nd5 Qa6 36. Nf6 Kh8 {With barely 2 minutes on the clock remaining, it is not easy to change plans and see the best options.} 37. exd6 ( 37. Nxg4 $3 {If I had looked to the other side of the board then I would surely not miss this move. Even after the game my opponent was still not recovered :)} Nf7 (37.. hxg4 38. exd6 Qa3 39. Kb1) 38. Qc2 hxg4 39. Rxf7) 37.. Bxf6 38. d7 {I miss everything and only see my pawns.} Qa3 39. Kb1 Bf5 40. Rc2 Qb2# {a beautiful mate, pity of my mistakes as I missed the chance to beat an IM} 0-1

2) A similar thing can be found in the next fragment where I lost track of the function of my pieces. And that while the winning combination was several moves on the board. Fortunately I was still able to win the game nicely.
Maxim Blokh Manual Of Chess
[Event 'Karpos Open'] [Site '?'] [Date '2016.04.04'] [Round '6'] [White 'Gottfried, Jonathan'] [Black 'Unal Gural, Ahmet'] [Result '1-0'] [WhiteElo '1737'] [BlackElo '2025'] [SetUp '1'] [FEN '2r3k1/4pp2/pq2b2p/1p2P1p1/2n5/2P1P1B1/P2rQPPP/1BR1R1K1 w - - 0 25'] [PlyCount '43'] {After winning a pawn and neutralizing the compensation of the opponent it was time to think.} 25. Qh5 Kg7 26. h4 g4 27. Bf4 Rh8 {and here the simple combination, which I had seen but forgot my bishop covering h7} 28. Rcd1 (28. Bxh6 Rxh6 29. Qg5) 28.. Qd8 29. Rc1 {I still miss Bc2} Qb6 30. Rf1 Qc6 31. Rcd1 Qd7 32. Bc2 Na3 33. Rxd2 Qxd2 34. Bf5 Qd7 35. Qxg4 Kf8 36. Bxe6 Qxe6 37. Qxe6 fxe6 38. Rd1 Kf7 39. Rd7 Nc4 40. Ra7 a5 41. Rb7 Na3 42. Rd7 Rc8 43. Bxh6 Rxc3 44. Bg5 Rc2 45. Rxe7 Kg6 46. g4 {My opponent resigned, mate is unavoidable.} 1-0
Losing track of a part of the board or the pieces, is normal. Detecting the problem and identifying it, will be the first step to find a cure :)
The most shocking in this tournament happened when the queen of my opponent was cornered:
White has just played Nf4. How can black profit?
My young opponent just played Nf4, I accepted the gift happily :) Do you also see it?
Finally I also want to show a tactical trap from the last round.
[Event '?'] [Site '?'] [Date '2016.04.07'] [Round '9'] [White 'Cakonchev, Hvistijan'] [Black 'Gottfried, Jonathan'] [Result '0-1'] [BlackElo '1737'] [SetUp '1'] [FEN 'r1bqr1k1/1p1nbppp/p7/3pB3/Q4P2/NPPP4/4B1PP/R4RK1 b - - 0 15'] [PlyCount '7'] {my last game against an unrated player - in this position I could win a piece but when I discovered a trap to corner the queen of the my opponent, I could not hold myself anymore} 15.. Nxe5 (15.. Bxa3 16. Qxa3 f6) 16. fxe5 Bc5 17. d4 Bd7 18. Nb5 Bf8 0-1
It was a fun tournament and if possible I would like once to come back.
Some strong qualities of the tournament:

Maxim Blokh Manual Of Chess Free


  • A spacious, comfortable and well lightened playing-room (the tournament was in the best hotel of Skopje)
  • A nice and friendly organization (for each round there was transport from the hotels which you could book via the tournament, everybody got each round a bottle of water,..
  • Many strong players: except the 18x 2500 players, the middle-field was very competitive. A mix of veterans and young wolves created a lot of competition (of 200 players more than 120 had +2000 rating)
  • Cheap:
    • plane 180€ (Adria Airways)
    • subscription fee 40€
    • hotel 120€ à 280 €

The only negative point I could find was the lack of a proper room to analyze the games afterwards.

Maxim Blokh Manual Of Chess Club

Pawnmayhem

Maxim Blokh Manual Of Chess Player


Maxim Blokh Manual Of Chess Set

Solution of the tactical question:
Black plays Nxe4 and Bf6 follows.



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