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Artikelnummer
LLKOS4LCP

40 Lessons for the Club Player

216 Seiten, kartoniert, Batsford Chess, 3. Auflage 1999, Erstauflage 1986

18,80 €
Inkl. MwSt., zzgl. Versandkosten
Final vergriffen
Improve your chess with this superb teaching manual
In this follow-up to From Beginner to Expert in 40 Lessons, Aleksander Kostyev concentrates on the challenges of practical play. It is ideally suited for the club and tournament player who has reached a certain standard and wishes to improve his or her game. The material is equally suitable for the curriculum of a chess course run by a strong player or for self-instruction.
A number of complete games illustrate important opening and middlegame themes, while great attention is paid to the basic endgame positions that should be essential knowledge for anyone aspiring to "master class". The teaching methods encapsulated in this book were responsible for the enormous growth in Russian chess and for the string of top players who have dominated the world scene for many years.
This work is designed to be used by players with ratings between 140 and 180 (BCF) or 1700 - 2050 (USCF).
Aleksander Kostyev is an experienced Russian chess teacher, and was director of the Chess School of Pioneers in the former Soviet Union.
Weitere Informationen
EAN 0713452811
Gewicht 290 g
Hersteller Batsford Chess
Breite 13,8 cm
Höhe 21,6 cm
Medium Buch
Erscheinungsjahr 1999
Autor Alexander Kostjew
Sprache Englisch
Auflage 3
ISBN-10 0713452811
Jahr der Erstauflage 1986
Seiten 216
Einband kartoniert
Contents

001 Lesson 1
Chaturanga and shatranj
When the king has not castled
Can a schoolboy win against a grandmaster?

005 Lesson 2
An assertion by shatranj theorists
The 'double mujannah'
How to prepare an attack

009 Lesson 3
The confession of Caliph al-Ma'amun
The penetration of chess to Europe
The classic bishop sacifice at h7

014 Lesson 4
When the kings have castled on the short side

022 Lesson 5
The first chess treatises
Damiano's advice - is it obsolete?
When both players have castled long

027 Lesson 6
The books by Ruy Lopez and Giulio Polerio
Storming the king's fortress
Eight concluding blows

032 Lesson 7
Kings castled on opposite sides
Pioneers on the attack
Pawn storm or piece pressure

037 Lesson 8
The early Italian School
What is meant by chess romanticism?
Basic principles of pawn endings

044 Lesson 9
The deceptive simplicity of pawn endings

049 Lesson 10
A study by Philidor
How to mate with bishop and knight
Problems in chess education

054 Lesson 11
Critics of the new theory
General Deschapelles plays at odds
Bishop in combat with pawns

059 Lesson 12
Can a knight cope with connected pawns?

063 Lesson 13
The rivalry between France and England
The La Bourdonnais-McDonnell match
An extra pawn in a bishop ending

069 Lesson 14
Staunton's style and the Orthodox School
Outward features in the assessment of the position
An extra pawn in a knight ending

075 Lesson 15
Which is stronger in the endgame: bishop or knight?

081 Lesson 16
Rook against infantry
How to draw a pawn down in a rook ending

088 Lesson 17
Kempelen's invention
A plan and its realization
Grandmaster Kotow's formula

092 Lesson 18
The café de la Régence
Pardoning a convicted man
A strategic gem by Akiba Rubinstein

096 Lesson 19
A World Champion's advice
Pressurizing in chess

101 Lesson 20
La Palméde the first chess magazine
The seven evaluation principles

105 Lesson 21
The first evaluation principle: material balance
Max Euwe annotates

109 Lesson 22
From Bilguer's Handbuch to the Encyklopaedia
The Berlin Chess School
The second evaluation principle: "What is threatening me?"

113 Lesson 23
The first international Chess Tournament
The third evaluation principle: king safety

118 Lesson 24
Creator of combinations
The immortal game of Adolf Anderssen
Victories in chess tournaments

122 Lesson 25
The fourth evaluation principle: the centre
Grandmaster Razuvayev's thesis

127 Lesson 26
Paul Morphy - the uncrowned World Champion
The match with Anderssen
Morphy in the eyes of his successors

132 Lesson 27
Boris Spassky's way to the top
The fith evaluation principle: open lines

138 Lesson 28
The sixt evaluation principle: active pieces

143 Lesson 29
Anatoly Karpov's Stockholm triumph
The World Champion's progress chart
The seventh evaluation principle: pawn structure defects

151 Lesson 30
A competition on evaluations
Five minutes per position
Who can score 25 points?

156 Lesson 31
The Lvov School of grandmasters
Alexander Belyavsky defeats his rivals
The centre - the soul of opening

162 Lesson 32
Open and closed centres
Typical plans and games

167 Lesson 33
The uncompromising Valery Chekhov
Transformation of the centre
Nona Gaprindashvili

173 Lesson 34
Artur Yusupov becomes member of the USSR team
How to parry a flank attack
Innovations in an old variation

179 Lesson 35
The formation of outposts

185 Lesson 36
The persistence of Sergev Dolmatov
Heavy pieces on open files and ranks
Tactical defeat strategy

193 Lesson 37
The invasion of the 7th rank with a rook
Fine technique sees Portisch defeat Andersson
Smyslov and Belyavsky show their mettle

199 Lesson 38
An appeal against adjudication
Gary Kasparov's gold medals
A model commentary

206 Lesson 39
How to play the opening
Plans, the initiative, and pawn sacrifices in the opening
Games by young players

213 Lesson 40
A plan for improvement
Chess and life
A word of praise for the ancient game

215 Index of Complete Games

216 Index of Openings