What is you oppinion and experience in only rook-and-pawns-related endgames. Do they frustrate you or do you think it´s a good sport and educating?
If you're talking about endings with R and pawns on both sides, I think they account for 50% of all endings in OTB games, so they are quite important and studying them is a must in any chess player education.
When I started tournament chess, too many years ago, I typically loathed endings (unless I ahead by a ton of material.) As I progressed in chess strength (before I plateaued out ), I appreciated the necessity of endgame technique and experience, especially since such endings (rook & pawn) seemed to recur constantly.
At the start, studying endgames may seem dry, but the effort really paid off for me when I "stole" draws from lost positions and wins from drawn positions due to my relatively greater knowledge base than my opponents'.
I will make an unsolicited book suggestion for starting out rook endings:
Mednis' "Practical Rook Endings" (can be found at www.abe.com for $10-$15)
before graduating to
Emms' "The Survival Guide to Rook Endings."
nimzovich wrote: When I started tournament chess, too many years ago, I typically loathed endings (unless I ahead by a ton of material.) As I progressed in chess strength (before I plateaued out ), I appreciated the necessity of endgame technique and experience, especially since such endings (rook & pawn) seemed to recur constantly. At the start, studying endgames may seem dry, but the effort really paid off for me when I "stole" draws from lost positions and wins from drawn positions due to my relatively greater knowledge base than my opponents'. I will make an unsolicited book suggestion for starting out rook endings: Mednis' "Practical Rook Endings" (can be found at www.abe.com for $10-$15) before graduating to Emms' "The Survival Guide to Rook Endings."
Thank You for suggestions!
As opposed to just a few yers ago, I'm delighted to see them, as I'm comfortable in them and often win even when a pawn down. Confidence does a lot here. This holds well against players up to about 2100 (OTB rating). A particularly notable case is my old win again a player 787 points my superior, from a clearly inferior position.
I am terrible at these. They're probably the weakest part of my game. This may sound ridiculous but I often draw and sometimes even lose these endings when I'm up two or three pawns! They're much more complicated than at first glance.
Short of hijacking this thread, I posted a game a while back in which I lost a rook-pawn endgame. You might find the endgame and the analysis from others worthwhile. :)
http://www.chess.com/forum/view/endgames/help-please--rookpawns-endgame-train-wreck
Definitely important. In this game my friend was playing, the game was down to a rook and king v.s. king endgame. He didn't know how to checkmate with the combo (LOL). He was lucky though...(the adjudicator gave him a win).
Rook and pawn endgames considered to be the most dificult endings,but i love them.Keres has write a book about endings and of course the man who played flawless the rook & pawn endings (and generally all endgames) was Capablava.
If you are interested for some studies about endgames you can find some interesting games about Capablanca at his group here
I'd say both: they're frustating and good sport/educating.
Maybe (as aristeidis9 says) R + Ps are considered to be the toughest endings, but queen endings are always the ones that give me the biggest headache (all those checks!). That's when you wish you had Fritz built in to your brain.
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