WHAT IS A GREAT CHESS PLAYER?.
Taken from the book: "TRAINING IN CHESS II", by Fide International Arbiters and National Master José Gauna

WHAT IS A GREAT CHESS PLAYER?.

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Through these psychosomatic requirements, the chess player will discover the shortest path to self-improvement and will be able to play a normalized game correlated with his technical and training situations.

WHAT IS A GREAT CHESS PLAYER?

A chess master is not made of laziness and monotony, but of perseverance, continuous work and above all the elaboration of a personal laboratory where the main alchemy is the criterion, concept and common sense.

It is known that Grandmasters spend a lot of time in their preparation and technical training, and that day to day is a total dedication to the exercise of calculation and the establishment of fundamental concepts and ideas about the various positions that are presented during the live game.

Without this criterion it would be almost impossible to assess the true talents of the men and women who devote themselves to the exhausting days of preparation and competition on a daily basis.

A great chess player must be a very punctual and recognizable program of events, namely:

· You must know perfectly the theoretical regularities and basic conceptual foundations of chess (Principles).
· Have a fine idea of ​​tactics as a hole-solving tool.
· Must have a broad imagination and creative ability.
· Recognize the concrete possibilities of a position, a problem or a group of problems.
· Know how to discern with the depth of analysis, but with the intuitive security of deduction.
· Properly assess the plays based on their correlation with the positions played.
· Possess a sharp intuition and capacity for abstraction.
· Have full control of concentration and attention, of their temperament and of their character.
· Know and master the details of their volitional strength.
· Know how to recognize defeat and triumphs in their proper proportion and know how to delimit the spaces and moments to move forward or backward.
· Be trained in creating your own style of play.
Through these psychosomatic requirements, the chess player will discover the shortest path to his improvement and will be able to play a normalized game correlated with his technical and training situations.

From the book: Training in Chess II.- Prof. José Gauna

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