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Tactics | Attack down the h-file ♟️ 50+2 Chess Quick Wins! Book

Tactics | Attack down the h-file ♟️ 50+2 Chess Quick Wins! Book

vitualis
| 3

#openingtactics #quickwins

50+2 Chess Quick Wins: Tactical ideas for exciting chess for beginner players. Buy on Amazon! US | CA | UK | DE | FR | IT | ES | NL | AU

My book, "50+2 Chess Quick Wins: Tactical ideas for exciting chess for beginner players" was published and released on Amazon in October 2023. This is the seventh video and article of a series that will cover the first section of the book, that explains tactical ideas and themes that underlie many quick win games!

The principal win state of chess is checkmate. In essence, where the opponent’s king is placed under attack and cannot escape from that attack. It stands to reason then that one of the simplest and most straightforward means to get to that win state is to attack the opponent’s king with pieces!

Although this might sound trivial, it is not necessarily an intuitive concept for many beginner and beginner-intermediate players as they enter the middlegame. If the strategy is to attack the opponent’s king where the opponent has castled short, then one of the overarching tactics is to move our pieces to the kingside. A specific tactic that is often worth thinking about categorically is to attack along the flank, the h-file. Why single out the h-file? Well, there is no i-file. The h-file is the board’s edge so no defensive resources can exist on the other side of the h-file. In essence, the h-file will often be less well defended than the f- and g-files, potentially making it a good target or line of entry.

Consider the following indicative pattern, where we only have the king's defensive pawns after the king has castled kingside. Notice that of the f-, g-, and h-files, the h6 square is specifically weaker than the others on the sixth rank as there is no i-pawn that also defends that square.

The following rook-queen attack along the h-file is a great demonstration.

This was a simple example of “attacking down the h-file”. There are more complicated h-file attacking ideas against the castled king, for instance, with the knight + queen, or the coordinated Greek Gift Sacrifice attack, which we will see in subsequent articles and videos in this series!

Hi!  I'm vitualis, the chess noob (aka chessnoob64), and I run the "Adventures of a Chess Noob" YouTube channel and blog.  I'm learning and having fun with chess! 

I restarted playing chess recently after my interest was rekindled by the release of "The Queen's Gambit" on Netflix.  I mostly play 1 or 2 games a day, and am trying to improve (slowly!).  I document some of my games and learning experiences on my blog and YouTube channel from the perspective of a beginner-intermediate player!


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