Increasing ELO & Chess Beginner Resources!

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Castroman3
Hello!

I wanted to see if anyone wouldn’t mind giving some good tips on ways that you have used to really improve your ELO rating.

Also, any good (free) downloadable books or resources anyone recommends for a beginner? I am currently receiving coaching weekly, but in between I really want to fine tune my skills and dive a little deeper into things.

Any advice would be greatly appreciated!
ChessMasteryOfficial

Learn exactly how to think in the opening, middlegame and endgame — this is what I teach.
Always blunder-check your moves.
Solve tactics in the right way.
Analyze your games.
Study games of strong players.
Learn how to be more psychologically resilient.
Work on your time management skills.
Get a coach if you can.

Castroman3
Currently, I have a coach and I heavily analyze my games afterwards. I appreciate the feedback here! Thank you!
ProbablyRaging
The absolute fastest way to increase ELO is to master the end game. Once you get down to little material, Chess is literally solved. Master the end game, then take trades whenever you can as long as they aren’t downright dubious. Bring your opponent into deep waters and watch them drown.
Castroman3
I think that’s my weak point at times is my end game. Especially when it comes to securing a checkmate. That’s my biggest hurdle right now! Any advice you could give on improving that?
ProbablyRaging

Same thing I just said, learn the basic end games as best as possible. Pawn and king, rook and king, queen and king. If you go into an end game up a pawn and you know the basic end games, you will promote to a queen, then you can do the king and queen checkmate.

Castroman3
ProbablyRaging wrote:

Same thing I just said, learn the basic end games as best as possible. Pawn and king, rook and king, queen and king. If you go into an end game up a pawn and you know the basic end games, you will promote to a queen, then you can do the king and queen checkmate.

Thanks! I appreciate it!

RussBell

Improving Your Chess - Resources for Beginners and Beyond…

https://www.chess.com/blog/RussBell/improving-your-chess-resources-for-beginners-and-beyond

Good Chess Books for Beginners and Beyond…

https://www.chess.com/blog/RussBell/good-chess-books-for-beginners-and-beyond

Scribd and PDFdrive For Online Chess Book Reading, Downloading…

https://www.chess.com/blog/RussBell/scribd-com-for-online-chess-book-reading

Castroman3
Thanks! I really appreciate it!
Petrosian94
Castroman3 wrote:
Hello!
I wanted to see if anyone wouldn’t mind giving some good tips on ways that you have used to really improve your ELO rating.
Also, any good (free) downloadable books or resources anyone recommends for a beginner? I am currently receiving coaching weekly, but in between I really want to fine tune my skills and dive a little deeper into things.
Any advice would be greatly appreciated!

If your coach is not suggesting or telling you what to work on between the lessons, then you should ask yourself the question, if he is interested in your development as a player.

CoachFMbgabor
Castroman3 wrote:
Hello!
I wanted to see if anyone wouldn’t mind giving some good tips on ways that you have used to really improve your ELO rating.
Also, any good (free) downloadable books or resources anyone recommends for a beginner? I am currently receiving coaching weekly, but in between I really want to fine tune my skills and dive a little deeper into things.
Any advice would be greatly appreciated!

Dear Castroman3,

My name is Gabor Balazs. I’m a Hungarian FIDE Master and a certified, full-time chess coach, so I hope I can help you. Everybody is different, so that's why there isn't only one given way to learn and improve.

First of all, you have to discover your biggest weaknesses in the game and start working on them. The most effective way for that is analyzing your own games. There is a built-in engine on chess.com which can show you if a move is good or bad but the only problem is that it can't explain to you the plans, ideas behind the moves, so you won't know why it is so good or bad.

In my opinion, chess has 4 main areas (openings, strategies, tactics/combinations and endgames) and if you want to improve efficiently, you should improve all of these skills almost at the same time. That's what my training program is based on. My students enjoy the lessons because they cover multiple aspects of chess in an engaging and dynamic way, keeping the learning process both stimulating and efficient. Of course, there are always ups and downs but this is completely normal in everyone's career.

If you would like to learn more about chess, you can take private lessons from me (you find the details on my profile) or you can visit my Patreon channel (www.patreon.com/Bgabor91), where you can learn about every kind of topics (openings, strategies, tactics, endgames, game analysis). There are around 39 hours of educational videos uploaded already (some of them are available with a FREE subscription) and I'm planning to upload at least 4 new videos per week, so you can get 4-6 hours of educational contents every month. I also upload daily puzzles in 4 levels every day which are available with a FREE subscription.

I hope this is helpful for you. Good luck with your games!

Magic_of_youth

I used to analyse my games and I heard that losing in chess is not failure it's a free lesson you will learn by analysing the game

Castroman3
I like that!