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Terrible game

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1d3_1-0

Opponent premoved and blundered a piece in the opening and from there , i played terrible , pulled an win in the end under time pressure ..... But still terrible game

Ransome01

13. a6 blocks your rook on a1. Instead, play axb6 to use the rook on that file. Your bishop sitting on e3 was controlling g1-a7 diagonal. It would've been a different game if you had played axb6. 

1d3_1-0
Ransome01 wrote:

13. a6 blocks your rook on a1. Instead, play axb6 to use the rook on that file. Your bishop sitting on e3 was controlling g1-a7 diagonal. It would've been a different game if you had played axb6. 

it was a blitz game so i didnt spend too much time on that move , i thought after axb6 , he would play Nxb6 and he could defend

Ransome01
1d3_1-0 wrote:
Ransome01 wrote:

13. a6 blocks your rook on a1. Instead, play axb6 to use the rook on that file. Your bishop sitting on e3 was controlling g1-a7 diagonal. It would've been a different game if you had played axb6. 

it was a blitz game so i didnt spend too much time on that move , i thought after axb6 , he would play Nxb6 and he could defend

Irrespective of bullet, blitz or standard time control, my suggestion would remain the same. The point is that you blocked your piece and the file by pushing the pawn forward. Try to keep the file open for your rook if you come across similar positions in the future and then see how it unfolds. My 2 cents. 

Ransome01
pfren wrote:

He, who analyses blitz, is...

 

Nah, I won't bother completing the Nezh aphorism.

I guess you're ignorant of the fact that hundreds of titled players play blitz games and win prizes more than $1,000 per week on this site. If you can't/don't, it doesn't mean others shouldn't.

1d3_1-0
Ransome01 wrote:
1d3_1-0 wrote:
Ransome01 wrote:

13. a6 blocks your rook on a1. Instead, play axb6 to use the rook on that file. Your bishop sitting on e3 was controlling g1-a7 diagonal. It would've been a different game if you had played axb6. 

it was a blitz game so i didnt spend too much time on that move , i thought after axb6 , he would play Nxb6 and he could defend

Irrespective of bullet, blitz or standard time control, my suggestion would remain the same. The point is that you blocked your piece and the file by pushing the pawn forward. Try to keep the file open for your rook if you come across similar positions in the future and then see how it unfolds. My 2 cents. 

K