1. I was told to play the game right through to the end in a few minutes time. Then whatever you didn't understand, see if you can figure it out through the annotations.
2. I was told to pick a name, or a personality that was interesting to me. I was given a brief adumbration of the chess player's personality.
3. Combinations and seizing open files.
4. The question is too complex for me. I can't teach chess.
5. Fischer.
6. Keep playing games against people your own rating or lower until you beat them comfortably.
Trysts' chess lesson of the day
I want to get the most "study" out of mastering grandmaster games so therefore my idea is to play through the game alone and annotate it with my own notes and then use an engine on it.
Questiosn
1: Around how long per game. Are we talking 10-15 minutes or 55 minutes- an hour per game if i want the most out of my study time. This is basicall asking quantity or quality. 10 games per hour with moderate annotations or 1 game per hour with in depth.
2. How do i pick which games? I obviously am going to do in order starting at Morphy and make my way to Steinitz, Lasker, and so on with a few picks of my own but how do i select which games from each master to play through. Should i only do famous games? Should i do 100 won games as white and 100 won games as black?
3. WHat should i be obeserving in the games heavily if im trying to get better?
4. Should i be focused on tactical shots mostly? Style like slow and positional or dynamic? Should i look at alternative moves that could have been made?
5. Any world champions who i should steer completely away from?
6. Any advise so i can really benefot from these games?