Check out this #chess game: vine96 vs Dis1510 - https://chess.com/live/game/5512695289
Just don't get it... I'll check out analysis by my self but, if any suggestions please can give
Check out this #chess game: vine96 vs Dis1510 - https://chess.com/live/game/5512695289
Just don't get it... I'll check out analysis by my self but, if any suggestions please can give
well, i, believe i have blundered a lot in these games... preferably any suggestions? so i can improve???
An odd opening by both players but 4.Qh5+ would have given you a great position, if g6 then Qxe5+ winning pawn and the Rh8 so black would have to walk his king out instead. Stuff like this is always in the air if black plays e5 and f6. Later 16.Qh5 misplaced your queen, it looks aggressive but you don't have enough pieces supporting the queen to attack. Notice how it remained stuck over there and later trapped on h6. 18.b4 was a horrible move, it is extremely unwise to push pawns in front of your king like this unless you are generating immediate threats. Here you just expose your king to attack. Black can even just go Rxb4. In this game you made aggressive manoeuvers but it was not justified. Chess is a game of balance...you cannot just launch an attack because you want to, your pieces must be organised correctly and working together to make it work.
Interesting game. I don't like 5.Be6, if white goes 6.Bxe6 you must go fxe6 and the ugly doubled pawns on e7 and e6 are a long term weakness. Everything got swapped off for a rook endgame in which you were outplayed. Studying rook endgames is very important because they happen all the time. Here you should not have lost had you played correctly. 21.b5 is an incorrect plan IMO because you are playing on the side where white has 4 pawns vs 3 and also can reply cxb5 leaving your pawns doubled. Better to move pawns on the other side where it is 4 pawns vs 3 in your favour to try to make a passed pawn. Additionally your rook is cutting off the white king from that side of the board so white must spend time getting organised whilst you get on with things. Anyway, you won a pawn but then the major mistake was 26.Kb8 I think. Whites rook is excellent on a7 and it was essential to challenge it there eg. 26.Rd4 so after Rxf7 you can go Rd7, stopping white from simply eating all your pawns. In rook endgames the activity of the rook is all important. In this game you had the more active rook, but then allowed whites rook to escape from a1 and become the more active on a7. Then you failed to challenge it in time and it was too late.
ok...