Thursday, July 10, 2008

Rook Endgames, Phase I

I just finished the first round of going through Karsten Müller's DVD 2 on rook endgames, and copying all of the starting positions into a database. That's about 70 positions in total, although some of them are more educational, in the sense that refuting the incorrect tries are much more important than the correct line. But quite a lot of them are also 'trainable' against Fritz as it is, meaning the meat of the positions lie in the correct mainline (along which engines probably step as sparring opponents). Which is exactly what I'm gonna do next.

So now I have all the positions in a chessbase database, even the 'untrainable' ones for completeness' sake. That way it's easy to load them up into Fritz (tools/options/training/endgame training), and use them instead of the pathetic default positions in the endgame training module.

On the first round I also went through the videos with some thought, and feel like I already gained a good familiarity with all the basic principles and techniques. Now the hard part begins, which is drilling the positions over and over, until the philidors, lucenas, vancuras, karstedts, saavedras etc. come as a second nature to me. I want to be able to blitz through all of it on autopilot if/when necessary, no matter how drunk or tired I might be. And at that point I'll attack the more discussional type of examples again, hopefully being able to spot the technical refutations and sidelines a mile away, as I should in a real game.

Quite a lot of the won lines end into a Q vs R endgame though, so maybe I should learn that first (it's on DVD 3, which I have but haven't gone through), in order to drill those positions until the bitter end? Sounds like a practical way to combine two drills, so maybe I'll just do that. it can't be that hard, can it? Although I did try it from the top of my head, and there's absolutely no way I could figure it out on my own. Seems more tricky than the KNB mate, which makes it pretty funny that most people probably resign rather than even think about trading the queen for a rook.

6 comments:

transformation said...

wonderful.

im sure you will continue your assured advance in chess training if not real meaningful accomplishment.

wormwood said...

I got a couple of won rook positions in blitz yesterday, but misplayed and lost them. I'm sure it'll take quite some time to integrate that new knowledge fully into my play, to see the right way to play those positions immediately. but at least I had some idea where I should be heading, even though I messed it up.

practice, practice, practice...

transformation said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
transformation said...

http://www.chessville.com/
UCO/TRNT/BirdsOpeningA03.htm

wormwood said...

hey, that's a great bird link dk, hadn't seen it before. thanks!

don't think anybody's ever played Nd7 against me in 2.Bg4, but I'm sure it'll happen sooner or later. mostly they play Nc6 and let me pin & double the pawns which will drop sooner or later. combined with Bb2 I usually get a nice game.

transformation said...

http://www.chessedelic.com/