On 17/06/12 04:44, raylopez99 wrote:
>> "Marginal" is your interpolation. Quite often, it becomes
>> obvious after a few moves that move A was better than move B, and
>> there is instructional value in knowing what it was in the original
>> position that Smyslov [eg] saw in order to understand that,
> Oh god. You are putting the cart before the horse. The reason GM
> Smyslov saw this several moves before you did is because, quite
> simply, he is a GM that can see further than you. There's no
> "mystery" to this--nothing in the initial position that will give you
> insight.
Not true, as Bronstein [Nimzovich, Euwe, ...] explains.
> It's simply the ability to mentally calculate further than
> the rest of us. You are reading tea leaves if you think otherwise.
It is certainly true that GMs see further into positions than
I do. But why? It's not as though there is no evidence on this --
there have been a number of studies. It isn't that GMs analyse
faster than other good players, but that they are much better at
"chunking" -- seeing patterns involving several pieces together, and
thereby being able to replace single tentative moves by a whole
series of connected moves. This is similar to the process by which
a beginner learns to recognise forks, or the power of doubled rooks
on the seventh, so that these no longer need detailed analysis.
>> Incidentally, one of the features of GM play is not that
>> they see "a plethora of plausible candidate moves" but that they
>> see very few -- which is why they can analyse more deeply than the
>> rest of us.
> No. This is Reti's lie about "I only see one move--the right move".
Nothing to do with Reti, but with the studies by de Groot
and others. I don't suppose you have ever analysed the position
after 1 e4 e5 2 Ba6??. You don't need to; you dismiss it straight
away because it obviously loses a piece -- a trivial chunk that even
a beginner knows. A GM typically dismisses for more moves than you
do, not because they obviously lose a piece but because they obviously
[to him] are not part of the chunks most relevant to the position.
> Simply not true. If you ever analyze with a master (and I do--as a
> high net worth individual I have a master on call to help me analyze)
> you will see they have a wider range of moves they consider for every
> candidate position--and they can analyze both deeper and faster than
> you and I.
There have been GMs, IMs and FMs in the local league, and I
have played and analysed with them and against them. They certainly
analyse more accurately than I do, which is why they are better than
I am. But if you propose a move and the master says "no, that's bad
because of ...", it doesn't follow that he saw your proposal as a
candidate move.
> [...] I am saying some moves at the 15
> centipawn advantage level are beyond the ken of understanding of mere
> amateurs like you and I--not that strategy is not important.
There *aren't* any moves at the 15 centipawn advantage level.
That is entirely an artifact of computer chess; it's just noise.
> Double
> rooks by all means, and try and use them to invade the seventh rank,
> and do put your Knight on the sixth rank, but Rad1 vs Rfd1 is beyond
> us (William Hyde notwithstanding)
I'm with William on this. Sometimes it simply doesn't matter
which rook you play to d1, sometimes there is a reason that I can
understand, and sometimes there is a reason that I don't understand
but Bronstein does and is able to explain [after which I do]. Once
we understand [more of] these reasons, our analysis goes faster, as
we don't even have to think about playing the "wrong" rook.
[...]
>>> but for the rest of us a good puzzle book is of
>>> more instructional value. And I suspect it's of more value for you
>>> too.
>> I have nothing against good puzzle books, but you suspect
>> incorrectly.
> Then you are foolish. I don't know or care what you are thinking, but
> for your own good I urge you to give up your silly fantasies about
> becoming a grandmaster,
I gave those up around 45 years ago, when I came to realise
that if I gave up my professional career and played chess full time,
I might just possibly progress from the UK top 100 or so to the UK
top 10 or so, and perhaps scrape a living and become a footnote in
chess history. It didn't seem a good idea.
> and simply pick up a good book and lern
> tactics.
My tactics are fine, thank you.
> It will serve you better in the long run than trying to
> figure out, W. Hyde like or Karpov like, which Q or K rook is better
> placed on the open file. That's a dangerous fantasy for a duffer like
> you (or me, or probably W. Hyde, notwithstanding his boasting).
The point is *not* trying to figure it out, but *knowing*
which is the right rook. As to whether players are "duffers" or
not, FIDE and national ratings are easily obtained online. I think
we can take it that Dr Hyde is good enough to have a reasonable
idea of which rook to move and where to, if not at the Bronstein
level of understanding.
--
Andy Walker,
Nottingham.