Download Build Up Your Chess With Artur Yusupov, Volume 2: Beyond the by Artur Yusupov PDF

By Artur Yusupov

This booklet is for chess gamers who are looking to construct their abilities on strong foundations. Yusupov courses the reader in the direction of a better point of chess knowing utilizing rigorously chosen positions and suggestion. This new figuring out is then verified through a sequence of puzzles.

Show description

Read Online or Download Build Up Your Chess With Artur Yusupov, Volume 2: Beyond the Basics PDF

Similar chess books

How to Solve Chess Problems

Fifty eight two-move difficulties, forty six three-movers, and 8 four-movers composed over the past 30 years and illustrative of the simplest paintings of 27 extraordinary American challenge composers. the writer has incorporated useful feedback for fixing every one challenge, an evidence of universal phrases and an exhaustive index.

Easy Guide to the Nge2 King's Indian

The King's Indian turns out to provide White with a vintage ''man or mouse'' selection - take Black on in a single of the severe major strains, or avert the problem with an harmless sideline. while you are uninterested in maintaining thus far with speedily altering main-line idea, yet don't need to squeak your means in the course of the establishing, the Hungarian assault bargains a truly welcome ''third way''.

Survival Guide for Chess Parents (Everyman Chess)

In Survival consultant for Chess mom and dad, Tanya Jones concentrates at the a variety of features of being a "chess mother or father" and solutions the various questions dealing with people with chess-playing young ones. there is definitely extra to this than meets the attention. difficulties are as various as 'How am i able to assist in the very early phases?

Additional resources for Build Up Your Chess With Artur Yusupov, Volume 2: Beyond the Basics

Example text

31 ƒxc6 †xc6 32 Èxd4 …xd4! 33 …xd4 ƒc8 34 …e1 ƒb7 (threatens mate on h1) 35 ‡f1 ƒc5 36 ƒe3 ƒxd4 37 ƒxd4 …d8 and wins (38 ƒe3 †h1+ 39 ‡g1 ƒa6+ or 39 ‡e2 ƒf3+), or if 36 e6+ ‡g6 37 ƒe3 …e8. d4! EK: “This well-timed advance of the d-pawn gives Black a winning position... The move opens the diagonal for the black † and queen’s ƒ. ƒc5. ” 30 ƒxc6 EK did not analyse 30 cxd4 in any detail but his view that Black wins is correct. cxd4! when: a) 31 Èxd4? g. 33 …xd4 ƒc5 34 …fd1 …d8 35 ƒf1 …xd4 36 …xd4 ƒb3 when White has absolutely no moves (37 †e3?

A6 line being played before that was understood. Instead 9 Èh4 ƒc2 10 †d2 Èe4 was better for Black in the stem game Morrison-Geo. Marechal, Toronto 1924. 9 †e2 was also seen in various games in the 1930s. ƒd6 10 †e2 Èbd5 11 f3! †c7 12 e4 Èxc3 13 bxc3 ƒg6 14 ƒa3 ƒxa3 15 …xa3 0–0 16 Èd3! had favoured White in BogoljubowPirc, Bled 1931. 10 †e2 0–0 11 e4 ƒg6 12 …d1 †a5 13 ƒg5! This is sharper than 13 ƒb3 as Bogoljubow had recommended. Èfd5 16 ƒxe7 …xe7 17 Èe4 Èb6 18 ƒb3 …d8 19 †g4‹ Flohr-Chodera, Prague 1931) 16 Èe4!

Xe5 19 †d8+ ‡f7 20 ‡e2. Èe7 16 †d2 c4 47 17 ƒc2 dxe4 18 Èg5 Èc5 19 †d4 b6 20 …xf8+ †xf8 21 ƒxe4 …b8 and now instead of 22 …f1, more useful is 22 ƒc2!? ƒa6. exd5? 19 †xd5+ Èf7 20 ƒc4. 17 …xf8+ ‡xf8 18 ƒxe5 This is good enough but not best. After 18 exd5 exd5 19 ƒb5! e. d4) 20 †e2. ‡g8 20 …f1 †g7 21 exd5 ƒd7 22 ƒc4ˆ. †xd5 is no better, there could follow 21 ƒe4 †d7 22 …f1. 21 †f2! White has threats of …e1, †xc5+ and †h4+. Black finds a move to stave these off for the moment, but the white initiative has grown too strong.

Download PDF sample

Rated 4.87 of 5 – based on 43 votes