This first-round tournament game was a useful experience with the reverse London System formation, which my opponent plays into as Black. As White, I could have played a little more aggressively with 4. Qb3!? but had a normal and very equal position heading into the middlegame. My opponent does a very good job with the transitions from middlegame to multiple endgame phases, seizing the opportunity to punish poor endgame decisions on piece placement. That said, the rook endgame *should* have been drawn...
Path to Chess Mastery
An examination of training and practical concepts for the improving chessplayer
23 February 2026
Annotated Game #335: All rook endgames *should* be drawn
19 February 2026
Training quote of the day #59: Alysa Liu
...I wouldn't necessarily say I'm nervous, because one thing about me is I really don't have any anxiety. I have none in my normal life, on ice, nothing. I just don't have it. In order for me to be anxious about something like that, it would have to mean I'm really counting on it or depending on it. I'm not really depending on skating. Of course there's meaning, but I find the meaning in the art, and there's no way to go wrong with that. Even mistakes in art can still be beautiful.
| 2026 Olympic Gold medalist Alysa Liu |
12 February 2026
Annotated Game #334: Misery loves company
This final-round tournament game was rather miserable, contributing to a rather miserable outing overall; at least I didn't lose all of the games, which was some consolation. Again I achieve an advantage out of the opening - here, as early as move 3 - but poor thinking and evaluation of my opponent's potential threats mean I am on the ropes before the middlegame even properly starts. My opponent misses several critical continuations, but in the end is able to very effectively dominate with his pieces, while mine are ineffective. Props to him for not collapsing to the early pressure and fighting back effectively.
07 February 2026
Annotated Game #333: When to trust an attack
This third-round tournament game highlights the attacking potential of the Colle / Stonewall Attack setup, with some spectacular tactics lurking if Black does not defend properly. Unfortunately I miss seizing my chances, first with a knight sacrifice on f7, then afterwards with a rook sac on the same square - which is in fact played, but one move too late to be decisive. My calculation and visualization challenges continue, leading to an eventual loss after sacrificing too much material, although I could have had a saving perpetual on Black's king.
Part of the problem was not trusting the initial attack enough to play into it. Even in a situation where you cannot calculate everything - which inevitably occurs at all levels - one can (and should) still evaluate the likely prospects for the attack. I am still relatively new to attacking play and therefore learning my way in such situations, which in this case called for more boldness. That said, I will also draw attention to the analysis, where after the sacrifices certain more patient prepatory moves would be necessary to seize the advantage. After not seeing immediate forcing sequences, however, I discarded the original attacking ideas. Patience in the attack is also something a lot of club players need to learn.
02 February 2026
Annotated Game #332: If it's not in the repertoire, it must be bad (?)
This second-round game taught me another opening repertoire lesson, this time in the Advance Caro-Kann. I had never seen White's move 7 before and thought it must be bad, or at least would provide me with an edge. The most direct response, 7...a5, would indeed have been excellent if it weren't for White's 8. Bb5! with an annoying pin. This is how learning and repertoire-building take place most effectively, however: by filling in repertoire holes whenever they are discovered, and taking the time in home analysis to understand the relevant ideas and comparison positions.
In the late middlegame I finally play actively enough to put my opponent under pressure, but then did not spot variations on a winning endgame idea, which involved sacrificing a pawn to get my knight into the action decisively. An interesting game, in any case, where my opponent gets props for spotting how to take advantage of some incorrect ideas and passive moves - although he then over-pressed with moves like 19. f4, giving me the better chances in the end. This is a common theme seen by Caro-Kann players, and one reason I remain very satisfied with the opening as Black.