News
About Natalia
Games
Our Team
Articles
Gallery
Chess Links
Play Chess
Pogonina's Chess Shop
Advertise
Contact Us

Highlights

 Follow Natalia on Twitter:

http://www.pogonina.com/images//nat%20twit.jpg

 
Please help Natalia promote chess by making a donation:



 

Link to Pogonina.com

Play chess at ChessOk

365Chess.com Biggest Online Chess Games Database





Check qyto.jp for Japanese bitcoin casinos.

Here you can find Swedish sites without license, Spelkonto utan licens.

Find new casinos at the brand new Online Casinos XYZ site with reviews and ratings of the best gambling sites for UK players.

Play the popular King Kong Cash slot machine at Slot Strike, the new slot site for UK players.

Grab the chance to win big with a high RTP on the goonies slot progressive jackpot.

Goodluckmate.com - made an easier way to find Skrill casinos

Nettikasinot.media lists the best online casinos for Finnish gamblers. For more information visit: https://www.nettikasinot.media/suomalaiset-kasinot/  

Sweden is now a regulated market, which means that as a player you can only play at casinos with a license. See all regulated
casinos in Sweden by Mr casinova.

To find the best casino in Norway take look at
norske casino at CasinoPiloten.

Find the best Norwegian casinobonus at NyeCasinoNorge.org.

Get exclusive access to a
huge range of free spins & no deposit casino offers with Spin Bonus.

Try the exhilarating new 20p Roulette game.
Play it online at thecasinodb and find casinos to play for real money.

Get the best casino bonus information with Casino Gorilla.

Chess games at Gametop

CasinoAdvisers.com For you that want to find online casino strategies, guides and a good casino bonus!

 
   ...


Polls
What's your FIDE rating?

What should Natalia do to make Pogonina.com more interesting for you?

Who is your favorite active top player?

Poker or chess: what do you like more?

What's the largest monetary chess prize you ever won?

How much time per day do you spend on chess-related activities?

Do you have a special chess mascot (pen, badge, toy, etc.)?

Which time control do you prefer for over-the-board tournaments?

The strongest women's chess team in the world is

What is the strongest national chess team in the world?

Will Magnus Carlsen's rating reach FIDE 2900?

Do you think you can become a GM?

Isolated Pawn

User Rating: / 0
PoorBest 
Written by Administrator   
Tuesday, 04 January 2011



by Natalia Pogonina for her
Chess.com Tuesday column


An isolated pawn is a pawn that has no pawns of the same color on neighboring files. Chess theory has many variations featuring this type of pawn structure, e.g. the Queens Gambit Accepted, Caro-Cann and others. In these systems the d4 (for White) and d5 (for Black) pawns become isolated. Today we will be discussing the main peculiarities of positions with isolated pawns.

An isolated pawn is controlling important central and adjacent squares. For example, for the d4 pawn it would be e5 and c5. These squares can be used as perches for pieces, especially knights. On the other hand, the opponent gets an excellent blockading square in front of the pawn. As an isolated pawn is not supported by allied pawns, it is subject to attacks from the opponent. In the endgame it becomes a target especially often.
 

Lets take a look at the typical strategy used when playing with an isolated pawn:

  1. Attacking the king. Some of the techniques: placing pieces on central squares controlled by the pawn; creating a B+Q battery aimed at the king, activating the rooks via the 3 (6th for Black) rank; pushing the f-pawn.
  2. Playing on the queenside. Exploiting the c-file, attacking queenside weaknesses (if any).
  3. Breakthrough d5 (d4 for Black). It is used to clear the files for ones pieces, e.g. when attacking the king, especially when the opponent is behind in development.
  4.  

Now a few ways to treat an isolated pawn in the opponents camp:

  1. Attacking the isolated pawn. Especially popular in the endgame, when your king may help eliminate the intruder.
  2. Exchanging pieces. It both decreases the opponents attacking chances and reminds him/her of the pawns vulnerability.
  3. Using the blockading square in front of the pawn for creating counter-play. For example, counter-attacking on the queenside.
  4. Exchanging pieces and thus creating hanging pawns that can become a target. For example, trading the d5-knight for the c3-knight and creating a pair of hanging pawns (c3 and d4).

In the following game I played vs Nazi Paikidze at the Russian Superfinal-2010. It may serve as an illustration of some of the above-mentioned concepts.



Please pay attention to the following moments: White has launched an attack against the Black king justified by the fact that the bishop on c8 was bad. I tried to slow my opponent down by exchanging pieces (usually a good idea when defending). On move 18, by playing Ng6 followed by d5 (another technique see above), White could have gained some space for her pieces and got a long-lasting advantage. Instead Nazi hesitated and played d5 only on move 22, which was less effective. The game reached a drawn knight endgame, but my opponent managed to lose it somehow. After the end of the round I was very glad to receive praise from ex-FIDE World Champion Alexander Khalifman, a critical-minded person with an exceptional chess technique, who noted that I had converted the advantage very skillfully.
 

Bookmark and Share



Comments (1)
1. Written by This e-mail address is being protected from spam bots, you need JavaScript enabled to view it on 02:49 07 2011 .
 
 
isolated pawns.
hello Natalia,  
i thought that isolated pawns were a thing of the past; that nowdays more and more players avoid creating m. 
except maybe at GM levels. i will check lateron the game and tell you.  
tks. 
:p
 

Write Comment
Name:
E-mail
Homepage
Title:
BBCode:Web AddressEmail AddressBold TextItalic TextUnderlined TextQuoteCodeOpen ListList ItemClose List
Comment:



Code:* Code

Last Updated ( Tuesday, 04 January 2011 )
 
< Prev   Next >