Good and Bad Pieces |
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Tuesday, 17 May 2011 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
by Natalia Pogonina for her Chess.com Tuesday column Each piece has its relative value. During the game it may vary depending on what position the piece occupies and what role it plays. Its hard to win when some of your pieces are misplaced. Therefore, you should make sure all your pieces are taking part in the fight, and try to worsen the placement of opponents pieces. Here are some general tips (as always in chess, there are exceptions) for each piece:
This is general advice, each particular position should be considered individually. Sometimes positional sacrifices occur that are connected with the dynamic strength of the pieces (when their value increases above their nominal value). Another important point is coordination of the pieces. Even if each piece is active on its own, but not coordinated and working together, their power decreases. The synergistic effect of well-coordinated pieces may often overpower armies composed of more valuable (in the nominal sense) pieces that arent cooperating well enough.
Rule #2 try to worsen the position of your opponents pieces, hinder their coordination. One of the possible approaches is to limit the activity of the pieces and lock them out on one of the flanks, while attacking on the other. Create weaknesses in your opponents camp so that he/she has to guard them, thus limiting the activity of the pieces. The player who has more active well-coordinated forces is usually a clear favorite. The following game has been played at the recent Russian Team Chess Championship vs WGM Vera Nebolsina. Black didnt simplify the position in time, so Whites chances for a win increased. I decided to exploit the weakness of Blacks dark-squared bishop and sacrificed a pawn. However, in time trouble I made a serious blunder by accidentally repeating the position thrice instead of twice.
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Last Updated ( Tuesday, 17 May 2011 ) |
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