276°
Posted 20 hours ago

100 Endgames You Must Know: Vital Lessons for Every Chess Player

£9.9£99Clearance
ZTS2023's avatar
Shared by
ZTS2023
Joined in 2023
82
63

About this deal

It has taken 2-4 hours of study every day, seven days a week, for nine weeks to get through the 100. And i am frazzled, but i feel i have a body of vital, organized knowledge under my belt.

100 Endgames You Must Know • lichess.org

Former Women’s World Chess Champion Alexandra Kosteniuk] said she had really enjoyed De la Villa’s 100 Endgames You Must Know and had made flashcards out of the 100 positions. One side of the card had the position, the solution was written out on the reverse, and she quizzed herself until she knew all 100.” - Elisabeth Vicary, USCF Online My favorite endgame book, very clear and concise. If you only read one endgame book it should be this one." - GM Niclas HuschenbethJesus de la Villa (1958) is an International Grandmaster born in Spain. He is a successful author and a well-known chess coach. He has won the Spanish Championship twice. The good news about endgames is that there are relatively few endings you should know by heart. What's more: once you know these endings, that's it. Your knowledge never goes out of date! The fact that players think in patterns has an important side-effect: their endgame errors tend to repeat themselves. That’s why De la Villa has not just included examples from games of elite GM’s but also of amateurs. Errors are always instructive and working with this book will seriously reduce the number of typical mistakes you are prone to make. The many practical exercises that De la Villa has selected will help you improve and retain what you have learned. Chess is complicated. A beginner to the game has a lot of rules to learn before they attain competence. A typical Chess game has three major sections; the Opening, the Middlegame, and the Endgame. Given all of this, how do you decide what to focus on first? I read and worked through the entire book on Chessable (the new interactive edition) https://www.chessable.com/endgame-boo... - I highly recommend it to chess players of all levels, but if you are a beginner, intermediate or casual player just start with Chapter 1 and 11 only. The others are more theoretical endgames that will probably not come in your games for a while.

100 Endgame Patterns You Must Know - Jesus De la Villa 100 Endgame Patterns You Must Know - Jesus De la Villa

ve always known that this book is supposed to be one of the best practical endgame books to study. However, I don't own it and haven't looked into it until now. The bad news is that, all the same, the endgame technique of most players is deficient. Modern time-controls make matters worse: there is simply not enough time to delve deep into the position.Jesus de la Villa's book comes highly-recommended by a coach (a Russian IM) whom I approached about this question. It is refreshingly focused on making your study time as productive (in terms of decisive game results) as possible. The greatest strength of the book: breaking things down into well-worded chunks of easily digestible information." I am a beginner (approximately 1400) seeking to improve my endgame technique. Which one of these books would you recommend as suitable for my strength and why?

100 Endgames You Must Know - Basic endings • lichess.org 100 Endgames You Must Know - Basic endings • lichess.org

Having spent quite a few hours with the book now it seems like a perfect match for the training power of chessable. I remember going over some of these endgames before at various times in my chess career and in varying detail. However, without training them I only vaguely remembered how to handle the situations. By going through these endgames now, with training, in the same amount (or less) overall time I'm much more confident that if I face them over the board later on I will have the most important patterns/ideas fully internalized and am much, much more likely to win or hold a game based on them. Addeddate 2019-09-04 15:43:18 Filename Chessbook - Jesus De la Villa - 100 Endgames You Must Know (2008).pdf Identifier chessbookjesusdelavilla100endgamesyoumustknow2008 Identifier-ark ark:/13960/t46q9tz78 Ocr ABBYY FineReader 11.0 (Extended OCR) Ppi 300 Scanner Internet Archive HTML5 Uploader 1.6.4 YearChess books are best when you follow the lines. Unless you have a great visual memory, you should have a physical board. comparing '100 Endgames' with John Nunn's 'Understanding Endgames') "Though Nunn's comments are clear and to the point, I found De la Villa's discussions easier to digest." There’s not much to say about it – you just have to buy it and read it! De la Villa does a truly wonderful job of explaining useful endgames in a calm and measured manner that is clear enough for any strength of player to understand while still being interesting for stronger players. If you’ve never read an endgame book before, this is the one you should start with.” - GM Matthew Sadler There’s not much to say about it, ­you just have to buy it and read it! De la Villa does a truly wonderful job of explaining useful endgames in a calm and measured manner that is clear enough for any strength of player to understand while still being interesting for stronger players. If you’ve never read an endgame book before, this is the one you should start with." As you said, 7-men Lomonosov built since last edition, and probably 7-men tablebase revealed that some analyses wrong.

100 endgames you must know • lichess.org 100 endgames you must know • lichess.org

Most of the patterns Jesus de la Villa presents in this new book are from the phase of the game just before a theoretical endgame turns up. Knowing these practical endgame fundamentals will enable you to fully reap the benefits of what you learned in De la Villa’s widely acclaimed classic 100 Endgames You Must Know. The instructional explanations, the many diagrams and the pleasant presentation make this endgame book an interesting publication for club players with a rating from 1600." De la Villa does the job quite well. He emphasizes the practical and prefers understanding to memorization." Most club players consider studying the endgame to be boring and have a clear weakness in their endgame play relative to their openings and middlegames. This increases the importance of endgame study because it is easier to increase the discrepancy between you and your peers by studying the endgame than by studying any other area of the game.Endgame books always contain analysis mistakes, and newer editions always correct these mistakes. So I would recommend to get up-to-date by buying the last one. Former Women World Champion Alexandra Kosteniuk] said she had really enjoyed De la Villa's '100 Endgames You Must Know' and had made flashcards out of the 100 positions. One side of the card had the position, the solution was written out on the reverse, and she quizzed herself until she knew all 100." If you really have no patience for endgames, at least read Jesus de la Villa's '100 Endgames You Must Know'." A clear exposition of the most important endgames, with exercises to test your knowledge.” - British Chess Magazine

Asda Great Deal

Free UK shipping. 15 day free returns.
Community Updates
*So you can easily identify outgoing links on our site, we've marked them with an "*" symbol. Links on our site are monetised, but this never affects which deals get posted. Find more info in our FAQs and About Us page.
New Comment