![]() ![]() ![]() “As a player that has learned chess late in life, an adult improver, I kept hearing that one of the best ways to improve is to analyze your own games. ![]() So here comes his method written by Nigel: I thought it was interesting and asked him if he was interested in elaborating, which he was. When I first posted about the journal one of the readers of the newsletter, Nigel, wrote a comment about his own approach to annotating games. I have now created a memory hook for next time I see the Cambridge Springs variation with 7. I can recommend using for following your Chessable lines like I just did here, since you get a sense of the history and names of the lines and who have played them the most times etc. If I look correctly 12… c5 is yet to be played in masters games. Bd3 c5! and the Queen can go to b8 if Nb5. 8.O-O This has been most common, but I prefer the text.”Īnd now there are different variations to learn, but the most critical is maybe 9.Bxf6 Nxf6 10. He could have done this on the previous move as well, but including Bb4 and Qc2 is clearly in his favor as it gets him closer to castling, and now it will be very hard for White to stop the freeing c6- c5 break. “Black hits the Bishop on g5, forcing it to exchange for the Knight on f6. If we go back to the first position and what Sam Shankland’s Lifetime Repertoire recommends it is I spent about 60 seconds on this decision and it is unclear why I unprovoked releases the tension and gives away the Bishop pair? A better move would be 11. ![]()
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