Chess Strategy For The Tournament Player (compr... Review

In the opening, you hide your King. In the endgame, the King is a powerful attacking piece. Bring it to the center.

Pawns pushed further into enemy territory grant your pieces more room to maneuver. Chess Strategy for the Tournament Player (Compr...

Avoid "analysis paralysis." If you have three good moves that all look roughly equal, pick one and save your time for the critical complications later. In the opening, you hide your King

Before every move, ask: "What does my opponent want to do if it were their turn again?" Pawns pushed further into enemy territory grant your

In casual play, we often focus exclusively on our own plans. In a tournament, your opponent is just as determined as you are. , a concept popularized by Aron Nimzowitsch, is the art of identifying and stopping your opponent’s plans before they even start.

Mastering the Long Game: Chess Strategy for the Tournament Player