How to Improve your Chess Visualization? | Part 2 | Chess Vision and Calculation Training |
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Watch the same video in 2D here: www.youtube.com/watch?v=98QNKnUPJeQ
In this second video for visualization, IM Alex Astaneh is continuing to show you, how you can practice our visualization skills. Visualization is the ability to picture a position in your mind, to hold that position in memory and to imagine how the pieces can move without actually moving them over the board. One of the biggest mistakes that we see, aspiring chess players make, is that they don’t practice their visualization skills anywhere near enough.
Check out the first video:
How to Improve your Chess Visualization? | Chess Vision and Calculation Training | Alex Astaneh
www.youtube.com/watch?v=WChrD2tXiWQ
In order to improve your chess visualization, you should practice holding the position in your mind and developing your chess imagination. In this video, IM Alex Astaneh will show you one technique in which you can do this. In this series, eventually we will show you a variety of different techniques to constantly work on your chess visualization.
The technique shown in this video is a very simple one. It involves playing over master level games, in this case a game played between Aaron Nimzowitsch and Simon Sinowjewitsch Alapin. IM Alex Astaneh will read out the first four moves from either side but rather than playing out the moves, one by one, he will instead only play out the moves in the position after four moves have been played by each side. The challenge of this exercise is that you must try and imagine the position, follow along with your mind’s eye and only afterwards will he show the position. The beauty of this exercise is that you can progressively increase it.
The world’s best chess players, like world champion Magnus Carlsen, are famous for being able to give simultaneous exhibitions where they play against ten, twenty or even more opponents at the same time wearing a blindfold around their head. That means that their visualization skills are so highly developed that they are able to hold all of these different positions in memory from the very beginning of a game to the end, all of them at the same time. Blindfold chess was considered miraculous for centuries, but now there is greater recognition of people who can keep track of more than one simultaneous blindfolded game. Grandmasters weren’t born knowing how to do that. It takes a lot of practice and patience, but after some time it will pay off.
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