Deep Thinking rightly deserves its name. Kasparov has many insightful things to say, not only in chess, but on mastery, strategy, business, intelligence, technology, and so on. This post will cover the big lessons I took from Mr. Kasparov, from his approach to sustained excellence, to his views on the âgravity of past successesâ.
All 2466 chess games played by the legendary World Champion, 298 of them with commentary. 225 exercises: play like Kasparov and play against Kasparov. Game 6. Kasparov stuck to his game plan and strategy with White keeping a more closed position against Deep Blue. This was the most one-sided game of the match, and Kasparov was able to put the final nail in the coffin of Deep Blue, proving that man was still king of the royal game. Kasparov conquered Deep Blue in their 1996 match. Drawing on a wealth of revealing and instructive stories, from the most intense moments of his greatest games to the world-changing decisions of history's greatest strategists such as Winston Churchill and Steve Jobs, Kasparov reveals the strategic ways of thinking that always give a player - in the game of life as well as chess - the edge. The ten-threat rule, endorsed by both Magnus Carlsen and Garry Kasparov, emphasizes the power of creating threats in chess. Whether through simple one-move threats or more complex tactics, the strategy of relentless pressure can lead to opponent blunders and victorious outcomes. To witness this rule in action and explore the games in more Garry Kasparov shares with you his chess mastery. Hear the stories he never told, secrets he never shared. Develop the skills to become a totally new player. âGrandmasters play chess by combining experience with intuition, backed up with calculation and study. Computers play chess by brute calculation; their âstudyâ consists of a gigantic database of opening moves.â â Garry Kasparov, How Life Imitates Chess: Making the Right Moves, from the Board to the Boardroom When Kasparov then lost, and lost in dispiriting fashionâin Game 2, he described the computer as playing âlike a god for one momentââhe seemed to have been not only intellectually butIn part one Garry Kasparov introduces the various sub-systems of the Najdorf, including the central âPoisoned Pawnâ variation. The development of each line is placed in historical perspective and examined in great depth, with Kasparovâs characteristic intensity. More than two 2.5 hours of first-class private tuition.
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