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chessclockz: 09. MasterClass - Garry Kasporov Teaches Chess - Interference

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Transcript
00:00And now after we learned how to use interference in a practical chess at this sample of Fischer's
00:11Brillancy, let's look at endgames. It's studies. No pieces left, the board is open, but still
00:18interference could be a very, very powerful tool. So we have a very simple endgame. White goes this
00:26way, so this port on E7, just one move away from promotion. But how we can get there?
00:34Because promoting the queen now doesn't work since our bishop is hanging, and then just
00:39imagine you make this mistake, and then rook takes his three, it's a skewer, and we just
00:44lose our queen and even lose the game. Of course, we can move the bishop, say we can
00:50bishop here. But then rook goes on E8, and it just controls E8 square, and then the game
00:57will be a draw. So how can we manage to prevent rook from appearing there, and also making
01:06sure that it doesn't use E5 for its counterattack, preventing us from promoting our pawn. The move
01:20is bishop A7. It's a sacrifice, but it's also interference. Now, if black takes it with the rook, then it
01:35will simply promote the queen. And there is no check here. If black tries to renew the
01:50threat by going back and trying to have a check, then we'll move king on F4.
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