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

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Learning
Transcript
00:00It's famous US National Championship was Fisher winning all the games that was the last round game
00:08play against Benko. Fisher developed quickly very strong attack but for a moment for a moment I
00:16guess Benko thought maybe maybe I could survive maybe the worst is behind me because of course
00:22white created very strong attack and the pole on H7 you could see it's potentially it's it's a mate
00:28but we have to open the bishop but if white plays f5 e5 what if white if white plays e5 opening the bishop
00:35then black plays f5 closing this diagonal and forcing the exchange of the queens so what white
00:45should do the answer simple interference that's what Fisher did rook f6 brilliant beautiful move
00:54and if black takes then after e5 we lost the rook that mate is inevitable and we'll remember checkmate is the end of the game
01:05the game so Benko didn't take the rook let King g8 after e5 h6 and Fisher simply move the knight there's no need to to hurry
01:19and Benko resigned because the big material losses are inevitable but more likely it was still mate so it was over so beautiful
01:32rook f6 rook f6 that's all we have to know about interference
01:37and now after we learned how to use interference in in a practical chess at this sample of Fisher's brilliancy
01:52let's look at end games it studies no pieces left the board is open but still interference
02:00so
02:06one
02:07one
02:07two
02:08one
02:09two
02:10two
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