Exeter Chess Club: Mini Chess Games for Beginning Chess Players
![[TRAINING]](GIFs/exercise.gif)
See also some great
active chess games for juniors from Sverre.
![[cool blue cat says:]](GIFs/cool_cat.gif) |
How should we first learn the game of chess?
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Nimzovitch had some interesting things to say about learning chess:
rather than learn about all the pieces, do one at a time, and learn its
strategical properties:
e.g. The Rook. Moves of the Rook. Control of ranks and files. Doubling
on the file. The seventh rank...
and so on - chess rather than mere moves.
Similarly, it has been said that one of the best things about the
old Soviet approach is that they used to teach the game backwards: that
is,
first learn to mate with two Queens (and King) against bare King
then mate with one Queen
then mate with one Rook
then two Bishops [Mate with Two
Bishops]
then learn how to win with King and Pawn against King
then King and two Pawns against King and Pawn, etc.
I don't even know if it's true, but it sounds good: get the basics right at
the start.
Anyhow, however you learned, here are some exercises to practice.
You will find others marked in boxes elsewhere in these pages.
Games for One
- There are very many self-test books and programmes available for
tactical play. For Beginners I like Tony Gillam's books Simple
Chess Tactics and Simple Checkmates; after
which you can try Chernev and Reinfeld's Winning Chess.
For club players I know of nothing better than Livshitz' series called
Test Your Chess IQ - there are volumes for ELO 1600,
2000 and 2200+. On-line there are tactical tests at Chess Archives for beginners and
more advanced players, and there is a demo version of the Art of
Chess Tactics programme available (look for ctdemo.arj).
- For strategy and endgames the best resources are IMHO the games and
notes of the masters. See also Winning Endgames by Tony
Kosten, Pandolfini's compete endgame course and the
Little Chessercises in Pandolfini's book
Chessercises .
- Play a computer. If you have a PC computer like an IBM type, Mac or
Amiga there should be a version of GNU chess available free via ftp from
the Internet Chess Library
(Chess Space: Programs
Index). To start with, make a programme move fast and/or on low
level, and it will probably make enough blunders for a beginner to
survive.
Games for Two
- Mating Race: Player 1 takes White K+Q against Player 2 Black K only, in
starting positions. Black moves first: how many White moves does it take
for player 1 to mate? Start again, remove White Q and put Black Q on
board, White moves first. How many Black moves?
- Mating Race 2: Same as above with K+R against K.
- Mating Race 3: Same as above with K+B+B against K. [Mate with Two Bishops]
- Pawn Race: Same as above with K+e-pawn (on e2) against K. Try with
White to move first (should be a win!) and with Black (should be a
draw!). Variations: try with f-pawn, g-pawn, h-pawn...
try with 2 pawns vs. one, 2 vs. 2 symmetrical, 2(bc) vs. 2(cd).
- Pawn power: play with just your King and pawns each.
Variations:
(1) White plays with only abc pawns, Black with only fgh;
(2) White plays with only abcdefg pawns, Black with only bcdefgh;
(3) play with Ruy Lopez Exchange Variation pawn structure i.e. White
pawns on a2,b2,c2,e4,f2,g2,h2, Black pawns on a6,b7,c7,c6,f7,g7,h7. Swap
sides in each game.
...etc!
- "Play the pawn game recommended by GM Lev Alburt and Roman Pelts in
their COMPREHENSIVE CHESS COURSE. Set up all pawns in their normal
starting positions, with NO OTHER PIECES on the board. Play continues
normally, all pawn moves (including en passant) as in a regular
game.
You win the game if: a) You capture all of your opponent's
pawns; b) you get any pawn to a queening square; c) your opponent has no
legal moves, but you still have a legal move.
The game is drawn if: a) you agree to a draw; b) neither
side has a legal move (all pawns are blockaded). This is more challenging
than it first appears, and I have had a number of reports from parents of
a 5 or 6 year old beating them at the pawn game. ;)" -- Duif
[This is very much like an 8x8 version of the old 3x3 computer
game of hexapawn,
which you can play on different
sized boards]
- One from the very helpful
http://www.rockfordchess.org/clubs/starting.htm
Typical
learning game: Rook’s pawn hunt
- Have players place their rooks on the
proper squares.
- Have players place their pawns at
random anywhere on the board being careful not to blockade
their own rooks.
- Rules: Pawns are asleep and cannot
move. Object is to take turns capturing pawns. First player
to capture all opposing pawns wins.
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- Rook Ending: play with Ke1+Rf1+Pf2 against Ke8+Rf8.
Variations: try different pawns a-h, two pawns, two
pawns vs. one...
- Cut-down chess games: Play with K+8p each and...
- just the rooks
- just the bishops
- just the knights
- just the queens
- just the minor pieces (knights and bishops)
- just the major pieces (queen and rooks)
Exercises
There are also a few chess exercises that are worth checking out:
the well-known knight's tour (visit each square on
a board ONCE with a knight: there's a Solution
here and a Windows
programme to practice with!)
and the eight queens
puzzle (place eight queens on a chessboard so no queen attacks
another).
The Number of Knight's Tours Equals 13,267,364,410,532, so you should be
able to find one, eh? ( Counting
with Binary Decision Diagrams. Abstract: Comments on: Martin Loebbing and
Ingo Wegener, The Number P.S.).
There's a couple of evil ones I have come across for Knight and Bishop:
Knight puzzle: Visit in
turn the squares a1-h1, h2-a2, a3-h3 WITHOUT ever moving to a square occupied
or attacked by a Black Pawn. Not too difficult, but can you beat 5 minutes
against the clock? (the Czech Knight
Knight puzzle: Exchange the positions of the White and Black
Knights.
SOLUTION from Alexander Doskey
Bishop puzzle: Exchange the positions of the White and Black
Bishops WITHOUT ever allowing a Bishop to be attacked by an enemy Bishop. You
may make more than one move for each side at a turn.
SOLUTION from Alexander Doskey
Does any body know any puzzles for Rooks or Kings?
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This document (minichess.html) was last modified on 8th March 1996 by ![[cool blue cat]](GIFs/cool_cat.gif)
Dr. Dave