Calculation Excerpt
Calculation Excerpt
CALCULATION
By
Jacob Aagaard
Quality Chess
www.qualitychess.co.uk
Contents
1 Candidate Moves
2 Combinational Vision
3 Prophylaxis
4 Comparison
5 Elimination
6 Intermediate Moves
7 Imagination
8 Traps
9 Tests
10 Difficult Positions
15
43
77
103
123
145
163
199
220
251
298
Name Index
Foreword
I have always liked books with challenging exercises. No matter what level you reach, it is
important to keep your mind sharp and ensure that your calculation is as quick and precise as it
can be. This can only be achieved by continuous practice.
After I told Jacob Aagaard that I had worked with his book Practical Chess Defence, he started
to send me exercise positions, some of which can be found in the Quality Chess Puzzle Book
(co-written with John Shaw) and now this book. I have enjoyed solving these positions over the
last few years and found them helpful. I am sure the same will be true of the reader. There is no
shortcut to the Grandmaster title, but there is a well-known route that many people have walked
over the years. Jacob offers to guide you on part of this journey and I hope you will take him up
on the offer.
Boris Gelfand
Winner of 2009 World Cup and 2012 World Championship Challenger
Series Introduction
Ever since I was a junior I have been a chess trainer. At times my dissatisfaction with the conditions for
trainers has caused me to be a player as well; and not without some success. But at the end of the day I
have had to accept that my destiny is not to feel comfortable on the stage, but rather in the anonymity
of the locker room. I have always cared more for the results of my students than my own, just as I have
always had lots of passion for training others, but none for training myself.
Over the years I have developed some of the skills necessary to become a decent trainer, not least of
all the ability to earn a living by other means! Among other things this means I have become a chess
writer. From the moment I started taking pride in my work, I have developed into a not entirely bad
one, to the degree where I am finally comfortable enough to publish this series of books, which I have
been dreaming about for years.
The series title Grandmaster Preparation is of course a little joke, as the five books originally planned do
not include any coverage of the opening. But it is also a serious point at the same time. Grandmaster
play does not occur in a vacuum, and it consists of much more than opening preparation, random
intuition and even more random calculation. There are rules and methods that have been successful
for many decades and will continue to be so in the future. One of my main objectives with this project
has been to merge this classic understanding of chess with my own ideas and create a serious training
plan for ambitious players.
This is the most ambitious project I have undertaken in my professional life, and there is no escaping
the unavoidable imperfection of the execution. I hope the reader will forgive me in advance for any
mistakes, but at the same time offer me the confidence to believe in most of what I claim throughout
these books. They are heavily researched and based on my experience of working with close to a
thousand individuals over the years: from my own daughters, who recently discovered the joy of
capturing a piece, to friends who have been involved in World Championship matches. So, please
develop your own understanding of chess by questioning everything I say, but at the same time, please
never disregard anything I say as unfounded.
When I was a young man I had no access to a classical chess education, and many other grandmasters
have had the same experience. It is my hope that this series will help to change this picture in the
same way that Mark Dvoretskys books have, and the way that Artur Yusupovs series of nine books
(Fundamentals, Beyond the Basics and Mastery) have given juniors and amateurs a clearly-structured
method of improvement.
The ultimate goal for this series is to show a path towards playing chess at grandmaster level for those
who do not have access to a good trainer. I have worked with some grandmasters who had the kinds
of holes in their chess understanding that would baffle the average man on the street. Obviously they
excelled in other aspects of the game simultaneously, but over time their weaknesses became obvious
to their opponents and their results duly suffered. This series is meant to help those players as well.
Jacob Aagaard, Glasgow 2012
Chapter 1
Candidate Moves
Pogos Nakhapetiane Sergei Zhigalko
Olginka 2011
Black to play
Black had just given up the exchange to regain his earlier sacrificed pawn. Seemingly
he was so glad about this that he failed to actually look at the position and the
opportunities he has in it.
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