Key Patterns Every French Player Must Know
Dr. Can's Chess Clinic Dr. Can's Chess Clinic
7.57K subscribers
1,787 views
0

 Published On Mar 22, 2024

🔵 My Chessable Courses: https://chessable.com/drcan
♟️ Find me on Chess.com: canka19
♟️ Find me on Lichess: cantosh
🏆 2022 Chessable Community Author of the Year! https://www.chessable.com/blog/announ...
🏆 2023 Chessable Best Tactics Course of the Year! https://www.chessable.com/fundamental...

Connect on   / kabadayichess  

Go Chessable Pro using this link to support the channel: https://chessable.com/drcanpro

00:00 Introduction
02:15 Trading the Bad Piece
03:41 A Typical French/Caro-Kann Idea
05:38 What is the Correct Trade?
07:10 The Endgame We Must Avoid
08:28 An Advanced French Endgame
11:18 Should White Grab the Pawn?
12:09 The Same Endgame with a Minor Difference!
12:57 Which Piece Should be Traded Off?
19:24 Model Game: Spassky - Korchnoi (1978)
23:21 How Should that Pawn be Recaptured?
24:30 Avoid the Chess Crime
27:02 A Great Multi-Purpose Move
30:08 The Art of Exchanging Pieces
31:57 Homework Position

Chess expertise relies mostly on knowing thousands of patterns and chunks. In this video series, we study typical patterns and chunks on different openings. Here we talk about the French Defense, which is a solid and strategic opening. We look at recurrent French middlegame ideas, pawn breaks, piece trades, and even endgame patterns. We finish by looking at a model French game played by Viktor Korchnoi against Boris Spassky. Please be actively engaged while watching this video, and pause the video after my prompts and think for yourself first.

This way of studying the openings will allow you to understand deeply the general plans and ideas of your openings, and this way you fight against rote memorization. This means, that even if you are out of book, you will still find strong moves based on these general plans and patterns that speak to the position. We cannot avoid memorizing moves while studying openings, but this should be accompanied by learning these important and recurrent opening patterns.

show more

Share/Embed