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Reddit mentions of Techniques of Positional Play

Sentiment score: 2
Reddit mentions: 3

We found 3 Reddit mentions of Techniques of Positional Play. Here are the top ones.

Techniques of Positional Play
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    Features:
  • Author: Valeri Bronznik & Anatoli Terekhin
  • Pages: 240
  • Publication Years: 2013
Specs:
Height9.24 Inches
Length6.7 Inches
Number of items1
Release dateOctober 2013
Weight1.07 Pounds
Width0.65 Inches

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Found 3 comments on Techniques of Positional Play:

u/mohishunder · 18 pointsr/chess

Ok, cutting and pasting my own post from early in the year. (Sorry about the formatting.) I originally composed this for a friend who claimed he was ready to work on chess for 20 hours/week. I don't think he's kept it up.

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Here's what I recently emailed someone in the same situation as you - well, his goal was year-end.

If you STUDY chess for 15-20 hours/week for a year, you should be 2000 strength by the end of the year, and 2200 (I expect - much better than me) by the end of next year. Studying is the same as for math and music - it does not include leisure time like playing blitz.

You can break down your chess study into five buckets:
Tactics (start now and continue forever)
Endings (start in April and continue)
Playing/competing (start in February / start reading in July)
Strategy/middlegame planning (start in August and continue)
Openings (start in November and continue)

I think you need to begin them in that order - overlapping, of course.

[1] Tactics - do these books in order. DO the problems, however long it takes - don't look up an answer until you have a solid solution. If the books offer clues on the page (e.g. this page is all pins and skewers), go through and black them out with a marker in advance.