17:22 you really wondered what you couldve done against their threat with the rook, which is indeed very powerful and you did an inaccuracy with f5. But honestly, the real inaccuracy if you ask me was rxd1, the move before. That was the true source of all your problems. While it is not shown as an inaccuracy and doesnt influence the eval bar whatsoever, it transforms your position from a very, very active one with a rook in their territory and having the open e-file to one, where you need to passively defend your pawns and they have the e-file. You actually found basically the only really valid plan after getting the passive situation, which is why you were able to hold the position, but it was very very dangerous there as even a slight mistake would spell disaster in that endgame. In the active situation for you, even doing 2 bad moves wouldve been fine probably.
@user-eu3fi5sn7b
Ай бұрын
Magnus himself is shaking after watching this masterclass endgame
@CorneredChess
Ай бұрын
He has no idea what he's in for 🤣
@ConradAdamsMrJUMBO
Ай бұрын
14:12 Besides that, I guess stockfish sees in the future that the a7 pawn could become a target, for example, if we play b6 as black to create a pawn chain and blunt White’s bishop, White knight to b5 becomes a nice temporary outpost for White, (ideas such as pawn to a4 open up for White to support the outpost square Nb5, and if the Black bishop trades for the knight, then on one hand you’ve given up a bishop for a knight, on the other hand it opens up the ‘a’ file for White’s rook, which once again targets the a7 black pawn. So….the rook on a8 does a nice job in defending that pawn😀. And.. especially with queens off the board, the chances of checkmating in the middle game becomes relatively lower, and so maybe the mindset of ‘let’s get all of our pieces on the kingside to checkmate White’ would not be as successful, which I guess is why stockfish prefers the slightly defensive approach. but ultimately who knows what the difference between a stockfish evaluation of -0.7 advantage and a -0.8 advantage is from playing those respective moves…
@looki4561
Ай бұрын
exactly, not only is the e7 pawn a liability, but that a7 pawn as well. also, the c5 and a7 pawn are nicely lined up for that black bishop.
@stuartmontgomery5935
Ай бұрын
At the end you stop the rook from moving if u put king G7 they can’t move it anywhere in time before u get a queen
@obsabeshir9979
Ай бұрын
ke7 is the best move because you immobilise the rook from catching the pawn
@elvirabudda
Ай бұрын
I still hate endgames. Give me a nice early checkmate any day.
@stephenwestland942
Ай бұрын
20:19 In your analysis you are missing the point. Rc4 is a mistake not because you will end up with your king stuck on the back rank but that white has made a horrible error in playing Rh4. Their rook is trapped and cannot get out of the pawn prison. The only way out would be an exchange of rooks which wins for you with your outside passed pawn. So far you here, Re7 or Rf7 would be horrible. It must be Rg7, This stops their rook from going to either h6, h7 or h8. Their rook is trapped and your a pawn will queen. That is why the score keeps flipping at the end because you are missing the point. Well, you did realise what was happening at the very end of your analysis.
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