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🔵 My Chessable Courses: https://chessable.com/drcan 🟢 My chesscom Courses: https://www.chess.com/courses/all?sea... ♟️ Find me on Chess.com: DrCanChess ♟️ 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... 🏆 2024 Chessable Author of the Year! https://www.chessable.com/blog/annouc... 🏆 2025 Chessable Awards – 4x Winner • Course of the Year – Preventing Blunders in Chess • Best Presenter – Can Kabadayi • Best Strategy Course – The Art of Chess: A Practical Workbook • Best Tactics/Calculation Course – Preventing Blunders in Chess https://www.chessable.com/blog/the-20... Go Chessable Pro using this link to support the channel: https://chessable.com/drcanpro 00:00 Intro 01:18 Candidate First Principle 03:46 Deep Freeze 05:48 Turtle Walk Pattern 08:31 Find the Simplest Winning Plan 10:41 Student Mistakes 17:32 Stockfish vs. Human Feedback In this lesson, I introduce a powerful pawn endgame principle that dramatically simplifies winning positions. Instead of relying on deep calculation, you’ll learn a practical pattern that allows you to convert advantages with clarity and confidence. By understanding the “candidate pawn first” principle, you’ll see how strong players create outside passed pawns, distract the opponent’s king, and turn technical endgames into straightforward wins. At the same time, this video explores an important limitation of engine feedback. While engines like Stockfish may evaluate multiple moves as equally winning, the human difficulty of those moves can be very different. I’ll show you how one move leads to a clean, principle-based conversion while another leads to complex calculations where even strong players can fail. The goal is to help you think like a practical player: choose plans that minimize counterplay, reduce cognitive load, and convert winning positions as simply as possible.