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Why You Must Sometimes Give Material Back In this video, I explain why material advantage is not something you simply defend — it’s something you manage. Using Fischer vs. Tal (Bled, 1961), we look at a position where Fischer is up a pawn, but the position remains tense and tactically charged. Rather than trying to protect the extra pawn, Fischer gives it back intentionally to maintain activity and keep pressure on Tal. Later in the game, Fischer goes a step further and sacrifices his queen, not as a speculative attack, but as a continuation of that same idea — keeping the initiative and preventing the position from slipping out of his control. The video focuses on: Why holding material can sometimes reduce your options How giving material back can preserve initiative and pressure The difference between losing material and choosing to return it How material decisions are tied to evaluation, not greed The key point is simple: Material only matters if it helps you play the position you want. If it doesn’t, giving it back — or even sacrificing more — can be the most accurate choice. This is a practical idea that shows up constantly in high-level games and is often completely missed by developing players.