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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... Go Chessable Pro using this link to support the channel: https://chessable.com/drcanpro 00:00 Position 1 03:31 Position 2 (King's Indian Pattern) 06:10 Position 3 (French Defense Pattern) 10:28 Turtle Walk 10:59 Position 4 11:56 Homework In this video, you’ll learn a crucial middlegame pattern that strong players use instinctively: cementing knights on powerful central or near-central squares using pawn support. Knights are short-range pieces, and their strength depends heavily on where they are placed and whether they can be chased away. Through concrete examples from the King’s Indian, French Defense, and Caro-Kann structures, this lesson shows how simple pawn moves can stabilize a knight, shut down the opponent’s counterplay, and transform a good square into a permanent outpost. Beyond the chess positions themselves, this video explains why these ideas matter from a learning and cognition perspective. Grandmasters don’t calculate 25 moves deep—they recognize mini-plans and recurring patterns instantly. By internalizing patterns like knight → improve → cement, you reduce cognitive overload, free up working memory, and make better decisions with less calculation. If you want to improve your middlegame play, dominate key squares, and understand why knights can completely paralyze an opponent’s position, this is a must-watch lesson.