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Preventing Blunders in Chess: http://chessable.com/blundercheck https://www.chess.com/course/preventi... The Art of Chess Calculation: • The Art of Chess Calculation (Thought Proc... 🔵 My Chessable Courses: https://chessable.com/drcan ♟️ Find me on Chess.com: canka19 ♟️ 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... Connect on / kabadayichess Go Chessable Pro using this link to support the channel: https://chessable.com/drcanpro 00:00 Introduction 01:12 Missing the Threats Behind Enemy Recaptures 03:09 Missing the Threats Behind Enemy Retreats 05:07 Quiz #1 06:51 Quiz #2 08:39 Conclusions Chess is a cruel game. You can play a perfect game and then make a single mistake that can cost you the game. This means we have to be careful at all times - and pay attention to the opponent's threats generated by their last move. As a coach, I witnessed players do not really internalize actively checking for threats that are presented as a result of the opponent's last move. Especially if that last move was a retreat or recapture. In those cases, the algorithm tends to falter and people forget to actively search for threats behind those moves. This video highlights this by instructive examples from real games. The lesson is clear: regardless of whether the opponent's last move was a retreat or recapture, we must still actively ask the fundamental question of whether that move presents a threat we must address. If this process fails even on a single move, you can lose any chess position...