Anatomy of a Chess Player - Chess Levels From Beginner to Expert

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    Anatomy of a Chess Player : Chess Levels FromBeginner to Expert

     Posted on August 2, 2009 (http://beginchess.com/2009/08/02/anatomy-of-a-chess-player-from-beginner-to-

    expert/) by beginchess (http://beginchess.com/author/beginchess/)

    How A Chess Player Improves from a 1000 Beg inner Rating to a 2000 Expert Rating 

    (http://i0.wp.com/beginchess.com/wp-

    content/uploads/2009/08/greysantomy.png)Below are the

    knowledge and skills

    (http://beginchess.com/2008/10/03/calculating-your-skill-

    and-knowledge-rating/) a beginning chess player must

    acquire to improve their chess level to improve from a chess

    beginner to an expert level chess player. The idea is to show

    the estimated chess rating, the required knowledge and skill,

    and the time it would take them to attain a speci䔱c ELO rating

    and chess level. Find out in which category you fall to

    determine the knowledge and chess skills you need to move

    on to the to the next chess level.

    I would love to get feedback from more knowledgeable

    players and coaches, since I think this might be helpful to

    chess players that are just starting out all the way to an

    approximate 1700 rating. The idea is for players to focus on those areas that they need to work on in order toreach the next level.

     

    Chess Rating Improvement Breakdown from Chess Beginner to ChessExpert

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    0-1000 (0-3 months of experience) The realm of the beginning chess player. At this stage the player has just

    learned the game, they constantly leave pieces en prise, and make many blunders

    (http://beginchess.com/2009/07/29/blunder-checklist/). Player has no tactical, endgame, or positional

    knowledge. Player does not know about chess strategy (http://beginchess.com/2016/03/13/chess-strategy/)

    and has no evaluation or analysis skills.

    1000-1100 (3-6 months of experience) Beginning player now has several games under their belt. They have verybasic tactical knowledge and they continue to make blunders and to leave pieces en prise. Plays without a plan.

    1100-1200 (1-2 years of experience) Beginning player continues to make many blunders. At this level they have

    learned basic tactics. Occasionally leaves pieces en prise, but this is not a common occurrence. Sometimes

    plays with a plan (http://beginchess.com/2007/02/06/purdys-thinking-system/), but the plan is usually incorrect.

    At this point the player sees many offensive tactics but they miss most defensive tactics.

    1200-1300 (2-3 years of experience) Player begins to understand that chess is a two player game, and begins to

    ask what the opponent’s last move is threatening. Blunders still occur but less frequently. One major reason for

    their rating increase, is that player stops leaving pieces en prise. Player has intermediate tactical skills but still

    misses many defensive tactical shots. Starts to build an opening repertoire, which gets them into themiddlegame with a better position. Very limited endgame and positional skills. Starts making better plans due to

    limited endgame and positional knowledge.

    1300-1400 (3-4 years of experience) Advanced beginner. Players at this level have reached an intermediate

    thought process. player Looks for Checks, Captures and threats after opponents moves. Does not leave pieces

    en prise. Very good with offensive tactics and improving on the defensive tactics side, but still misses some. Still

    building opening repertoire. Starts learning basic endgame and middlegame strategy, but knowledge is still very

    basic. This level is an important milestone for the beginning chess player because they are on the verge of being

    an intermediate player.

    1400-1500 (5-6 years of experience) Intermediate level player. Good thought process, does not leave pieces en

    prise. Advanced tactically, both on offense and defense (might occasionally miss a defensive tactic). Has an

    opening repertoire and plays pet openings. Has intermediate endgame, positional and analysis skills. One of the

    reasons for low rating is players poor positional evaluation abilities. Will probably need a chess coach to improve

    further.

    1500-1700 (6-7 years of experience) Advanced intermediate player. Advanced tactical skills and thought

    process. Player has Intermediate endgame and positional skills at this stage. Intermediate positional evaluation

    and analysis skills. Should have a chess trainer, and play against strong opposition in order to improve as well as

    a strong focus on the endgame, positional and evaluation skills.

    1700-1900 (7-8 years of experience) Near expert level player. Advanced tactical skills and thought process. Very

    strong endgame and positional skills. Intermediate evaluation skills. Very good analyst. Player needs to continue

    focusing on evaluation (http://beginchess.com/2009/08/17/stoyko-exercises/) and analysis skills. Opening

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     Chess Board Visualization Exercise #4

    (http://beginchess.com/2009/08/01/chess-board-

    visualization-exercise-4/)

    Chess is More a Game of Skill than Knowledge

    (http://beginchess.com/2009/08/05/chess-is-

    more-a-game-of-skill-than-knowledge/)

    theory knowledge becomes an important component for further improvement. Player has a good database of

    structures that that can help them when they reach unfamiliar positions in OTB play. Player should reach expert

    level in approximately 2 more years, which falls in line with expert theory which claims that it takes 10 years to

    become an expert in any 䔱eld.

    Update 2/6/15

    This post has been the most popular on this site for a very long time. Thank you for taking the time to add youropinions and feedback. I plan on doing a follow up post in the future, with all of the things I have learned from all

    of you. It is still not too late to comment, all of your feedback on how you have improved in chess levels is very

    valuable.

    This entry was posted in Improvement (http://beginchess.com/category/improvement/), Training(http://beginchess.com/category/training/) and tagged chess improvement

    (http://beginchess.com/tag/chess-improvement/).

    Bookmark the permalink (http://beginchess.com/2009/08/02/anatomy-of-a-chess-player-from-beginner-

    to-expert/).

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      28 people found this article useful

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     (http://beginchess.com/author/beginchess/)

     Yuval says:

    (http://www.

    beginchess.

    com)

     beginchess (http://www.beginchess.com) says:

    39 thoughts on “Anatomy of a Chess Player : Chess Levels From Beginner to Expert”

    I can agree with the ratings and the correspondence knowledge, but I Can’t agree with the rating involved

    with it.. as I am a 1705 and rising and this is my third year playing (second rated), fourth if you will include

    the year when I played a hour a week and learned how to move the pieces. and I am not a talented player at

    all, in my club there are a lot of players my age or smaller which have less experience and are better then

    me..

      August 2, 2009 at 10:45 am (http://beginchess.com/2009/08/02/anatomy-of-a-chess-player-from-

    beginner-to-expert/#comment-138)

    @Yuval, Thanks for the feedback.

    Are you a scholastic player? I have noticed that scholastic players do advance much faster than adult

    beginners. It would also be helpful to know how many hours per day you spend studying / playing chess.

      August 2, 2009 at 3:09 pm (http://beginchess.com/2009/08/02/anatomy-of-a-chess-player-from-

    beginner-to-expert/#comment-139)

    http://www.beginchess.com/http://www.beginchess.com/http://beginchess.com/author/beginchess/

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    (http://chess

    skill.blogspot.com/)

     James Stripes (http://chessskill.blogspot.com/) says:

    (http://www.beginchess.

    com)

     beginchess (http://www.beginchess.com) says:

    The number regarding months/years of experience are based on what? Most kids play many years without

    crossing 1000. Those that have natural talent and study cross over 1000 fairly quickly. Some never do.

    I had been playing chess almost 30 years, including some organized competition in high school, before I

    acquired a rating in my 30s. My initial established rating was in the 1400s. It took me nine years to get from

    the 1400s over 1600, and another three to get over 1800.

      August 2, 2009 at 10:55 pm (http://beginchess.com/2009/08/02/anatomy-of-a-chess-player-from-

    beginner-to-expert/#comment-140)

    This chart assumes that you are applying effortful study to your chess training. Expert theory says that you

    should reach expert level in 10 years if you continuously dedicate and challenge yourself in any 䔱eld. Of

    course, there will be some that have more “talent” that will be able to make it to expert level in much less

    time, but this chart would be the average time it would take an average chess player that dedicates at least

    5 hours per week to chess training.

      August 3, 2009 at 7:38 am (http://beginchess.com/2009/08/02/anatomy-of-a-chess-player-from-

    beginner-to-expert/#comment-141)

    Pingback: Chess for Beginner « Tons-Of-Tips Links (http://www.tons-of-tips.com/links/chess-for-beginner)

    http://www.tons-of-tips.com/links/chess-for-beginnerhttp://www.beginchess.com/http://www.beginchess.com/http://chessskill.blogspot.com/http://chessskill.blogspot.com/

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     nt says:

     james breeden says:

    Thanks for the very good article.I have two kids playing scholastic chess.

    A: 1400, 3 years

    B: 800, 6 months

    My experience:

    1 Blunder=2 pawns=1 piece=1 exchange=0.5 Rook=0.3 Queen=0.5 Mate-in-1

    On the average:

    800: 2 blunders per game

    1000: 1 blunder per game

    1200: 1 blunder per 2 games1400: 1 blunder per 4 games

      September 8, 2009 at 11:45 am (http://beginchess.com/2009/08/02/anatomy-of-a-chess-player-from-

    beginner-to-expert/#comment-143)

    ridiculous links embedded in article – like paper shredders – are annoying

    but to my point: i miss any mention of

    1. visualization-the whole board [empty and with pieces]; i mean, how much can a player ‘see’ at each

    stage?; sectors of the board with pieces; changes in sectors with moves; the whole board and with changes

    as a result of moves.

    and2. key ‘patterns’: books on the market Alburt. etc. seem to suggest that there are about 1000 such patterns;

    3. methods of learning / improving [beside OTB and computer correspondence games], such as playing

    computers; playing over annotated master games; de la Maza’s rapid chess improvement for adults; and,

    4. 䔱nally, competency in various uses of computers from taking video lessons to playing programs like Fritz

    and Excalibur to using programs like Bookup and Aquarium and Chess Assistant and Chessbase.

    [oh, and 5 =s lessons from live humans ]

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     chessplayer says:

     observerr says:

     Ken says:

      January 1, 2010 at 11:12 am (http://beginchess.com/2009/08/02/anatomy-of-a-chess-player-from-

    beginner-to-expert/#comment-144)

    Been playing for two years and was stuck around 1300 for a year and then started studying chess puzzles

    to improve tactics which i feel most important. Now i am a solid 1600 player. I used chesstempo.com but

    however spent probably for a time period 3 hours a day for a year playing.

      December 16, 2010 at 3:48 am (http://beginchess.com/2009/08/02/anatomy-of-a-chess-player-from-

    beginner-to-expert/#comment-430)

    nice to read this article thinking I have rating 1350 in 6 months.for me, just know the basics concepts of

    weak squares, open lines,passed pawns, center control and download fritz 12 for opening mastery(just

    know the general safe move patterns)…

      January 14, 2011 at 1:01 am (http://beginchess.com/2009/08/02/anatomy-of-a-chess-player-from-

    beginner-to-expert/#comment-437)

    Pingback: Reader Mailbag: Defensive Chess Tactics | Tactics Time (http://tacticstime.com/?p=1021)

    http://tacticstime.com/?p=1021

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     Trent says:

     Adam Rinkleff says:

     Monayem says:

    4000 hours in 10 years = Chess teacher.

    8000 hours in 10 years = Good at chess.

    10,000 hours in 10 years = Expert and above.

    So, it is really a matter of hours of deliberative practice within that 10 year span.

      November 4, 2011 at 9:01 pm (http://beginchess.com/2009/08/02/anatomy-of-a-chess-player-from-

    beginner-to-expert/#comment-1193)

    Playing consistently is key to improving. Sounds obvious but for me taking a year off set me back. Not that

    I’m not an expert but wish I didn’t have to re-learn tedious openings and other strategies.

      February 14, 2012 at 2:25 pm (http://beginchess.com/2009/08/02/anatomy-of-a-chess-player-from-

    beginner-to-expert/#comment-1207)

    I thought this was fairly well written.

    -Adam Rinkleff

      August 5, 2012 at 9:07 am (http://beginchess.com/2009/08/02/anatomy-of-a-chess-player-from-

    beginner-to-expert/#comment-1344)

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     Lucas says:

     Derek says:

    I am about 1500 player from Bangladesh. Up-noted was good. Want to improve a lot. Thanks.

      June 28, 2013 at 9:23 pm (http://beginchess.com/2009/08/02/anatomy-of-a-chess-player-from-

    beginner-to-expert/#comment-1528)

    I learned how to play chess at the age of 12,just the basics of chess.i never took chess serious,i never

    played chess thereafter for 5 years.i played chess serious chess in my 䔱nal year at high school for about

    9months.when on for about 2years again without playing a single game.i have now dedicated my spare

    time to chess begining january 2013 upto date,i spend more than 10 hours on the chess board studying and

    playing chess.

    I beat karpov2 mobile chess game hands down but i don’t know my rating.i’am improving each and

    everyday.

    What could be my possible rating?

      August 3, 2013 at 5:32 am (http://beginchess.com/2009/08/02/anatomy-of-a-chess-player-from-

    beginner-to-expert/#comment-1539)

    @Trent: When learning openings, learn the ideas behind them and not so much on the actual moves. It will

    help you in memorizing the actual moves better because. Start with the theories behind the moves 䔱rst. I’ve

    used this method myself and it helps me out a lot.

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     Alex Bai says:

      August 15, 2013 at 10:27 pm (http://beginchess.com/2009/08/02/anatomy-of-a-chess-player-from-

    beginner-to-expert/#comment-1541)

    The data in the op is pretty incorrect, in my opinion. BTW, I am a chess expert (USCF 2000+), and it

    happened in U3 years.

    A player with rating of 900 (0-1000) is a pretty strong player compared to the casual chess player. In my

    high school, the weak chess players at the chess club rarely leave en prise pieces, and yet they are below

    900 for sure. 900 players are in my experience, “strong casual players”, or “strong beginners”. The time spanseems reasonable.

    But after this, the “time span” to reach a certain level becomes quite ridiculous.

    Does someone need 5-6 years to reach 1500?! 5 hrs dedicated a week, I bet someone could easily become

    a master or at least 2100 player with the right study methods with 5 hrs a week.

    But really important is the IMO, openings are NEVER an essential or even slightly important part of

    improvement: openings are rather useless to concrete chess improvement at all levels below 22-2300, in my

    experience. Why? In my games against expert level opposition, I am constantly out of the opening by move

    4 or 5. I’ve played a good number of games against expert level opposition recently, and the result of NONE

    of the games had a single thing to do with the opening.

    After the opening, someone had an advantage. They lost it, and the evaluation shifted. Then that other

    player made a mistake, and 䔱nally it was a draw (or something like this) . If this happens at the expert level

     just about every time (openings not mattering) then I think only at a level 200 points or so higher would it

    even start to matter (and then only a bit).

    Only the 2400+ need opening prep for serious improvement. Everyone else should ignore it for the most

    part, I think.

    BTW, I wouldn’t say that players rated around 1700 have advanced tactical skills either. I have had a good

    experience playing against these guys in the past, and I can say that most of them still make tactical

    blunders pretty easily when their position gets slightly worse, or I get an attack etc. At the expert level, this

    almost never happens anymore (even @ class A it is pretty rare) unless it is a serious positional advantage.

    However, experts sometimes miss “rare” or “invisible” tactical tricks or ideas that could get an advantage or

    save a game etc. Their tactical skills are better, but only intermediate level. I consider my tactical skills to be

    at the intermediate level currently as well.

    1800s and below should mainly work on basic ideas in chess, and not study too many advanced ideas and

    can pretty much forget all about the openings if they want to improve. It may seem a bit far-fetched, but

    trust me: I’ve played against these players before a good number of times, and many of them play pretty

    terrible moves, making their game unstable and showing a lack of basic chess knowledge and haphazard

    studying.

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     Kevin says:

     Gary says:

    Also, I would generally cut out endgame study (but not totally). Endgame study is interesting, since many

    players do it wrong and at the wrong time in their chess development, IMO.

    The 䔱rst problem seems to be that players only care about the useless theoretical endgames that almost

    never occur in real life.

    I have never had to play a lucena or philidor draw etc.. in my entire otb chess playing career a single time (or

    any other theoretical endgame except theoretical king+pawn). The only theoretical endgame knowledge I

    have are 2 key king and pawn endgame positions, and they have happened only once each.It is much more important to study strategy in endgames, and this I did a bit.

    However, it is even more important to focus on ending the game during the middlegame, so that you won’t

    need to grind out an ending. Players at the skills levels of U1800 rarely can play a competitive middlegame

    against good play. Therefore, it is practical to gain good skills here and beat them in the middlegame and

    forget about the endgame. This is what I did. In the World Open U1800 (2012), only 1 game reached a

    competitive endgame, and that one was strategic. I scored 7.5 there, and all the games I won except for that

    one endgame were won by middlegame.

      August 31, 2013 at 2:33 am (http://beginchess.com/2009/08/02/anatomy-of-a-chess-player-from-

    beginner-to-expert/#comment-1597)

    I began to take chess seriously last year, right around my 24th birthday. I started playing games and ended

    with a low 900 rating on chess.com after the 䔱rst month. Then I opened a book on chess basics (endgames,

    good n bad bishops, post for knight, tactical motifs, etc…) and after the 䔱rst 130 pages I’m around 1300.

    Really need to speed things up, my guess is that if i read the appropriate literature and incorporate theory

    into practice, I can achieve my goal of 2000+ in a matter of years and hopefully not decades. 1300-1500 are

    good, but we make many blunders, that keeps our ratings grounded.

    One thing that I noticed is that an organized study time and an organized life can lead to a better rating.

      March 13, 2014 at 11:15 pm (http://beginchess.com/2009/08/02/anatomy-of-a-chess-player-from-

    beginner-to-expert/#comment-1637)

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     gasparddm says:

     matt10030 says:

    I would agree with the explanations of how people play at different levels (although I think people stop

    leaving pieces en prise far earlier than you suggest) but the time range seems off.

    Progression in chess, I suspect, has more to do with acquiring certain bits of knowledge + understanding

    than the number of games played. Overcoming the urge to pawn-grab, to understand that pieces don’t have

    permanently 䔱xed values, getting bored and making moves in an attempt to liven things up, letting go of

    overly rigid general rules, and so on, these things come more quickly to some people than to others.

    A player that always has to win, someone who can’t bear to lose a game, will progress slower than someone

    who doesn’t mind making dodgy/inferior moves to see what will happen. If you, for example, say to yourself

    that you will always swap queens wherever possible and play many games in which you do this then you will

    learn much quicker when + why it is appropriate to swap queens and when + why it isn’t.

      April 1, 2014 at 11:53 am (http://beginchess.com/2009/08/02/anatomy-of-a-chess-player-from-

    beginner-to-expert/#comment-1639)

    Im 15 years old and started playing chess 5 months ago, I have a chess coach and I practice around 2 hours

    everyday. My rating is of around 1400 (said by my coach, 3 times Brazilian champion). So I it is saying there

    that in 3-4 years you can reach that rating of mine, not true.

      April 6, 2014 at 11:01 pm (http://beginchess.com/2009/08/02/anatomy-of-a-chess-player-from-

    beginner-to-expert/#comment-1641)

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     peter says:

     Riky䔱re says:

    I can’t agree with you I’m 10th years .I started playing chess 3 years ago and now my rating is 1600 I have a

    chess coach every 4 weeks and I play on the computer no one at my house knew chess but my mom

    encourage me to play on the computer 2 games a day and do 15 minutes off endgame that help me a lot.

      May 7, 2014 at 5:13 am (http://beginchess.com/2009/08/02/anatomy-of-a-chess-player-from-beginner-

    to-expert/#comment-1644)

    I have been playing chess by myself for 10 months and Im currently at 1500 in live blitz at chess.com . Isthis considered fast?

      October 31, 2014 at 9:02 pm (http://beginchess.com/2009/08/02/anatomy-of-a-chess-player-from-

    beginner-to-expert/#comment-2679)

    I’ve only started to really play Chess (about 2 hours per day) around 2 years ago.

    I went from the starting point in Standard on the chess website (1200) to the 1700s and I’m still slowly

    increasing.

    I haven’t had any help other than watching a few YouTube videos on Chess openings and playing a little bit

    of Tactics Trainer.

    1200-1700s in 2 years.

    Time span to get better is all in one’s mind — not on a statistical sheet.

      June 17, 2015 at 7:43 pm (http://beginchess.com/2009/08/02/anatomy-of-a-chess-player-from-

    beginner-to-expert/#comment-4798)

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     Rob says:

     charlie says:

     Daniel says:

    Not sure about some of that. I’m about 2000 rating and consider my endgame skills to be appalling. I win

    games because my tactic awareness is better than my opponents, but in reality it is still pretty poor. Play 20

    games v a chess engine and you’ll see that none of your play can be considered “advanced”

      October 2, 2015 at 1:52 pm (http://beginchess.com/2009/08/02/anatomy-of-a-chess-player-from-

    beginner-to-expert/#comment-4987)

    I would like to get to 1500 I’m 973 now. No training yet but play fast and love it. I’m on chess.com couple

    times a week if job allows. When my health is good and I’m not tired I’m much better. Any help on what to

    study. Who is a good coach in pensacola?

      October 27, 2015 at 4:05 am (http://beginchess.com/2009/08/02/anatomy-of-a-chess-player-from-

    beginner-to-expert/#comment-5029)

    I 䔱rst learned how the pieces move when I was about 8, 10 years later I decided to really start learning the

    strategy, openings, tactics, etc. Two weeks into learning I estimate from reading this article and based on

    my online rating I am at about the 1200-1300 range.

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     John says:

     Elijah Logozar says:

     chessbuzz says:

      November 11, 2015 at 1:57 am (http://beginchess.com/2009/08/02/anatomy-of-a-chess-player-from-

    beginner-to-expert/#comment-5065)

    I’m 15 and I started playing chess 3-4 months ago , learning openings, how the pieces move etc. I signed up

    for the USCF and started going to club rated games. Currently my rating is 1634.

      December 4, 2015 at 1:54 am (http://beginchess.com/2009/08/02/anatomy-of-a-chess-player-from-

    beginner-to-expert/#comment-5119)

    I disagree with this. I went from 1036 to 1675 in the last year.

      January 14, 2016 at 11:36 pm (http://beginchess.com/2009/08/02/anatomy-of-a-chess-player-from-

    beginner-to-expert/#comment-5251)

    If your time is limited, I would focus on studying tactics. A good site for this is chesstempo.com

    (http://www.chesstempo.com). I would focus on tactics and in eliminating mistakes

    (http://beginchess.com/2009/07/29/blunder-checklist/), before getting a coach.

    Good luck.

    http://beginchess.com/2009/07/29/blunder-checklist/http://www.chesstempo.com/

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    (https://ww

    w.facebook.

    com/app_sc

    oped_user_i

    d/10101028

    030400915/)

     Rafael Rondon

    (https://www.facebook.com/app_scoped_user_id/10101028030400915/) says:

     Arno says:

      January 24, 2016 at 4:40 pm (http://beginchess.com/2009/08/02/anatomy-of-a-chess-player-from-

    beginner-to-expert/#comment-5269)

    To the people with ratings over 1800 that are claiming a portion of their skills to not be any good… your

    being ridiculous. Good is relative, you may not have a chance against a grand master but you can still beat

    99.99% of the population at chess, and that’s pretty darn good imo.

      February 2, 2016 at 10:52 pm (http://beginchess.com/2009/08/02/anatomy-of-a-chess-player-from-

    beginner-to-expert/#comment-5301)

    Pingback: 10 Steps to Chess Improvement | (http://beginchess.com/2012/01/06/the-road-to-chess-

    improvement-in-10-steps/)

     just wondering what the author means by “defensive” tactics, as opposed to “offensive”.

      March 7, 2016 at 10:54 pm (http://beginchess.com/2009/08/02/anatomy-of-a-chess-player-from-

    http://beginchess.com/2012/01/06/the-road-to-chess-improvement-in-10-steps/https://www.facebook.com/app_scoped_user_id/10101028030400915/https://www.facebook.com/app_scoped_user_id/10101028030400915/

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     chessbuzz says:

     Tomasz says:

    beginner-to-expert/#comment-5357)

    Defensive tactics are tactics that your opponent can play against you. For example, falling victim to a fork or

    skewer that you didn’t see. An offensive tactic are those tactics that you can play against your opponent.

      March 10, 2016 at 4:37 am (http://beginchess.com/2009/08/02/anatomy-of-a-chess-player-from-

    beginner-to-expert/#comment-5363)

    Pingback: Chess Board Visualization Training | (http://beginchess.com/2016/02/05/chess-board-

    visualization-training/)

    Pingback: The Steps Method in Chess (http://beginchess.com/2009/07/23/the-step-method-in-chess/)

    Pingback: Chess Ratings Explained - Chess Notebook | Chess Notebook (http://chessnotebook.com/chess-

    ratings-explained/)

    Pingback: Extreme Chess Training | Chess Position Database (http://extremechesstraining.com/chess-

    position-database/)

    @Rafael Rondon

    There are some questions waiting to be asked.

    http://extremechesstraining.com/chess-position-database/http://chessnotebook.com/chess-ratings-explained/http://beginchess.com/2009/07/23/the-step-method-in-chess/http://beginchess.com/2016/02/05/chess-board-visualization-training/

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     matt says:

    #1) “To the people with ratings over 1800 that are claiming a portion of their skills to not be any good… your

    being ridiculous”.

    It depends what ratings do you mean? ELO, USCF, BCF any other? Do you mean rating at classical, fast or

    bullet chess? Do you mean OTB rating or virtual one? There are a lot of factors that differentiate these data.

    In particular I am around 2000 at FICS, but am I any good? It depends what do you mean by “good player”. If

    there are players rated 1500-1600 – most often I can beat them, but not because of my genius – but rathersimply due to their lack of patience, making simple (unforced) mistakes and sometimes playing very weak

    at endings.

    Of course if you mean “over 1800” – and the level of 2400 (Fide master or International Master) is one of

    the examples – this caliber of player is really strong one. He can beat 99% of all the amateurs without much

    effort.

    #2) “Good is relative, you may not have a chance against a grand master but you can still beat 99.99% of the

    population at chess, and that’s pretty darn good imo”.

    I made a test playing at FICS. I have been playing against one of my friends – he is about 1650-1700 and I

    won 32 games, drew 2 games and lost just one. It is about 94-96% of winning. Anyway If I went to chess

    tournament (the group U1800) I would NOT be able to win it (I tried to do this a few times, but with no

    success). That means I could not beat 95% of the players – even at the amateur level. Take notice there are

    some players who have been playing via Internet (chess servers) and in OTB play they can even reach 2000-

    2100 (online) rating. That means they could have been able to outplay me without great effort.

    #3) There are some players who are strong amateurs and they have an ELO rating in the range of 1800-

    1900. If they can play at this level – they are able to outplay 95-98% of chess amateurs (coffee house

    players), but at tournament level – they are just at the mean of the pool (most often called “strong

    amateurs”).

    Let me know if my explanations helps in any way :). Thanks for your post!

      March 14, 2016 at 1:42 am (http://beginchess.com/2009/08/02/anatomy-of-a-chess-player-from-

    beginner-to-expert/#comment-5377)

    I don’t mean to sound proud but this is my second week and my rating is 1400…so I don’t really gree

      March 16, 2016 at 11:20 pm (http://beginchess.com/2009/08/02/anatomy-of-a-chess-player-from-

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