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Today, my favorite piece is the rook,
and you're about to find out why!
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At the beginning of the game,
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we focus a lot
on knights and bishops.
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But after they're all gone, the rooks
become the most important piece.
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In this chess position, all of
the rooks are blocked by pawns.
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Now, rooks may have
a lot of friends on the chessboard,
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but I can guarantee you one thing:
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pawns are NOT a rook's best friend.
Rooks basically hate pawns!
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Because pawns are always
clogging up the action.
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What we need to find is an
"open file."
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Let's first define what it means.
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An "open file"
is a file that has no pawns on it!
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Now, there could be pieces on it,
but not pawns,
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because pawns almost never leave
a file unless they're capturing.
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In short, ChessKids, you want
your rooks to be on open files.
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That's the party zone!
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So in this very basic chess position,
no matter whose move it is,
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it's a race
to get to the open file first.
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If you're White,
slide your rook on over!
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Now, the beauty of the open file
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is you can come charging
all the way down the board--
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maybe create a
back-rank checkmate,
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maybe just gobble up some pawns!
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If Black doesn't realize
what's going on,
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and plays some
random chess move,
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your rook can
dive all the way to e7
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and you're going to act like PacMan,
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gobble, gobble,
eating all of those power pellets!
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Of course, the smartest move
for Black was to challenge you.
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If you play Re1, Black should
actually do the exact same thing.
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Now we have a staring contest,
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and I would not be
the first person to blink!
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Because if you capture
the Black rook,
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he'll come over and capture yours,
and he will control the open file.
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He's going to come down
and play PacMan with your pieces,
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or, if your rook goes off somewhere,
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he could even give a
back-rank checkmate later on.
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Let's look at a slightly more
complicated chess position.
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Here, what's the open file?
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Aha! It's a trick question.
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There are no files
that don't have pawns.
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All the pawns are
still on the chessboard!
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So here's what you want
to do, ChessKids.
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When you don't have any open files,
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you want to figure out which file
is about to become open,
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and go ahead
and place your rooks there.
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So one option for White
is to open up the f-file.
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I know, I know, I didn't give White
permission to move his f-pawn,
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but if he wanted to anyway,
if he was disobeying my advice,
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you could play pawn to f3,
and if this pawn ever captured,
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your rook could take back.
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Now, this not an "open file"--
we call this a "half-open" file;
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but that's still a pretty good
place for your rook to be!
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A "half-open file" is when there's
a pawn only of the enemy's color,
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and that's still not so bad.
Here, black's pawn
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is the only pawn on the f-file.
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But I have an even
better idea for White.
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If I was White, I would go for a
different pawn advance.
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I would want to push my c-pawn.
That way, I don't weaken my king,
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and I really challenge Black's center.
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So, a good way to prepare this move
is to move the rook to c1.
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Now, I know the rook
is not ON an open file,
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but that file could very well
become open in a couple of moves.
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Let's just give black some
random chess move;
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now when we play the move
pawn to c4,
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if Black captures, we capture back--
we have ourselves a half-open file,
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and our rook is about to
capture this pawn on c7.
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Of course, Black could have
defended his center
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by playing pawn to c6,
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but now if we take,
and he takes back,
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we in fact do have our open file.
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Our rook can charge all the
way up the chessboard
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and start doing some damage.
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In fact, if Black played
this move Rc8,
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I probably would not even
capture the free pawn.
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I love open files so much
I would bring my other rook to c1,
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and now we have what's called a
"battery."
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We have two pieces working
together. In this case,
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the battery is on the c-file.
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That's a very dominating position
for White, and in fact,
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it brings us to the last
part of our video today.
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In looking for historical examples
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of top players that
have used open files,
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there was no better player
at using open files than
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José Raul Capablanca.
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Apologies! FunMasterMike
does not speak very good Spanish.
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He was World Champion
in the 1920s,
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when he had tons of games
where he dominated the open file.
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Let's take a look at one of those.
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In this chess position,
it's very easy to see:
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his rook is already on the
only open file of the chessboard.
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But what's better than
one rook on an open file?
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Well, yeah! Putting a battery of
TWO rooks on the open file!
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So he played the move Rh4,
with the simple idea
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of swinging the other rook
behind the first rook.
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Now Black got worried--
understandably so,
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and he started running away.
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Then, Capablanca
put his other rook on h1,
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and he did have a battery.
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Now Black is preparing himself
for a possible rook invasion,
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and plays Ng8 to guard
his king from the side.
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Okay, White plays Qf3;
Black took; White took back--
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of course, the rook
has to run away now;
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and Capablanca made
a TRIPLE battery!
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Some players would call this
"Alekhine's Gun,"
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when you put a queen
AND two rooks on the same file.
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Of course, Alekhine and Capablanca
were kind of rivals,
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so, it's funny that Capablanca
is using Alekhine's idea.
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Okay! Black is getting worried
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about the queen and possibly
even this bishop teaming up,
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so he plays Ra7
to defend his knight,
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and the queen
creeps in further to g6.
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Now Black is getting super worried
about the rooks diving in.
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In fact, this move Rh7 looks pretty
hard to deal with on the next turn.
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There's going to be
a double-attack on g7,
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and Black is doing all he can
just not to get checkmated.
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So Black puts one of his knights
on h6 to block off the open file,
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but White just takes anyway!
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The pawn takes back,
and he takes with the bishop.
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And now Black's got a big problem.
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If he takes the bishop
(it's usually a good idea
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to get rid of the attackers),
the rook will take back,
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and look at how the rook
and even the queen
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are enjoying these two open files.
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Good luck trying to stop the move
Rh8 on the next turn!
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That just looks like we're going
to skewer the king and the queen.
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In fact, it's probably going to be
mate pretty soon, too.
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Let's just give Black some sort
of random chess move;
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we'll play rook check (Rh8+),
and when he runs away
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I won't even take the queen;
I'll play Qg7#,
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and that's a good example
of using those open files.
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For historical accuracy,
I'll show you how the game ended:
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instead of taking the bishop,
we had Ke7;
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then the queen crashed through
on her own open file;
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the king ran away;
we take the knight;
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the king runs away;
we make ANOTHER skewer;
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Black tried to trade, but
now we play the very cool Bf8.
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That forces black to take us,
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and THEN the rook
makes use of the open file,
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skewering the king
and the other rook;
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White is up way too much material
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and went on to win
in a couple more moves.
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And our final example
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is my favorite, favorite,
FAVORITE Capablanca game--
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look what he does here!
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He moves his king up to put
both of his rooks on the h-file.
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You see these two pawns
about to capture?
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That's right! Everything is going
to be loaded up on the h-file,
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but let's fast-forward
a bunch of moves here.
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Oh my goodness!
Look what he's done!
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He's transferring everything
to the a-file;
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not only that,
he put his pawns in a "v" formation.
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"V" is going to be "victory" here!
Let's see what he does on the a-file.
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And here we go!
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It is Alekhine's Gun in the
proper form on the a-file:
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the queen behind the two rooks.
But he's still not done!
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He has put every
single piece on the a-file!
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Not really the subject of our
lesson, but pretty enough
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and he's about to crash
through on the b7 pawn.
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So Black captured;
he got his bishop back,
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and now a very nice
sacrifice to end the game:
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rook takes knight, destroying the
defense of the c6 pawn,
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and after take and take
it is a "family fork":
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we're threatening ALL of Black's
big pieces, and Black resigned
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because we're going to be
taking one of those rooks,
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capturing on a6,
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we're going to have two extra pawns,
still in the v-formation;
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what an exciting way
to close out our video on open files!
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He shifted from the h-file
all the way to the a-file;
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I think in basketball we would
call that a crossover dribble.
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Simply great stuff from our
former World Champion.