Lessons With Grandmaster - 3 100%

Go through your last three losses. Don’t look for where you hung a piece. Instead, find the moment your opponent started a plan that you ignored.

A weakness isn’t always a hanging pawn. Sometimes it’s a square that could become weak ten moves from now. We’ll dive into:

Staying objective when you have a "slightly" better position. Lessons with Grandmaster - 3

Taking your chess game to the next level requires more than just memorizing openings; it requires a shift in how you "see" the board.

Make small, quiet moves (like h3 or Kh1) that take the sting out of a future counter-attack. Limit the mobility of the opponent’s best-placed piece. Go through your last three losses

How to create and occupy outposts that paralyze the enemy position. 3. Psychology and the "Second Wind"

How to "saturate" the board with problems until the opponent eventually cracks. A weakness isn’t always a hanging pawn

Learning how to dominate on one color of squares when the opponent has traded off their corresponding bishop.