Caswin Private Chess

Caswin Private Chess

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Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Caswin Private Chess, Education, Wavecrest Strandfontein, Cape Town.

30/05/2022

Chess significantly improves children’s visual memory, attention span, and spatial reasoning ability, according to studies conducted at the University of Memphis. Chess promotes better memory, problem-solving speed, and calmness under pressure. Chess also promotes the notion that learning is a never-ending process that can be done at any age. In fact in real life too, life is also like a game of chess, we are the chessboard and the moves, the pieces are the events which occur, the rules of the game are what we call the laws of nature and the player on the other side is hidden from us. A thing to ponder is that your kid is never too young to play chess!

29/09/2021
01/09/2021

Playing daily helps to manage anxiety and other turbulent emotions. Enhanced Critical Thinking Skills. Chess improves the ability to think critically. ... In some instances, the development of critical thinking skills led to better performance on standardized tests.

01/09/2021

Chess helps build individual friendships and teaches children about sportsmanship. Children learn how to win graciously, and more importantly, how not to give up when encountering defeat. Chess encourages and rewards hard work. Children learn that those who practice and study the strategies win more games.

23/10/2020

Chess has many cognitive benefits, including the ability to improve your:

intelligence

empathy

memory

planning and problem-solving skills

creative abilities

Chess can also help with the symptoms or severity of several health conditions, including dementia, ADHD, and panic attacks. In addition, playing this challenging game can help you find a sense of flow or improve the effectiveness of your therapy sessions.

02/06/2020

General ideas in the middlegame are the following-

1) Improve the position of your pieces- knights on outposts, bishops on open diagonals, rooks on open files, etc.

2) If a piece is badly placed and cannot be improved, see if you can exchange it for one of your opponent's better placed pieces.

3) Create weaknesses in your opponent's pawn structure, by provoking certain pawn moves. Note that every pawn move is irreversible, thus you must watch out for opportunities where you can provoke pawn moves from your opponent that would weaken their position.

4) If you yourself have weaknesses, see if you can eliminate them; if not, guard them well.

5) Keep your pieces co-ordinated and see if you can disturb the co-ordination of your opponent's pieces.

6) Keep your king safe and see if the opponent's king position can be compromised.

7) Look for transpositions into favorable endgame positions (e.g. two bishops vs two knights or two bishops vs bishop and knight in open positions).

With respect to your particular approach, attack's on the opponent's king are not always justified. It may work at the beginner level, but a stronger opponent will be able to refute an unfounded attack. In order to attack, first of all, there must be something to attack- weaknesses. If your opponent has no weaknesses, then your attack will come to nothing and you risk ruining the co-ordination of your pieces.

The better approach therefore is to work for the accumulation of advantages. A single advantage (like a knight on a good outpost) is often not enough to win. You must try to accumulate as many advantages as you can before you can deal the lethal attacking blow. Of course, if the opponent makes a mistake or blunders, then the lethal blow can come quickly. If not, slow yet constant improvement of your position is the best way to go.

20/05/2020

Problems You Face When Your Visualization Skills are Bad

Here are the typical signs that indicate you should work on your visualization skills:

You tend to calculate lines over and over in your head because you simply do not trust your own calculations. As a result, your time management suffers and this may even cause anxiety.

You struggle to keep track of all the implications when you try to visualize more than 2 or 3 moves ahead. This hurts your confidence and slows you down even more.

You occasionally make silly blunders because of something that inexplicably slipped your mind in the moment.

19/05/2020

How to Work on Your Openings – Master’s Advice

How to work on your openings
Having a well prepared opening repertoire is one the main goals that a chess player should work for. From a very early age we are told that studying openings is not as important as studying endgames for example, or like strengthening our middle-game skills by doing a different type of training.

This classical approach towards training yourself is quite effective, but once you have raised your level it is time to work on your opening repertoire seriously, especially if you are active playing tournaments. Here are 4 reasons to take the openings seriously in order to upgrade your strength and results in tournaments:
It is easier to play “good” positions where your plans are clear and the positions are familiar to you.
Avoid getting in time trouble by knowing well the first stage of the game. The faster you play the opening the more time you have to use in the critical positions in the middle game or converting an advantage in the endgame.
Confidence. Knowing the openings in depth will increase your confidence during the game, not only because you know your book but also because what happens on the board is less of a surprise to you.
Novelties. This is a far advanced aspect of studying openings, but a deep work in your openings allows you to prepare surprise moves to set new problems for your opponents.
Studying openings should not be only about memorizing tons of variations, but you should also go through a great amount of old classical games which will inevitably also enhance your chess understanding and knowledge.

Here are a few tips to work on your openings; make sure you have a decent database and of course a well-known chess program that allows you to work with it. You should also have an engine in order to check the evaluations of your opening variations

Decide your repertoire

Perhaps this will take you a long time, but selecting the lines you’re going to study and stick to them is essential. If you have a chess coach then it can be done easily. If you don’t, choose lines that fit with your playing style.

Trust but double check

Look into the established theory by checking the latest books written on that opening. If there aren’t any books or you don’t have them, it is not a problem. You could check the latest games by Grandmasters in your database and see what the trend is.

Most of the times you can follow the moves played by the top players with confidence, trusting on their work. However, you should not do this blindly and we recommend double checking with your chess engine to make sure it’s all good.

Make a database file with your openings

Store your work in order to be able to review it, improve it and update it anytime. It will also be useful to prepare before the games. This can be done using chess software.

Memorization

Dealing with the memorization of long variations on every line is not something easy for everyone. Even for top players it is difficult and sometimes they mess up the lines or simply forget their analysis. In my opinion you can help your memory by writing notes at the critical points of the line. For example “17.Bd1! this move is necessary to prepare a queenside advance with a3-b4” by reading the note as opposed to a cold “17.Bd1” it may be easier to remember why you’re playing the moves. Of course, a second method could be to play long blitz sessions against a partner until the lines are easily remembered.

Study of the classics

It is very important to understand the origins of your openings in order to have a clear picture of the ideas and themes that arise in the middle-game from the opening. This will give you a wider look at the time you have to make choices and plans in the middle game. You’ll not be relying only on the theoretical moves, but also on the old ways that the classics played the opening and plans. A database with the most important “model games” and the games played by the specialists of the lines is always useful.

These 5 tips should help you with your work on the openings no matter what your level is. It’s a lot of hard work, we know, but it pays off in both short and long term. Once you have finished with your opening repertoire, then it is time to search for new openings to investigate and do the same. The more systems you know how to play, the better.

If you want to improve your chess level, you need to have a clear study plan. If you aim for a dramatic improvement at chess you need to work on all of the elements of the game in a systematic way:

tactics
positional play
attacking skills
endgame technique
classical games analysis
psychological preparation

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Wavecrest Strandfontein
Cape Town
7798

Opening Hours

Monday 09:30 - 17:00
Tuesday 09:30 - 17:00
Wednesday 09:30 - 17:00
Thursday 09:30 - 17:00
Friday 09:30 - 17:00
Saturday 09:00 - 13:00