25 How to Analyze.pdf

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25 .
HOW TO
ANALYZE
CHAPTER RE VIE W
“You have to be very
honest, brutally honest,
even relentlessly honest
with your own games.”
—Garry Kasparov
SU B C HAPTER S
Analyze Your Own Games
Find Your Mistakes Immediately
Analyze the Masters
Persistent self-improvement is a mark of Garry’s mastery, even
if acknowledging his own blunders is a gut-wrenching affair.
Analyzing your own games and finding your weaknesses is the
best way to show yourself what exactly you need to work on to
improve your game.
Break down your games immediately after “checkmate.” If you
lost, note your mistakes and own up to them. If you won, it’s still
more than likely you erred along the way. Don’t fall into what
Garry calls the “gravity of your past success” trap; treat your
victories as you would your losses, find your errors and
consider the flawed decision-making process that produced them,
and work on those areas in your next study session.
G ARRY ’ S D OUB LE CHECK
“I cannot emphasize enough how important it is to analyze
your games, and as soon as possible. Only you know why you
made each decision, why you made each move. And if you
don’t know, that’s a big problem! Even if it doesn’t turn out
the way you hoped, each move should have a purpose.”
LE ARN M ORE
In his book,
Excelling at Positional Chess,
Scottish chess
Grandmaster Jacob Aagaard suggests immediately recording
three things you learned after a game. Did you assess your
opponents moves correctly? Were you ever caught off guard?
What moves would you make again, and where would you have
improved? You can grab the book
here.
Do you like to use computer to analyze your games? Use this
chess board and PGN editor
to review your games, move by
move.
GARRY K A SPAROV
69
25 .
NOTES
GARRY K A SPAROV
70
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