[go: up one dir, main page]

100% found this document useful (2 votes)
373 views11 pages

The Power of Pawns: Chess Structure Fundamentals For Post-Beginners

Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1/ 11

Jrg Hickl

The Power of Pawns


Chess Structure Fundamentals for Post-beginners

New In Chess 2016

Contents
Explanation of Symbols . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6
Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 7

Part 1 - Pieces and pawns . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 11


Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3

The bishop . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12
The knight . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24
The rook . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 36

Part II - Basic pawn structures . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 49


Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10

Hanging pawns . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 50
Isolated pawns . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 62
Backward pawns . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 86
Passed pawns . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 106
Doubled pawns . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 123
Weak squares . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 141
Pawn chains . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 162

Index of Games . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 181


Index of Openings . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 183
Bibliography . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 185

Introduction
What every club player desires is to reach an acceptable playing level with a
reasonable expenditure of time and effort. That is the point of the present book
The power of the pawns. An overview of basic pawn structures, together with a
lot of practical hints, helps to improve ones understanding of chess at a deep level.
Chess players require a broad spectrum of knowledge. A game seldom works out
as planned new, frequently unknown positions suddenly crop up and demand
great flexibility. One has to transform experience into a positional evaluation
which is as accurate as possible. Profound knowledge is of course an advantage,
but frequently unnecessary. This book is intended to make a contribution to
turning a club p
layer into an all-rounder, who can feel at home in any situation.
It is important to recognise the strengths and weaknesses of a pawn structure, in
order to bring their advantages to bear in practice. The study of this volume will
help you with that.
In the middle of the 90s, when in addition to top-level sport I focussed more of my
chess activity on the organisation of chess holidays and chess training, the needs
of the majority of club players were foreign to me. The demands of top-level chess
are too different from those of occasional tournament players. In more than ten
years of intensive work and communication with the participants in my holidays,
the same questions about structures and evaluation of positions kept coming up.
I became aware that club players have to struggle with a similar approach and
similar problems.
These reflections led among others to the following questions: Can I do some
thing to improve this situation? Where can my experience help to make learning
easier for chess players? And how can they make progress?
During my training I kept having my attention drawn to the difficulties
participants had with pawn structures and the related evaluation of positions.
Pawns are the soul of the game this was already recognised by Franois-Andr
Danican Philidor, the worlds best player in the 18th century. Their particular way
of moving is of decisive significance: they are the only pieces which cannot move
backwards. A careless pawn move can have important consequences, which can
be seen with subjects such as the good/bad bishop, the open file or the eternal
piece.
To clarify these specific effects on the other pieces, the introductory part of the
book is dedicated to the minor pieces and the rooks. Those pieces which move both
in straight lines and diagonally, the king and the queen, are far less dependent on
the structure and thus are not considered separately.
There are many typical pawn structures too many. Even for experienced
grandmasters their study involves lifelong learning. No single book can provide
7

The Power of Pawns


an exhaustive treatment and would in any case demand too much of the student.
So the main part is limited to the most frequently met and basic structures: from
hanging pawns via isolated pawns to weak squares.

Working with this book


It is not sufficient to read chess books. Their contents must be studied intensively
and worked through, so as to consolidate the knowledge in a lasting manner. This
demands a certain amount of personal initiative and unfortunately also a not
inconsiderable investment of time. That, however, is the only way in which the
knowledge can be assimilated and also recalled without problem at a later date in
order to be of use in your own games.
Every structure dealt with in the second part is first explained in general terms
by means of a diagram. In order to lay the accent on their particularities, no pieces
have been included in certain circumstances, however, not a single piece has yet
left the board. All the structures of course can occur with reversed colours.
Basically you should be working with a chessboard of tournament dimensions!
Through their practice chess players are very strongly influenced by threedimensional thinking and achieve noticeably better results at the board than they
do when working with a chess program or a computer monitor.
Important positions are highlighted by diagrams and provided with an exercise.
Solving these will be easier for you if in doing so you answer the following
questions:
What are the specific characteristics of the position? Pay attention to different
pawn majorities, king safety and important peculiarities concerning the minor
pieces, like for example good or bad bishops or eternal squares for pieces.
Where should I play? Queenside, kingside, or the centre?
Are different evaluations valid for different phases of the game? Should you
neglect in the opening or middlegame a pawn weakness, which will constitute a
serious defect in the endgame?
Where are there pawn levers? Is there a possibility of altering the structure? By
advancing my own pawn, can I open a line or create a weakness?
And never forget an extremely important point:
What are the opponents intentions? If you can answer this question then you are
one step ahead of him!
But The Power of the Pawns does not just offer an overview of various structures. In
many places you will find, in italics, practical tips, e.g. how to behave in time
trouble, finding candidate moves and classic mistakes.
Independent study of the model games listed at the end of each chapter will
round off the subject matter and deepen the knowledge you have acquired. All the
games mentioned in the book are available on the internet in electronic form for a
free download at www.joerg-hickl.de.
8

Introduction
I would like to express my great gratitude to my co-author Erik Zude for his
outstanding cooperation and to Uwe Schupp for his editorial work on the book. I
would also like to mention specially the participants in the chess holidays, whose
constructive questions and suggestions in the long run were the driving force
behind this book.
Jrg Hickl

Chapter 1 - The bishop

Training exercises
After a lot of general advice, we should like to bring the chapter on the bishop to
a conclusion with a practical unit. In the following diagrams the g2-pawn is under
attack.

Should White play f2-f3 or g2-g3?


Your judgement here should not concern only the endgame. Does your evaluation
change somewhat if there are even more pieces on the board?

Exercise 1

Exercise 2
Instead of a knight White has a bishop
on d3.

._._._M_
_Jj._JjJ
J_L_._._
_._._._.
._._._._
_.n._._.
IiI_.iIi
_.k._._.

._._._M_
_Jj._JjJ
J_L_._._
_._._._.
._._._._
_._B_._.
IiI_.iIi
_.k._._.

Exercise 3

Exercise 4

Instead of the knight White has a bishop


on e3.

White has the bishop pair.

._._._M_
_Jj._JjJ
J_L_._._
_._._._.
._._._._
_._.b._.
IiI_.iIi
_.k._._.

._._.sM_
_Jj._JjJ
J_L_._._
_._._._.
._._._._
_._Bb._.
IiI_.iIi
_.k._._.
21

The Power of Pawns

Chapter 3

The rook
It is really a superior man who can watch a game of chess
and remain silent.
Chinese proverb

Though they are mostly of slight use in the opening, the effectiveness of the rooks
grows the longer the game progresses. They need open files to develop their high
potential. The goal here is above all the seventh or even the eighth rank of your
opponent: there they can achieve extra horizontal impact and attack opposing
pawns and the king.
To get there ones own pawns are often sacrificed in order to open files.

The opening and occupation of a file

T_.t._M_
j._._J_J
.j._._J_
_.j.j._.
._I_._._
_._I_Ii.
I_._Ik.i
r._._R_.
The position is closed in character. In order to activate the major pieces a file needs
to be opened. For that there is 1.a4, intending a4-a5.
The following replies are available: allow 2.a5 and then take it, advance past it
or stay in position, and also the ugly 1...a5, which turns the b6-pawn into a lasting
weakness and degrades the black queenside majority.
How would you react?
Let us take a closer look at the first option: White gets in a4-a5. Capturing 2...bxa5
can be quickly excluded it leaves the two weaknesses a7 and c5. By-passing with
2...b5 (after e.g. 1...ab8) leads after 3.cxb5 to a c5-pawn in need of protection.
Black has three pawn islands, White only two. So what about doing nothing? But
there is no way of hanging on to the a-file: 1.a4 g7 2.a5 f6 3.a4 (or 3.fb1
ab8 4.axb6 axb6 5.a6/7) followed by fa1. After that White infiltrates on the
seventh or eighth rank and has the clearly more active pieces.
In his 1956 manual, Pawn Power in Chess, which is highly recommended, Hans
Kmoch describes the distance between the back rank and the pawns as the rearspan.
A greater rearspan generally leads to the seizing of the file. White has a superiority
36

Chapter 3 - The rook


in space and can determine when he will play axb6. The doubling of rooks forces
Black into moving away.
After it has become clear to us that in all cases b6 is weak, the unpleasant 1... a5
will feel somewhat easier. In any case, by playing it we can prevent White from also
getting the a-file. The b6-weakness can be covered horizontally with the rooks or
also later by the king.
The enumeration of pawn islands which was mentioned is a simple procedure which almost always
leads to a rapid and frequently very reliable evaluation of the structure.

._T_.tM_
j._._JjJ
.j._.s._
_._J_._.
._.iJ_._
_I_.i.i.
I_._.iBi
_.r._Rk.
White or Black to move

White continues with 1.h3, which forces Black to give up the c-file. The white
rook arrives powerfully on c7. If it is Black to move, he must prevent this in all
circumstances. In order to close the h3-c8 diagonal, both 1...h5, intending 2.h3
g4, and 1...g5 2.h3 g4 come into consideration. However, White can continue
to hope for an advantage by transferring the bishop to the a6-c8 diagonal. E.g. 1...
h5 2.fe1 a5 3.h3 (or also the immediate 3.f1) 3...g4 4.f1 ad8 5.a6
a8 6.b7 a7 7.c8 a8 8.xg4 hxg4 9.c6 and White does finally possess
the only open file.
Openings in which pawn chains have a part to play, such as the French or the
Kings Indian, are characterised by their closed nature. So both sides try to open
lines for their major pieces.

._._._._
jJj._J_J
._.j._J_
_._Ij._.
._I_I_._
_._._._.
Ii._.iIi
_._._._.
One of the basic structures in the Kings Indian Defence

37

Chapter 5 - Isolated pawns

IQP (I)

._._._M_
jJ_._JjJ
._._J_._
_._._._.
._.i._._
_._._._.
Ii._.iIi
_._._.k.
Specific characteristics
The white queens pawn is separated from
the remaining pawns. It is not protected
by a neighbour and is thus a welcome
target for the black pieces. The square
in front of it, d5, cannot be controlled
by white pawns. It serves as an active
outpost for opposing blockading pieces.
As compensation for this weakness
White obtains an advantage in space on
the kingside and the central outposts e5
and e4 for his pieces.
The e6-pawn somewhat cramps the
black position. The queens bishop
cannot be developed on the c8-h3
diagonal. If it is fianchettoed, however,
the e6-point loses its support, so that
attacking motifs such as f3-e5xf7
and then or xe6 come into
consideration. In any case Black requires
several moves to develop the bishop.
This means that White as a rule obtains
a lead in development. In addition, the
pawn on e6 gets in the way of a transfer
of the black pieces to the kingside.

the queens bishop to g5 or f4. White


tries to exert pressure on the d5-square
(c4). Alternatively, there might be an
attack on the kingside, frequently with
the queen-bishop battery d3-c2 in
conjunction with g5 or even with the
manoeuvre e5 and then f3(d3)-h3.
We will go into this later in the game
Smyslov-Karpov.

._Td.tM_
jL_.lJ_J
.jS_JsJ_
_._._.b.
._.i._._
i.nQ_N_.
.iB_.iIi
_._Rr.k.

Sample game: Smyslov-Karpov, Leningrad 1971

White usually does without creating an


airhole with h2-h3 or g2-g3, so as to
be able to bring the major pieces into
position on the third rank for an attack
against the black kingside.
A frequently recurring motif is the
advance of the IQP, often involving a
pawn sacrifice:

T_Ld.tM_
_._.lJjJ
J_._Js._
sJ_I_._.
._._._._
i.n._N_.
.iB_.iIi
r.bQr.k.

Plans for White

Sample game: Kramnik-Anand, Dos Hermanas 1999

White disposes of perfect squares for


the development of his minor pieces.
c3 and f3 are obligatory; according
to the situation the kings bishop will
be actively developed to c4 or d3 and

With the help of 13.d5 the pieces


develop their full effect. At the same
time the coordination of the black forces
is disrupted. Later we will analyse the
problems which result from this.
63

Chapter 7 - Passed pawns

The passed pawn in the middle- We already came across this topic in the
game
chapter on knights in game 4, AtalikWe were impressed by two games of the
German grandmaster Artur Jussupow.
35 Catalan Opening
Artur Jussupow
Sergey Dolmatov

2450
2495

Graz 1978 (6)

1.c4 e6 2.g3 d5 3.g2 f6 4.f3


e7 5.0-0 0-0 6.d4 dxc4 7.c2
d7 8.e5 c6 9.xc6 xc6
10.e3 a5 11.d1 c6 12.d2
b5 13.b3 cxb3 14.axb3 b6
15.a3 b4 16.b2 ac8 17.e4
fd8 18.b1 c5 19.a2 c6
20.d5 exd5 21.exd5 d4 22.c4
c7 23.xd4 cxd4 24.xd4 c5
25.d2

Up until this point the game has not


been particularly exciting. A slight
white advantage from the opening has
been evaporating more and more.

._Tt._M_
j.d._JjJ
._._.s._
_.lI_._.
.jN_._._
_I_._.i.
Q_.r.iBi
r._._.k.
Black to move

How should he continue?


The opponent has a passed pawn, which
has to be stopped. The ideal blockading
piece is the knight. If we bring together
both parts of the puzzle we will quickly
find the most important candidate
move:
25...e8

Hickl. Since it is extremely important,


here are some basics again:

._._._._
jJ_._J_J
._.s._J_
_.jIj._.
._I_I_._
_._B_._.
Ii._._Ii
_._._._.
analysis diagram: the ideal square for a knight

This structure could have arisen from


the Kings Indian Defence. White played
f2-f4, went on to exchange on e5 and
Black recaptured with the d-pawn.
Let us first familiarise ourselves with
Whites plans. On which flank will
he become active? Which pawn lever
should be aimed for?
It is probably not easy for you to con
struct a plan. Perhaps play down the
semi-open f-file? Probably not, since
even tripling the major pieces does not
produce a threat worth the mention.
The centre is locked, so we are left
with the queenside. The possible lever
b2-b4 could be met with ...b7-b6, after
which the change in the structure is
insignificant.
And now Black. The knight is exerting
pressure on the two pawns c4 and e4,
protecting f7 and supporting the levers
...b7-b5 and ...f7-f5. Of these, ...f7-f5 is
the less pleasant for White. A capture
leads to the powerful pawn pair e5/
f5; not doing so can under certain
circumstances be met with ...f5-f4 and
the activation of the kingside majority.
In all these considerations the white
109

The Power of Pawns

The fianchetto-holes

._._._._
_._._._.
._._._._
j._._._.
.j._._._
_I_._._.
I_I_._._
_K_._._.
This formation can arise if after
the fianchetto of the bishop the
neighbouring central pawn (here d2) is
swapped off.

Specific characteristics
The dark-square weaknesses on c3 and
a3 are striking. They were fixed by the
well-supported black b-pawn. If one
imagines black minor pieces on a3 or
c3 or doubled major pieces on the
c-file dark clouds soon appear on the
horizon.
Our tip: think things through before
making an airhole for your king. The
rule of thumb: if in doubt, move the
rook pawn!
The reason is simple: in a sound
structure with pawns on a2, b2 and c2
the move a2-a3 does not create a weak
square; b3 is after all protected by the
c2-pawn.
If we play b2-b3, then two points
lose their pawn protection, a3 and c3.
Consequently they must be guarded by
pieces or even by the king itself. Very
often that is not something you want
to do sometimes it even constitutes a
serious disadvantage.

142

Plans for White


White has problems with the safety of
his king. How great these are depends
on the remaining pieces. In each case
he must bear in mind the opponents
plans: Black will be directing minor
pieces towards a3 and c3 and doubling
major pieces on the a-file in order to
open the latter with the lever ...a5-a4.
White has too little space to hold out
against this. As long as the king is not
too badly endangered, space for the
defence can be created by c2-c3. The
holes may remain, but nevertheless the
rooks get opportunities for deployment
on the c-file and if required can protect
the a2-pawn along the second rank.

Plans for Black


In addition to the attacking ideas
described above, Black has two
other ways to take advantage of the
unfortunate situation on the white
queenside.
On one hand, the c-pawn is backward
on a semi-open file and thus a welcome
target for thorough siege by the major
pieces.
On the other, White is often under
threat of still suffering from the
weaknesses even in the endgame. The
pawn majority on the queenside needs
the support of a piece to create a passed
pawn. Sometimes Black will exploit this.
See on this subject game 51, KasparovAndersson.

Conclusion
The weaknesses on c3 and a3 should be
avoided for as long as the opponent still
has available the means to exploit them.

You might also like