Winning in Equal Positions with GM Tornike Sanikidze (10h Running Time) 

Modern Chess Team     July 1, 2022

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Content  (27 Articles)

Introduction and Free Preview  Free
Chapter 1 - Two Bishops vs. Bishop and Knight (part I)  Closed
Chapter 2 - Two Bishops vs. Bishop and Knight (part II)  Closed
Chapter 3 - Middlegame Plans Counterplay  Closed
Chapter 4 - Middlegame Creativity and Amazing Rook Game  Closed
Chapter 5 - Opening Preparation – Wrong Decision in Rook Endgame  Closed
Chapter 6 - Maneuvering in the Middlegame  Closed
Chapter 7 - Totally Drawish Endgame  Closed
Chapter 8 - Maneuvering Improvement in the Middlegame  Closed
Chapter 9 - Equal Rook Endgame  Closed
Chapter 10 - Opening, Middlegame, Equal Rook Endgame  Closed
Chapter 11 - Improper Defense in the Endgame  Closed
Chapter 12 - Rare Checkmating Ideas in Rook Endgame  Closed
Chapter 13 - Incredible Win in Rook Endgame  Closed
Chapter 14 - Fighting for Win in Equal Position  Closed
Chapter 15 - How to fight in a Bad Position  Closed
Chapter 16 - Middlegame Fight and Mistakes in Calculation  Closed
Chapter 17 - Repeating moves – Nice Rook Endgame  Closed
Chapter 18 - Equal Position after Opening  Closed
Chapter 19 - How to Create Weaknesses  Closed
Chapter 20 - Home Preparation  Closed
Chapter 21 - Fight till the End  Closed
Chapter 22 - Worse, Equal, and Win!  Closed
Chapter 23 - Fighting for Win in Endgame  Closed
Chapter 24 - Create Weaknesses in Endgame  Closed
Chapter 25 - Win in Rook Endgame  Closed
Extras  Closed

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Winning in Equal Positions with GM Tornike Sanikidze

They said it about Rubinstein and Capablanca in the 1920s…

About Petrosian and Smyslov in the 1960s…

About Karpov in the 1990s…

And about Carlsen today.

“He somehow wins completely equal positions…but how?”

What sorcery are these guys involved in, to win positions that other masters regard as completely drawn?

And what if you developed this ability?

What would it do for your chess results?

This almost “magical” chess technique has never been broken down formally, yet that is precisely what we asked GM Tornike Sanikidze to do.

We asked him to break this “winning from nowhere” skill down into its core components and into easy-to-digest lessons that club players can pick up in a few hours.

And yes, that’s how the brand new GM Sanikidze’s Winning in Equal Positions course was born.

You’ll get 10 hours of HD video training, detailed PGNs to review each topic, as well as the online practicum…

At the club level, this is such a rare skill to develop. So, grab a copy and start squeezing those “drawn” positions into wins!

Here is what you will learn:

In our opinion, this course is a no-brainer!

You get to discover all of the small details that go into those “impossible” wins, that only a few top GMs seem to be capable of.

Maybe you won’t suddenly have Carlsen’s technique afterwards…but your chess technique will be transformed completely!

Outline:

Chapter 1. Two Bishops vs. Bishop and Knight (part I)
Chapter 2. Two Bishops vs. Bishop and Knight (part II)
Chapter 3. Middlegame Plans Counterplay
Chapter 4. Middlegame Creativity and Amazing Rook Game
Chapter 5. Opening Preparation – Wrong Decision in Rook Endgame
Chapter 6. Manoeuvring in the Middlegame
Chapter 7. Totally Drawish Endgame
Chapter 8. Manoeuvring Improvement in the Middlegame
Chapter 9. Equal Rook Endgame
Chapter 10. Opening, Middlegame, Equal Rook Endgame
Chapter 11. Improper Defense in the Endgame
Chapter 12. Rare Checkmating Ideas in Rook Endgame
Chapter 13. Incredible Win in Rook Endgame
Chapter 14. Fighting for Win in Equal Position
Chapter 15. How to fight in a Bad Position
Chapter 16. Middlegame Fight and Mistakes in Calculation
Chapter 17. Repeating moves – Nice Rook Endgame
Chapter 18. Equal Position after Opening
Chapter 19. How to Create Weaknesses
Chapter 20. Home Preparation
Chapter 21. Fight till the End
Chapter 22. Worse, Equal, and Win!
Chapter 23. Fighting for Win in Endgame
Chapter 24. Create Weaknesses in Endgame
Chapter 25. Win in Rook Endgame

About the Author:

GM Tornike Sanikidze [2616 FIDE]

is a Georgian chess grandmaster. He was awarded the titles of International Master in 2005 and Grandmaster in 2008. GM Sanikidze won the Georgian championship in 2009.

He has represented Georgia at the Chess Olympiad in 2012 in Istambul as well as in 2016 in Baku.