Today at US Women's championship, we've had 3 winning endgames butchered by prodigies with Black and curious post-game interviews where Ashley and Seirawan stressed how many points young guns lose in the endgame and shamed them like a school teacher shames a student who has failed a homework
It was clear from the interviews with the girls that American schoolgirl prodigies' chess prep is not a rigidly planned multi-hour routine.
I've already
addressed WFM Jennifer Yu's game in the LC thread.
When Maurice Ashley asked Yu (the interview is at around 5 h 29 min in the recorded video) how much she studies endgames, she admitted that she hadn't counted it, though she said she does do these studies systematically.
NM Carissa Yip has got criticised for her dubious decision vs FM Alisa Melekhina (I'm more of a fan of the latter
, but nevertheless).
In this equal position, Alisa made two mistakes in a row: 42. b3? Rc2 (43. Ng1 d3 44. Rxd3 Bb5 was the lesser of evils for White) 43. Kf1? Rxe2! (which I don't mind as Alisa is now rather focused on law studies anyway
) 44. Kxe2 Bxg4+ 45. Kd2 Ba5+ 46. Kc2.
Here, Carissa thought for 12 minutes (!) while the commentators were wondering why there's even room for thought (two bishops are so strong vs a rook in an open endgame), and then took on d1 instead of h3 because she thought 'two passers should win', making the position easily drawn for White as it took time for Black's king to come into action.
When, to finish the interview, Maurice asked Carissa what lessons she had learned from the championship, she got confused again and said she had 'not really' learned anything, though, as Maurice pointed out, at least the cumulative power of two bishops is the lesson to be learnt.
So there appears to be quite a mess in her head, the trainers should address it.
Regarding WIM Agata Bykovtsev, Maurice pointed out that, vs WGM Katerina Nemcova, she should have kept opposite colour bishops as the attacker (Ba8) instead of trading into an endgame (Qxf4) here
and then Yasser pointed out that her winning plan in the rook endgame should have been
to take on f2, move the rook to b2 behind White's passer and advance the 3-to-1 pawn majority on the kingside (instead, she played Rc6 and drew), the interview revealed that Agata had 6 hours' worth of school homework to be done after the game and was coping with both pursuits only due to 'tons and tons of Red Bull'.
So, though her subjects as a senior will be 'easier', right now, her chess prep is getting thrown under the bus so far and she's damaging the health with an energetic drink, whereas e.g. the top rated FIDE girl, WGM Aleksandra Goryachkina, chose a special low-load P.E. college to continue her general education while focusing hard on chess.
Somehow I'm aware of those theoretical considerations (opposite colour bishops in the middlegame, the universal importance of piece activity in the endgame) but some prodigy masters seemingly aren't
The interviews with Bykovtsev and (right after that) Yip start at around 4 h 50 min in the recorded video.
This all makes me think about the sad trade-off between chess and real-life earnings, and seemingly in most cases, chess prodigies who would become an IM/GM with proper effort choose real education to earn more money...
Examples are the mentioned
lawyer Alisa Melekhina and also Alexandra Wiener,
once the US girls' champion and a soccer amateur but now
a financial analyst and
Caruana's 'very close friend'.
Last edited by coon74; 04-23-2016 at 11:44 PM.