A
couple months ago a young man in his 20s with
a 940 rating contacted me for lessons. He had
only been playing for a short time, was a very
intelligent guy, and already had solid tactical
skills (probably 1500+ tactics). Why then was
he only rated 940? I was interested in answering
this question so I accepted “Stu”
as a student, and our quest for his improvement
began. During one tournament, Stu was playing
a 1200 player. He was winning the game easily
but, in the thick of battle, made some blunder
and lost. Afterwards Mr. 1200 said, “I heard
you are taking lessons from Silman. Don’t
bother! Instead, just read RAPID CHESS IMPROVEMENT
by Michael de la Maza and you’ll get good,
just like I have!”
A few weeks later Stu was playing
another 900 player. Stu achieved a Lucena (I had
taught him that it’s easily winning), forgot
how to win it (sigh…) and drew. Afterwards
his opponent said, “Yeah, that position’s
just a draw. By the way, you know how I got so
good? I read RAPID CHESS IMPROVEMENT.”
Aside from the absurdity of a 900
and 1200 player claiming vast improvement due
to this book (and both players showed no tactical
or positional skills whatsoever in the games mentioned),
I admit to being intrigued by the repeated mention
of a book I knew nothing about. Thus, I bought
it, read it, and now completely understand where
these two (deluded) gentlemen were coming from.
Mr. de la Maza is a player who (at
around 1321) suffered badly from elementary tactical
oversights and, rather than lie back and accept
eternal misery, decided to do something about
it. Creating his own tactical study plan, he followed
it with incredible verve and leapt up “…400
USCF rating points in my first year of tournament
play and almost 300 rating points in my second
year of play.” This, and a little luck (you
always need some luck to win a tournament!), helped
him win the U2000 section of the 2001 World Open,
which netted him a $10,000.00 prize. He then retired
from active play with a 2041 rating.
That’s a nice success story,
and it certainly makes the average tournament
player salivate in lustful desire. Any student
that looks at the de la Maza book will ask, “Can
I improve as fast as he did? Can I win $10,000?”
Mr. de la Maza starts out by doing
something I can’t stand: he tells you, over
and over and over (page after page after page),
what he’s going to do for you without teaching
you anything. This technique is popular in many
self-help and how-to books. It serves as page
filler, it revs the reader into a frenzy, and
it obscures the fact that the author actually
has very little of worth to say. In short, RAPID
CHESS IMPROVEMENT is less instructive than motivational.
It incites emotion, promises far more than could
or should be promised, and ultimately is nothing
more than pie in the sky in view of the true lesson
he’s imparting: Study Tactics and Work Your
Ass Off!
Mr. de la Maza’s well-intentioned
manipulation is based on a sincere desire to help
those who suffered as he did. I respect that.
And I can’t help but agree with his true
(sometimes “coded”) message: Tactical
skill acquired by hard work will make you much
stronger.
How much work did de la Maza do?
Let’s have him tell us: “It took me
about twenty months to achieve a rating of 1900
and during that time I studied two to three hours
a day for a total of approximately 1500 hours
of study. In addition, I played approximately
200 chess games, each of which took approximately
three hours for a total of 2100 hours of study
time.”
I hate to break this to the
many chess hopefuls out there, but EVERY chess
writer/teacher begs the student to master basic
tactics. And it doesn’t take a genius to
agree that hard work will always inspire some
sort of improvement (sometimes small, sometimes
enormous). The problem (As mentioned in my article:
BUILDING A BASE OF CHESS UNDERSTANDING. To see
it, click HERE)
is that very few people are able to offer up this
much time, effort, and dedication to chess due
to the constraints of job, family, children, and
life in general.
I’m reminded of the ever-renewing
slew of young starlets who arrive in Los Angeles
from farms, towns, and cities all over the U.S.
Each has a dream, and every one of them knows
that they WILL be that one in 20,000 that will
succeed. Once they hit the streets of Hollywood,
a variety of manipulative, shady characters meet
them, tell them that he’ll turn them into
the star that they know they’re preordained
to be, and…well, it’s not pretty.
Preying on people’s hopes and dreams is
one of the oldest scams in the world, and this
desire to be “a great chessplayer”
makes such dreamers swoon at de la Maza’s
inspirational words.
Some years ago I received a serious
flier that recommended you quit your job and enter
the “lucrative field of chess.” Upon
reading this, my heart stopped and I had to push
a finger into the wall socket to regain a beat.
Imagine the déjà vu when I read
these de la Maza words on page 47 of his book:
“If you do not have access a computer you
should make every effort to get one. New computers
can be purchased with a monitor for under $400
and used computers can be purchased with a monitor
for under $200. The money you spend will be immediately
returned to you when you start winning prizes
at tournaments.”
Note how he constantly pushes “hope”
– hope that you’ll get good, hope
that it will be easy, hope that you’ll win
lots of money. His non-stop blither about “chess
vision” makes one squint into a mirror and
imagine that a super hero is looking back, while
his promises to the gullible chess student of
hundreds of rating points in one year and a nice
income from chess prizes is, in my opinion, almost
criminal and is most certainly ignorant.
Most horrifying, perhaps (how to
pick one horrific moment over another?), is his
sample game (one of his own in which he plays
White), where he shows how one should think move
by move:
Opponent’s threat: No significant
threats.
Decide move: 1.e4 of course!
1.e4 c5
Opponent’s threat: No significant
threats, but watch out for …Qa5.
Decide move: No tactics. 2.Nf3 or 2.Nc3 are
both reasonable.
2.Nf3 d6
Opponent’s threat: No significant
threats.
Decide move: No tactics. 3.e5 is most shocking.
Continue development with 3.Nc3.
3.Nc3 Nf6
Opponent’s threat: No significant
threats.
Decide move: No tactics. Continue to develop
with 4.Bb5+.
4.Bb5+ Bd7
Opponent’s threat: No significant
threats but light-squared Bishop is attacked.
Decide move: No tactics.
5.Bxd7+ Qxd7
Opponent’s threat: No significant
threats.
Decide move: No tactics. 6.e5 continues to be
quite interesting, at least in part because
it creates a crazy position that Black will
not know: 6…dxe5 7.Nxe5 Qe6 8.f4. Stay
safe with 6.0-0.
6.0-0 Nc6
Opponent’s threat: …Nd4
is unpleasant.
Decide move: No tactics. Exchange pawns and
open up center with 7.d4.
Is this guy kidding? Is he trying
to turn us into soulless chess machines made of
flesh? I half expected him to write (once a threat
finally appeared): “Danger, Will Robinson!
Danger!”
My final spasm associated with RAPID
CHESS IMPROVEMENT (or should I rename it: RAPID
CHESS IMPOVERISHMENT) is the 16 pages he devotes
to reader’s praise. The title of this chapter
is “Success With Rapid Chess Improvement.”
I read the letters with interest but soon that
interest turned to incredulity. Of the more than
16 letters he lists, only two people (perhaps
I missed one?) claim any rating gain! Instead,
we get “success” stories like this:
“Excellent!”
NM Spencer Lower
“I would like to thank you
for creating your systematic chess…I am
totally stunned and surprised about this whole
new idea – and I will of course try it
myself!”
Torsten Hellmann
“I read your [RAPID CHESS
IMPROVEMENT program] and really enjoyed it.
I think that it will be a great help to me.”
Brian Summer
Perhaps I should write a book called,
GRANDMASTER IN TWO WEEKS where I will recommend
buying a Fischer signature (don’t worry,
you’ll regain the spent money in chess prizes),
sitting on it for two weeks straight (no getting
up allowed!), and then heading for the nearest
international event where you can take your rightful
place as a world beater. Letters would pour in
like: “I’m still sitting, but I can’t
wait for the two weeks to be up so I can be World
Champion!” or “When I find time to
sit like that I know it will make me a great player!”
Everyone clearly loves the idea
of easy and rapid improvement (who wouldn’t?),
and they all can’t wait for those rating
points to pour in (kind of reminds me of those
late-night infomercials about instant wealth).
Yet, hope alone won’t get the job done.
The simple truth is, everyone has
his own individual needs, weaknesses, and strengths.
When I get a new student, I look at his games
in an effort to see what HIS individual problem
is. Then I try to cure that particular problem,
while not forgetting to give him healthy doses
of information in other areas of chess thought.
Many players have tactical abilities far beyond
their rating, but are positionally pathetic. Others
are, indeed, helpless in the face of tactics.
And others have problems such as lack of patience
or the feeling that all games need to be decided
by a kingside attack or a trick.
Another thing that de la Maza didn’t
mention (he was most likely unaware of it) is
that many tactical errors occur after a strategically
poor position has been reached. Confusion and/or
panic sets in, the player has no idea what he’s
supposed to do, and a blunder follows. In fact,
this same thing happens at high levels, where
a grandmaster gets himself into positional trouble,
despairs in the face of helplessness, and misses
an obvious tactic. This very common problem isn’t
about tactics at all.
A study regimen MUST be created
for the individual in question. And due to this
truth, I can (VERY reservedly!) recommend de la
Maza’s book to those that are falling apart
tactically AND who are willing to work like dogs
to eradicate the problem (and those hard working
individuals will quite likely experience chess
improvement of some kind). For those that need
a cheerleader/drill sergeant/motivational speaker
to get them started, de la Maza is there to lead
you to the Promised Land of robotic tactical acumen.
But if your main problem lies elsewhere, or if
you have limited time to devote to chess study
(translation: if you have a life), then other
books, (real) teachers, ideas, etc. need to be
made use of.
Winning by trickery without understanding
the game at all is nothing less than pathetic.
Yes, we all need tricks now and then to save us
from certain doom, but to play for a cheap tactic
from move one on is NOT chess. By all means, study
tactics as often as possible, but don’t
allow yourself to look at a grandmaster game and
understand nothing whatsoever about what’s
going on. To avoid this state of “chess
existence without beauty,” one must seek
balance. Understand a couple openings (don’t
memorize, understand the ideas of your opening),
understand basic strategic concepts, learn endgame
basics, and master key tactical motifs. All this
can be done at your own pace, and you CAN improve
without the use of snake oil.
Let’s take a look at a letter
I received:
The reason for his letter
is to thank you. I began playing chess some
years ago when I was already about 50 years
of age. I have read a plethora of chess books
in the meantime but none of them with real benefit.
They were either too sophisticated or too simple
with too few explanations. I found CT-Art on
CD ROM very useful, but in spite of improving
my tactical skills I lost too many games without
knowing what actually was going on. Then I found
your book The
Amateur’s Mind. Indeed,
that was the book that I
was waiting and looking for. After having read
it, my playing strength dramatically increased
and since then I have more fun when I play chess
because I do understand what I am doing and
what I have to do in a given position.
Dr. Koechel
Germany
I get hundreds of letters from students
worldwide that gain hundreds of points in a few
months from reading my “strategically oriented”
books. Others don’t improve drastically
in tournament play, but simply enjoy the game
more because they can suddenly understand ideas
utilized by the chess greats. This is a VERY important
point (I’m not pushing my books, I’m
trying to make a point!): they enjoy the game
more because, instead of looking for tricks while
not having a clue about what’s happening
on a broader scale, they are taught that chess
has many hidden depths that ARE accessible to
them with proper training.
When all is said and done, I can’t
recommend RAPID CHESS IMPROVEMENT
(a book that, in my view, offers a philosophically
bankrupt vision of what chess is). It smacks of
“the blind leading the blind.” But,
as I said earlier, his book might prove useful
for some.
For those that wish to read
more about my views on proper chess coaching and
how beginning tactics should be studied, click
HERE.
YOU
CAN FIND THIS BOOK AT

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