- Find The Right Plan.pdf - Anatoly Karpov
In this summary, we'll explore the key takeaways from Karpov's book, providing you with practical advice on how to improve your own chess skills.
This essay explores Karpov’s style, his best-known games and rivalries, the theoretical contributions he made to opening and endgame practice, and the pedagogical legacy he leaves for players seeking to improve their own planning. I argue that Karpov’s career illustrates a single coherent principle: chess excellence built on superior judgment, prophylaxis, structure, and the disciplined execution of long-term plans. I then offer practical takeaways for players who want to bring Karpov-like planning into their own games. Anatoly Karpov - Find The Right Plan.pdf
One of the defining characteristics of Karpov’s approach is the concept of prophylaxis. In the context of finding a plan, Karpov argues that the best offensive move is often one that prevents the opponent’s plan. He teaches that chess is a dialogue, not a monologue. To find the right plan, a player must constantly ask, "What does my opponent want to do?" By stifling the opponent’s counterplay, Karpov creates a scenario where his own strategic aims can be executed without friction. This leads to the "boa constrictor" style for which he is famous: a slow, suffocating pressure where the opponent eventually runs out of safe moves. In this summary, we'll explore the key takeaways
Find the Right Plan with Anatoly Karpov by Anatoly Karpov and Anatoly Matsukevich helps club-level players transition to strategic planning by utilizing seven core positional evaluation principles. The manual emphasizes the "Law of Domination" and prophylactic thinking, offering 72 annotated examples to illustrate methods for creating objective, long-term plans. A detailed review of this, and related works, can be found at Review: Find the Right Plan with Anatoly Karpov - Chess.com 9 Mar 2020 — I then offer practical takeaways for players who
After studying this PDF, you will no longer ask “What now?” in quiet positions. Instead, you will ask three questions Karpov always asked: