(3) PEÓN PASADO: Aplicación en Finales de Alfiles de Diferente Color

OPPOSITE-COLORED BISHOPS ENDINGS WITH PAWNS In this video, we analyze the importance of creating pawns in opposite-colored bishop endings. We'll see the importance of creating two separate, passed pawns that the bishop cannot stop because they lie on different diagonals. Conversely, we see that a bishop can stop several pawns if they all cross the diagonal controlled by that piece. It can even defend its own passed pawn if it also lies on this diagonal. We'll also see the importance of each piece's role in this endgame: the defending king must stop the enemy's passed pawn; meanwhile, the bishop must defend its pawns, facing the enemy king and pawns almost single-handedly. We will also observe a very important method that saves the defender: "Grabbing the King by the arm" (which is almost equivalent to saying that the defending Bishop must be very active). All of this will help us understand the game between Kurajica and Karpov, especially the opposite-colored bishop endgame and the appearance of passed pawns (analyzed by Dvoretsky and Karsten Muller). Follow the Escaques y Trebejos channel on WhatsApp: https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029Vb7d... Telegram: https://t.me/EscaquesYTrebejos