![]() I set a clock to time myself, filled notebooks with variations, tried to visualize the final positions – Who was ahead materially? Could I work out the win? Find the checkmate? "I believe the most important course of training I undertook was selfmotivated (no one had advised me) and difficult: I tried to simulate tournament conditions with studies and problems from books and magazines. ![]() I was even more encouraged when I saw Kotov recommend it is a training tool, and then what really convinced me was a quote in Chess Visualization Course: I first read about Stoyko in an article by Dan Heisman. Compare your analysis against the author's. ![]() You can do it by moving the pieces, or only by visualizing. Basically you find a complicated tactical position that is well-annotated. ![]() There are many articles on google about Stoyko exercises - what it is, and how to do it. ![]()
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