IMJohnCox wrote on 02/13/07 at 10:54:51:
But does it matter? I can't think of a single occasion on which I've had any of the classic 'knowledge' endgames - R & P -v- R, R f&h -v- R, R and a pawn -v- R with fgh each, R & B -v- R, those R & P's -v- B & P's fortresses, Q -v- R, Q -v- R and pawns fortresses, R -v- 3 Ps mutual zugzwangs, and so on. I suppose I've had the odd Lucena, and once a R v Pawns endgame with a thematic trick (which I didn't know but stumbled into). Maybe I've just been lucky and I'm in for a horrible retribution in due course.
That matches my experience too, even the R v P one where my opponent got a draw by promoting to a Knight which I hadn't considered when I went into the line.
I've been on the wrong side of R+B vs R and lost it. I looked up the defensive technique afterwards, but might have to wait another 10 years for it to come up again.
I've studied endings quite a lot, and I know I throw away a lot of points through poor ending play but it seems to be done before I get to these theoretical positions.
In tournaments, often there is one game left with lots of specators and I've seen these theortetical postions come up and seen them misplayed (e.g. a 2000+ rated play who didn't know how to build a bridge) and have thought I'd hate to be in that position, so I think studying them is more for psychological comfort rather than practical use. Hmm, I kind of think that's the same with studying openings.
There are some endgame specialists, but it seems even GMs make a lot of mistakes in endings, and even in their analysis of them, so there's hope for us all.