trw wrote on 05/07/10 at 20:06:51:
I have a different problem with focus issues.
During the game, I see very very far. I'm actually proud of my calculation skill. But then once the game becomes clear and i'm winning... I relax and I quit focusing. I can't seem to won the won game. And i'm not talking about slightly winning features either. I mean up a full rook or a queen vs knight. Something elementary that I think most 1200s would win. I feel embarrassed and frustrated with chess for weeks. To play very very well and throw it all away on a ?????????? level move right before the finish line. I know the saying is "the hardest thing to win is the won game" but I have somehow managed to take that to extremes. I think it might be a psychological problem or something.... but any advice or books worth reading would be appreciated.
To avoid such painful experiences (and we all have them, but some more than others), in winning positions I try to be even
more systematic and careful than usual. Identify the weak points of my position that could conceivably allow a swindle. Look at every possible defence and counterattack. Something like the Kotov "tree" method, but with liberal double-checking.
But probably you know this already and it's really an attention problem. Kotov and others discuss the
Blumenfeld rule, meant to be followed on every move except in extreme time trouble: When you're done thinking and ready to move, take one last look at the board
"through the eyes of a patzer"... and discover the simple tactic you have missed before it's too late!
It's also not a good idea to enjoy a winning position too much at the board; until the opponent resigns I have work to do. I can be relaxed and happy
after the game.
I have blundered in winning positions sometimes, usually when I've been lazy on my regular tactical puzzles. So now I try to get 1/2 hour of tactics training (easy to medium difficulty) every day the last week before a tournament. It doesn't necessarily make me a better player, but it helps me catch myself before I blunder and thus at least maintain my level.