peunit3-2chess-170112121825.pdf

CHESS
MR. CARLO JUSTINO J. LUNA
Malabanias Integrated School
Angeles City
PHYSICAL EDUCATION
Unit 3 – Indoor Recreational Activities
HISTORY
Brief History
of Chess
ORIGIN
• Chess is a game that has been played for
centuries and was thought to have
originated in India over the 15th
century.
• Long ago, it was considered a game
reserved only for Kings and members
of the upper classes.
• Nowadays, chess is played by common
people even at early age.
Brief History
of Chess
ORIGIN
• The modern design of chess pieces
bears the name Staunton, who was an
English master in the mid-18OO's.
• These are the type of pieces that are now
used in all tournaments worldwide.
Brief History
of Chess
ANDERSSEN
• London Tourney – the first
international chess tournament played in
1851
• Adolf Anderssen – a German who
won the game, London Tourney.
• He became the unofficial best chess player
of the world because he did not receive
any award or title.
Brief History
of Chess
MORPHY
• Paul Morphy – the first great
American-born chess player
• Paul traveled to Europe in the 185O's,
where he beat all challengers, including
Adolf Anderssen.
• However, the English champion of the time
(Staunton) refused to play with him, so
Morphy never became a world chess
champ.
Brief History
of Chess
STEINITZ
• The first official championship chess
tournament was played in 1866 in
London, with sand clocks to restrict the
length of a game.
• Steinitz – a Bohemian (Czechoslovakian)
Jew who won the game
• He became the world's first official chess
champion, holding this title until 1894.
Brief History
of Chess
TODAY
• Recently, Russia dominates the game of
chess. This results from the establishment
of government schools for talented chess
players after the communist revolution of
1917.
• Since 1927, many of the top chess players
have been citizens of the former USSR, and
include: Tal, Alekhine, Petrosian, Spassky,
Smyslov, Anatoli Karpov, and Gary
Kasparov.
GOAL
GOAL
• Chess is a game played between two
opponents on opposite sides of a board
containing 64 squares of alternating
colors. Each player has 16 pieces: 1
king, 1 queen, 2 rooks, 2 bishops, 2 knights,
and 8 pawns.
• The goal of the game is to checkmate
the other king. Checkmate happens when
the king is in a position to be captured (in
check) and cannot escape from capture.
CHESS
PIECES
CHESS
PIECES Pieces
on the
Board
White
Diagram
Pieces
Black
Diagram
Pieces
King Queen Bishop Knight Rook Pawn
King
& Queen
King Queen
⊙The King’s crown has a
rounded shape. King’s has a
cross on top of their crown.
⊙The Queen’s crown has
a pointed shape.
Bishop
⊙The shape of the Bishop used in printed chess
diagrams is based on the Bishop’s Mitre, a
liturgical headpiece worn by the bishop when
exercising his office.
⊙Two bands called “lappers” hang from the
back of the Mitre down onto the shoulders.
A Bishops’ Mitre
Clipart courtesy FCIT, http://etc.usf.edu/clipart
Chess Bishop
for print diagrams
These are
lappers, not
“feet”
The cleft
between the front
and back of the
Mitre became the
diagonal cut in the
Bishop chess piece.
Knight
⊙The shape of the Knight used in
printed chess diagrams is the head
of a Knight’s horse.
Statue, Doncaster Knights
Rugby Club
© Copyright Dave Pickersgill and licensed for
reuse
Chess Knight
for print diagrams
Rook
⊙ The shape of the Rook used in printed
chess diagrams is a circular tower
from a castle.
Winsor Castle
© Derek A R., 2005 licensed for reuse
Chess Rook
for print diagrams
Pawn
⊙Swiss infantry formed pike squares of 100 infantry men
in a 10 x 10 array, each holding a long pointed staff. A
well-drilled pike square was impenetrable by cavalry
and very mobile.
⊙Notice how the pikeman’s helmet and armor
looks like a pawn.
Pikeman’s Armor, 1600-1630 A.D.
© mharrsch, licensed for reuse
Chess Pawn
for print diagrams
Pike
Square
CHESS BASICS
CHESS
BASICS
⊙How to Set Up the Chess Board
⊙Basic Rules
 How the Pieces Move
 Rules for Castling
 En Passant Pawn Captures
 Checkmate – How a game is won
 The Ways to Draw a Game
CHESS
BASICS
“White to the right”
Put the white corner to
the right side
Switching this can make a
game invalid.
If the board has letters,
they should read A-H for
the white player.
SETTING UP A CHESS BOARD
CHESS
BASICS
“Queen on her color”
⊙ White Queen is on a
white square.
⊙ Black Queen is on a
shaded square.
“A lady wants her shoes
to match her dress.”
Check this before you
start the game.
SETTING UP THE PIECES
CHESS
BASICS
“Add the pieces in
alphabetical order, going
out from the King &
Queen.”
Bishops next to K & Q
Knights next to Bishops
Rooks in the Corners
Switching a Bishop and
a Knight is a common mistake in
setting up the board.
PIECES IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER
CHESS
BASICS
Now the board
is ready to play
chess!
ADD THE PAWNS IN FRONT
CHESS
BASICS
 White (corner) to the right
 Queen on her color
 Add pieces alphabetically from the
center
 Pawns in Front
RULES FOR SETTING UP BOARD
HOW THE PIECES
MOVE
Rooks move to vacant
squares in a
horizontal or vertical
straight line.
Rooks must stop
before their own
pieces, or they can
capture an
opponent’s piece and
occupy that square.
MOVING ROOKS
Bishops move to
vacant squares in a
diagonal straight line.
Bishops must stop
before their own
pieces, or they can
capture an
opponent’s piece and
occupy that square.
MOVING BISHOPS
Knights move in an
“L”, two squares in
one direction and one
square at a right
angle.
Knights jump over
pieces of any color.
MOVING KNIGHTS
Knights can capture opponent’s pieces, but
not their own pieces.
The Queen combines
the moves of the
Rook and the
Bishop. The Queen
moves to vacant
squares in a straight
line.
The Queen must stop
before her own pieces,
or she can capture an
opponent’s piece and
occupy that square.
MOVING THE QUEEN
The King moves
one square in any
direction, but
cannot stay in or
move to a square
under attack by an
opposing piece, or
occupy a square
that has one of his
own pieces.
MOVING THE KING
The King may
capture an
unprotected piece,
even if it is
attacking him.
Castling is done
with both the King
and Rook in the
same move.
MOVING THE KING
Pawns move
forward, either one
or two empty
squares on their
first move, and only
one empty square
after that.
MOVING PAWNS
Pawns may capture
opponent’s pieces
that are one
diagonal square in
front of it.
A Pawn cannot
capture a piece
directly in front of
it.
MOVING PAWNS
Pawns allowed able to take
an opponent’s pawn “en
passant”
(French for “in passing”).
When the opponent’s pawn
moves two squares, the pawn
can captures as if the pawn
only moves one square.
“EN PASSANT” CAPTURE
This en passant capture
MUST be done immediately
(on the very next move), or
the option to capture this
way is lost.
“EN PASSANT” CAPTURE
CASTLING
1. The King & Rook have not yet
moved in the game.
2. All squares between the King
and Rook are empty.
3. The King is not in check.
4. The King does not move to or
move over a square that is in
check.
RULES FOR CASTLING
CHECKMATE  Checkmate is when one player’s King is
threatened and there is no legal move
to meet the threat.
 The player giving checkmate wins the
game.
 A player can resign when their position
is hopeless. It is a loss, but it saves time
& shows they knew they lost.
CHECKMATE AND WHEN TO
RESIGN
DRAW
1. By agreement with your opponent
2. Repeating the same position three
(3) times, with the same person to
move and the same possible moves
3. Stalemate: The player to move has
no legal moves and is not in check
4. The 50-Move Rule: 50 moves
without a check or a piece being
captured
4 WAYS TO DRAW A GAME
DRAW
 To request a draw:
1. You must be the player to move
2. Make your move
3. Offer a draw before touching the
clock. The offer is considered on
your time, not your opponent’s time.
 If your opponent offers a draw, he
often thinks he is losing. Check what
winning chances you have.
ABOUT DRAWS
50-MOVE
DRAW
 The opposite-color
Bishops can avoid
each other, and
avoid capture by the
King forever.
 This will be a draw
eventually, if one is
not offered and
accepted.
50-MOVE DRAW EXAMPLE
PERFORMANCE
APPLICATION
1. Name each chess piece.
2. Set up the chess board.
3. Demonstrate how each chess piece
moves.
4. Demonstrate castling and en passant
capture.
5. Explain the four rules in castling.
6. Demonstrate on a chess board four
ways a chess game can end in a draw.
PERFORMANCE
THANKS!
CHESS
MR. CARLO JUSTINO J. LUNA
Malabanias Integrated School
Angeles City
PHYSICAL EDUCATION
Unit 3 – Indoor Recreational Activities
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peunit3-2chess-170112121825.pdf

  • 1. CHESS MR. CARLO JUSTINO J. LUNA Malabanias Integrated School Angeles City PHYSICAL EDUCATION Unit 3 – Indoor Recreational Activities
  • 3. Brief History of Chess ORIGIN • Chess is a game that has been played for centuries and was thought to have originated in India over the 15th century. • Long ago, it was considered a game reserved only for Kings and members of the upper classes. • Nowadays, chess is played by common people even at early age.
  • 4. Brief History of Chess ORIGIN • The modern design of chess pieces bears the name Staunton, who was an English master in the mid-18OO's. • These are the type of pieces that are now used in all tournaments worldwide.
  • 5. Brief History of Chess ANDERSSEN • London Tourney – the first international chess tournament played in 1851 • Adolf Anderssen – a German who won the game, London Tourney. • He became the unofficial best chess player of the world because he did not receive any award or title.
  • 6. Brief History of Chess MORPHY • Paul Morphy – the first great American-born chess player • Paul traveled to Europe in the 185O's, where he beat all challengers, including Adolf Anderssen. • However, the English champion of the time (Staunton) refused to play with him, so Morphy never became a world chess champ.
  • 7. Brief History of Chess STEINITZ • The first official championship chess tournament was played in 1866 in London, with sand clocks to restrict the length of a game. • Steinitz – a Bohemian (Czechoslovakian) Jew who won the game • He became the world's first official chess champion, holding this title until 1894.
  • 8. Brief History of Chess TODAY • Recently, Russia dominates the game of chess. This results from the establishment of government schools for talented chess players after the communist revolution of 1917. • Since 1927, many of the top chess players have been citizens of the former USSR, and include: Tal, Alekhine, Petrosian, Spassky, Smyslov, Anatoli Karpov, and Gary Kasparov.
  • 10. GOAL • Chess is a game played between two opponents on opposite sides of a board containing 64 squares of alternating colors. Each player has 16 pieces: 1 king, 1 queen, 2 rooks, 2 bishops, 2 knights, and 8 pawns. • The goal of the game is to checkmate the other king. Checkmate happens when the king is in a position to be captured (in check) and cannot escape from capture.
  • 13. King & Queen King Queen ⊙The King’s crown has a rounded shape. King’s has a cross on top of their crown. ⊙The Queen’s crown has a pointed shape.
  • 14. Bishop ⊙The shape of the Bishop used in printed chess diagrams is based on the Bishop’s Mitre, a liturgical headpiece worn by the bishop when exercising his office. ⊙Two bands called “lappers” hang from the back of the Mitre down onto the shoulders. A Bishops’ Mitre Clipart courtesy FCIT, http://etc.usf.edu/clipart Chess Bishop for print diagrams These are lappers, not “feet” The cleft between the front and back of the Mitre became the diagonal cut in the Bishop chess piece.
  • 15. Knight ⊙The shape of the Knight used in printed chess diagrams is the head of a Knight’s horse. Statue, Doncaster Knights Rugby Club © Copyright Dave Pickersgill and licensed for reuse Chess Knight for print diagrams
  • 16. Rook ⊙ The shape of the Rook used in printed chess diagrams is a circular tower from a castle. Winsor Castle © Derek A R., 2005 licensed for reuse Chess Rook for print diagrams
  • 17. Pawn ⊙Swiss infantry formed pike squares of 100 infantry men in a 10 x 10 array, each holding a long pointed staff. A well-drilled pike square was impenetrable by cavalry and very mobile. ⊙Notice how the pikeman’s helmet and armor looks like a pawn. Pikeman’s Armor, 1600-1630 A.D. © mharrsch, licensed for reuse Chess Pawn for print diagrams
  • 20. CHESS BASICS ⊙How to Set Up the Chess Board ⊙Basic Rules  How the Pieces Move  Rules for Castling  En Passant Pawn Captures  Checkmate – How a game is won  The Ways to Draw a Game
  • 21. CHESS BASICS “White to the right” Put the white corner to the right side Switching this can make a game invalid. If the board has letters, they should read A-H for the white player. SETTING UP A CHESS BOARD
  • 22. CHESS BASICS “Queen on her color” ⊙ White Queen is on a white square. ⊙ Black Queen is on a shaded square. “A lady wants her shoes to match her dress.” Check this before you start the game. SETTING UP THE PIECES
  • 23. CHESS BASICS “Add the pieces in alphabetical order, going out from the King & Queen.” Bishops next to K & Q Knights next to Bishops Rooks in the Corners Switching a Bishop and a Knight is a common mistake in setting up the board. PIECES IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER
  • 24. CHESS BASICS Now the board is ready to play chess! ADD THE PAWNS IN FRONT
  • 25. CHESS BASICS  White (corner) to the right  Queen on her color  Add pieces alphabetically from the center  Pawns in Front RULES FOR SETTING UP BOARD
  • 27. Rooks move to vacant squares in a horizontal or vertical straight line. Rooks must stop before their own pieces, or they can capture an opponent’s piece and occupy that square. MOVING ROOKS
  • 28. Bishops move to vacant squares in a diagonal straight line. Bishops must stop before their own pieces, or they can capture an opponent’s piece and occupy that square. MOVING BISHOPS
  • 29. Knights move in an “L”, two squares in one direction and one square at a right angle. Knights jump over pieces of any color. MOVING KNIGHTS Knights can capture opponent’s pieces, but not their own pieces.
  • 30. The Queen combines the moves of the Rook and the Bishop. The Queen moves to vacant squares in a straight line. The Queen must stop before her own pieces, or she can capture an opponent’s piece and occupy that square. MOVING THE QUEEN
  • 31. The King moves one square in any direction, but cannot stay in or move to a square under attack by an opposing piece, or occupy a square that has one of his own pieces. MOVING THE KING
  • 32. The King may capture an unprotected piece, even if it is attacking him. Castling is done with both the King and Rook in the same move. MOVING THE KING
  • 33. Pawns move forward, either one or two empty squares on their first move, and only one empty square after that. MOVING PAWNS
  • 34. Pawns may capture opponent’s pieces that are one diagonal square in front of it. A Pawn cannot capture a piece directly in front of it. MOVING PAWNS
  • 35. Pawns allowed able to take an opponent’s pawn “en passant” (French for “in passing”). When the opponent’s pawn moves two squares, the pawn can captures as if the pawn only moves one square. “EN PASSANT” CAPTURE
  • 36. This en passant capture MUST be done immediately (on the very next move), or the option to capture this way is lost. “EN PASSANT” CAPTURE
  • 37. CASTLING 1. The King & Rook have not yet moved in the game. 2. All squares between the King and Rook are empty. 3. The King is not in check. 4. The King does not move to or move over a square that is in check. RULES FOR CASTLING
  • 38. CHECKMATE  Checkmate is when one player’s King is threatened and there is no legal move to meet the threat.  The player giving checkmate wins the game.  A player can resign when their position is hopeless. It is a loss, but it saves time & shows they knew they lost. CHECKMATE AND WHEN TO RESIGN
  • 39. DRAW 1. By agreement with your opponent 2. Repeating the same position three (3) times, with the same person to move and the same possible moves 3. Stalemate: The player to move has no legal moves and is not in check 4. The 50-Move Rule: 50 moves without a check or a piece being captured 4 WAYS TO DRAW A GAME
  • 40. DRAW  To request a draw: 1. You must be the player to move 2. Make your move 3. Offer a draw before touching the clock. The offer is considered on your time, not your opponent’s time.  If your opponent offers a draw, he often thinks he is losing. Check what winning chances you have. ABOUT DRAWS
  • 41. 50-MOVE DRAW  The opposite-color Bishops can avoid each other, and avoid capture by the King forever.  This will be a draw eventually, if one is not offered and accepted. 50-MOVE DRAW EXAMPLE
  • 43. APPLICATION 1. Name each chess piece. 2. Set up the chess board. 3. Demonstrate how each chess piece moves. 4. Demonstrate castling and en passant capture. 5. Explain the four rules in castling. 6. Demonstrate on a chess board four ways a chess game can end in a draw. PERFORMANCE
  • 44. THANKS! CHESS MR. CARLO JUSTINO J. LUNA Malabanias Integrated School Angeles City PHYSICAL EDUCATION Unit 3 – Indoor Recreational Activities