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Your strategy and tactics in chess will be affected by your pawn structure setup. The information below outlines the main types of pawn structure and how you should play to make the best of each situation:
PAWN ISLANDS AND OPEN FILES A pawn island in chess is a collection of pawns cut off from other pawns. E.g. if you have pawns on every file except the d' and g' files, then you will have 3 pawn islands (a-c, d-e, h). Generally, in pawn structure terms, the fewer pawn islands, the better. However, the gaps in your pawn structure create openings for your rooks. In this situation, you will want to get your rooks onto the open files to exert pressure into the enemy camp. Also, this type of structure may also be open' (see below).
ISOLATED PAWNS isolated pawns have no pawns on the files either side of it. Therefore, it cannot be defended by any other pawn. Generally, this is a chess weakness to be avoided if possible.
DOUBLED PAWNS - A doubled pawn is where one pawn is behind another on the same file. This is not automatically a chess weakness, if it is part of a larger pawn island. That is, there is at least one pawn on an adjacent file. However, if the doubled pawns are also isolated, then this is a big weakness and should avoided unless you are gaining a big advantage in compensation.
OPEN PAWN STRUCTURE where there have been many pawn exchanges and relatively few remain, the board is considered open. The chess board is less cluttered with slow and static pieces. Such an environment is perfect for long-range chess pieces such as bishops and rooks. The short-range knights are generally less effective in this situation as they can't take advantage of the extra space.
Therefore, you should keep the pawn setup in mind when looking at piece exchanges. If it is open, or will be, then you would look at swapping one of your knights for an opponent's bishop, leaving you with the best piece for the situation.
CLOSED PAWN STRUCTURE Closed structures are where the chess board is crowded with pawns and where there are few opportunities for pawn exchanges. Imagine White pawns on a4, b5 and c4 with the corresponding Black pawns on a5, b6 and c5. The pawns are blocking each other and cannot be swapped off. If the chess board is generally in such a position, the pawn structure is closed.
The Bishops and Rooks in closed positions have a much reduced scope as, unlike the knights, they can't jump over these obstacles. Therefore, if you believe you are going into a closed position, you
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