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Great video. You explain way better than most chess RU-vidrs and I really like that you don’t just give us the moves, but also explain the ideas of the opening and strategies associated with it
Hi sir! I love the way you teach us, keep moving ... I'm looking forward for the french opening theory and some tactics and traps. Thanks in Advance Sir from Philippines.
i often arrived in a position after the move from czech pirc reversed....1.d3 Nf6 2. Nf3 d5 but was not able to play 3.e4 because it is only now that i have seen this video. i'm excited to play 3. e4 now. thanks and more power...
I started learning chess recently because I was challenged by a friend. He always plays Scandinavian but doesn't retreat the quick and immediately checks the King. How should I react in this situation?
Hi Kaspa! In the Tennison gambit, after the moves 1.e4 d5, 2.Nf3 dxe4, 3.Ng5 Nf6, you suggest the move 4.Nc6… waiting for 4.…Bf5. What can we answer if black moves 4.…Bg4? I think it is an answer that puts White in difficulties
I guess I'd normally be playing my bishop to f5 anyway to protect the pawn rather than Nc6, but good to know that there are also ways to play into traps. Black has a nice lead at that point, and white is just spending more of their evaporated advantage on knight moves. Must be people playing into this, I guess!
I think this is a scam. Stockfish 15 agrees: 1. e4 d5 (2. exd5 +0.9) 2. Nf3 (-1.3) and just mounting attackers on the black e4 pawn later on still gives black the better position. 2. ...dxe4 3. Ng5 Bf5 (-1.43) Of course, this youtuber could be some alien, who plays even better than stockfish... Please note, that the accent and the image also are an unlikely match.
The Knight has somewhere to go. I have a video on my channel where my opponent didn't take on d3 and the game went so easy. The whole purpose of a gambit is not really to make your opponent accept it but to be ahead in development and have many attacking chances in a very open position. If you want to learn serious (classical) chess, you may check out my short courses for beginners in the description and see which one would suit your needs.
@@realharami White can settle for this slightly worse position after 4N: e4, e5 but if white is expecting a full bodied, attacking position, he's going to be pretty disappointed. I do like the 3Nc3 line in this gambit much more than any d3 ideas.
I wonder if "It's always advantageous for white if black doesn't take" caused general laughter amongst all of the French and Caro players that viewed this. The idea that 2. Nf3 prevents 2...d5 in either in a way that 2. d4 does not is one of the weirdest distortions I have seen in a chess video. Moving on, black's best scoring line after 3. Ng5 is 3...Bf5 and when you finally do show a Bf5 line, you somehow miss out that black's main line after 6. f3 is 6...Qd4, which leads to a position with fighting chances for both sides. Moving on to the Leonhardt Gambit, the main line after 6. Bc4 is 6...Nf6, taking the h5 square away. An example game (Pliukha-Markov 2020) continued 7. Nc3 c6; 8. Nc3 Bg4; 9. 0-0 e6; 10 Rb1 Qc7 with a position that is good for black. The proper title of your video would seem to be: "If black makes multiple terrible moves, white can win". Meanwhile, the sort of player that would actually enjoy the type of gambit position being suggested is precisely the type of player that will thrive in one of the main line Scandinavian systems. So the question becomes - why did they make a dubious sacrifice to avoid a position that suits their style of play?
It looks goood but how Caruana Kasparove or Carsson or Tal would react. They wouldn't fall for that. Without the qween the king will fall in most senarios.
@Hypercube 1. Before yapping, look at my uploading dates and compare them to anybody you want. 2. Type any video title from your favorite RU-vidr into the search box and check how many older similar videos of other people will appear. 3. Nobody owns these openings; we just present them differently. 4.Just as in education, courses and curricula may be the same but taught differently, so it's up to you to listen to your favorite RU-vidr. 5. Don't be bitter for nothing. Let love lead!
KaspaChess. I'm a new subscriber to your chess channel. I LOVE CHESS. Your content is amazing! I enjoyed how you explained everything in detail. Now, I was hoping when you're going to show strategies on being the black pieces. Thanks again. Stay Blessed 🙏
White players who don't like open games just don't play 1.e4. On the other hand, who doesn't love an open game when your opponent is playing into your hands? I had no idea the center counter game could be so tricky! I especially liked the way you could transpose into this opening from Reti's move. You could probably get a lot more chances to play this fun opening from 1Nf3 than from 1Ne4, including many chances against players who do not normally play the Scandinavian and are not familiar with the ensuing complications. Definitely worth my time!
Interesting. In the Zuckertort Tennison gambit line, lichess db has no master games playing 6. d3. Which makes me think it's unsound. Probably fine for 2000> rapid players though!
8:15 is a blunder. Scandinavian expert won't play that move. Nc6 instead of pawn to c6 leads to a winning game for black. -2.3 Stockfish 14+ evaluation, a very big advantage for black. Basic principle In chess tournaments, beginners shouldn't expect your opponent to blunder. Play the right moves always.