See this I can get behind... its unsound at any higher level sure! But as for beginners and intermediate players... this is exactly what a gambit should be about. Teaching you to be as efficient and aggresive with your development and attacking (for the cost of a pawn or 2) as possible! Super fun great choice here!!!
Clever -- never heard of this line. It's weird black is often 3 pawns down but with a fairly minimal computer disadvantage and tons of ways for white to go wrong.
the first thing anyone does after taking that initial pawn and we push knight c3, is to defend with knight c3. I literally have not faced a single game where opp plays d4 instead. I'm playing at 1200-1300 level. Any tips for knight move by opp?>
@@nasirmovahedi it is absolutely never played in my games. Everyone plays Kc3 instead. This is such a lovely trap but sadly I cannot play it. I have played like 100 games in this opening since watching this video. Not a single person played the pawn move :(
7:29 "I can't show you all the moves"_ Correct, but you could show what white should play. E.g. instead of 3. d4 white could play ♘f3, ♗b5+ (quite natural for amateurs), ♗e2 or the slightly dubious ♗c4. I think this gambit works for none of these alternatives. Or if 3 d4 - c3 then dxc and the response - ♞xc6 are really the only options, but you advocate the dubious but gambit e5 instead. Engine claims 5. cxb is the far best option, about a pawn more worth than option #2, dxe5. If white really goes for dxe5 it's still more or less +2 advantage for white. 5. - ♛xd1 , 6. ♔xd1 - ♞g4 is "obligatory", but then white should play cx6 first. And so on. How long would that take to do? Would perhaps double the length of the video but also increase its value. But I'm being ungrateful! Thank you for making this awesome chess content. I like it a lot. And give your cat a scratch from me, please. ♥
White should only play 3 Nf3 or 3 Bb5+ if they want to avoid this gambit - a positional victory for Black anyway. 3 Bb5+ invites the just as dangerous gambit move 3...c6. I play 3 Nf3 myself here to avoid all the Scandinavian gambits. But that is because I'm a pussy, and am afraid of defending in any position since I know can't play like an engine or even 2200 when my opponent has multiple mating and material threats. You yourself needed an engine to tell you how to defend. Very few black gambits are sound. You have to access the risk, recognizing that no amateur defends well, but many of them attack well. You need to recognize that you may only be able to use it once in tournament play because they will use the engine AFTER THE GAME and not before it. Nobody wastes time looking at lines to refute "obviously "unsound gambits. We assume that they can meet them over the board. This gambit is hard to meet if you haven't seen it before so it is an aggressive tricky gambit, like he said.
Igor, thank you very much for all your cool videos. Love them! In this video, after 1. e4, d5, how would you continue if white goes 2. e5? Love your cat!!
You probably just play a different opening. Maybe a London variation? It's not as strong, but you can't force your opponent to go into a setup, you can only generously encourage them with a hidden debt and hope they only see profit and not interest rates. Luckily, worse case if they take the first one but not beyond that, you can in fact just take back pawns with knight and play improv from there.
I would play after 4 ... e5; 5. c7, Qxc7, now white is a pawn up for nothing. For example 6. dxe5 Qxe5+; 7. Qe2 and trade queens a pawn up or 6 ... Ng4; 7. Be2, Nxe5; 8. Nf3 +- . The attack on f2 is not allowed to develop. Reasoning: the c6 pawn was just going to fall with tempo anyway, so use it to scramble black's setup. Learn to play attacking moves, but also learn to see opponent's solid moves. (I was usually the guy playing the solid moves, boring I know.)
I feel like in a lot of cases white is going to see the threat to their queen if they take on e. When I have been in similiar spots where I know my opponent wants to trade queens and make my king defend it, I usually will attempt to play an intermediate move to defend my queen so I don't lose right to castle. Not full proof, but i hate moving my king to defend my queen.
White don't need to immediately defend against the fork as long as it can take pawn b2. Then black first need to catch the pawn and then Be3 is enough to defend.
► Chapters 00:00 Aggressive Chess Opening for Black Against 1.e4 01:02 Kadas Gambit, Scandinavian Defense 02:13 Line-1: If White plays Nh3, protecting f2 05:00 Line-2: If White plays Ke1, protecting f2 07:58 Line-3: If White plays cxb7
Very cool. Oppomemts already not playing the common refutation so move 2-3 is already very different, but definately mnot the same old boring stuff resulting of this.
Should check out the Rousseau gambit. I'm around 700 and have the chance to do the opening quite a lot as black. It's essentially just the Vienna gambit for black.
It's an unintuitive move for sure, but it is one of the best responses. It's a pretty common response in the intermediate to advance level because it's not best to try and hang on to the pawn on d5.
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Nice teaching sir
See this I can get behind... its unsound at any higher level sure! But as for beginners and intermediate players... this is exactly what a gambit should be about. Teaching you to be as efficient and aggresive with your development and attacking (for the cost of a pawn or 2) as possible! Super fun great choice here!!!
Absolutely!
Simple agraaaassive opening! Keep up the great work!
Clever -- never heard of this line. It's weird black is often 3 pawns down but with a fairly minimal computer disadvantage and tons of ways for white to go wrong.
8:18 "It's very different to be a computer and a human being" (Spock eyebrow lift). Fantastic!
Seems like along of similar concepts and mindset as Danish gambit which I love👌👌
What is your suggestion after 3: Knight C 3
the first thing anyone does after taking that initial pawn and we push knight c3, is to defend with knight c3. I literally have not faced a single game where opp plays d4 instead. I'm playing at 1200-1300 level. Any tips for knight move by opp?>
Yah,I have the same idea,it is not mandatory move.
@@nasirmovahedi it is absolutely never played in my games. Everyone plays Kc3 instead. This is such a lovely trap but sadly I cannot play it. I have played like 100 games in this opening since watching this video. Not a single person played the pawn move :(
just recapture with Nd5 and Black equalizes immediately which is very good for black.
If Nc3 (which is dubious)
Play N×d5 and black equalized.
7:29 "I can't show you all the moves"_
Correct, but you could show what white should play.
E.g. instead of 3. d4 white could play ♘f3, ♗b5+ (quite natural for amateurs), ♗e2 or the slightly dubious ♗c4. I think this gambit works for none of these alternatives.
Or if 3 d4 - c3 then dxc and the response - ♞xc6 are really the only options, but you advocate the dubious but gambit e5 instead.
Engine claims 5. cxb is the far best option, about a pawn more worth than option #2, dxe5.
If white really goes for dxe5 it's still more or less +2 advantage for white.
5. - ♛xd1 , 6. ♔xd1 - ♞g4 is "obligatory", but then white should play cx6 first.
And so on. How long would that take to do? Would perhaps double the length of the video but also increase its value.
But I'm being ungrateful! Thank you for making this awesome chess content. I like it a lot. And give your cat a scratch from me, please.
♥
White should only play 3 Nf3 or 3 Bb5+ if they want to avoid this gambit - a positional victory for Black anyway. 3 Bb5+ invites the just as dangerous gambit move 3...c6. I play 3 Nf3 myself here to avoid all the Scandinavian gambits. But that is because I'm a pussy, and am afraid of defending in any position since I know can't play like an engine or even 2200 when my opponent has multiple mating and material threats. You yourself needed an engine to tell you how to defend. Very few black gambits are sound. You have to access the risk, recognizing that no amateur defends well, but many of them attack well. You need to recognize that you may only be able to use it once in tournament play because they will use the engine AFTER THE GAME and not before it. Nobody wastes time looking at lines to refute "obviously "unsound gambits. We assume that they can meet them over the board. This gambit is hard to meet if you haven't seen it before so it is an aggressive tricky gambit, like he said.
@@yzfool6639 simply 3.d4 c6 4.dxc6 e5 5.cxb7 Bxb7 6.Nf3 Nc6 7.Bb5 Qa5+ 8.Nc3 Bb4 9.0-0 Bxc3 10.Bxc6+ Bxc6
11.bxc3 Bxf3 12.Qxf3 0-0 13.Bg5 and black has not enough counterplay for the pawns (+=/+-)
Igor, thank you very much for all your cool videos. Love them!
In this video, after 1. e4, d5, how would you continue if white goes 2. e5?
Love your cat!!
You probably just play a different opening. Maybe a London variation? It's not as strong, but you can't force your opponent to go into a setup, you can only generously encourage them with a hidden debt and hope they only see profit and not interest rates.
Luckily, worse case if they take the first one but not beyond that, you can in fact just take back pawns with knight and play improv from there.
Very nice Sr
Really nice. Thank you
Welcome 😊
Wonderful 👍 💯 😎
Thanks very much Sir
Awesome to hear that from you💛
what happend if is not d4 but Nc3 the white play ?
C5 is the best move. Hands down. It depends on about 6 till 10 moves. If all of them are perfect you have a great middle and end game.
Gambit is my style!!
Can you do a video on Evans Gambit please, I have seen that it's one of the best plays against Black
Here is a video about Evans Gabmit.
th-cam.com/video/-33dCNrgIKw/w-d-xo.html
I would play after 4 ... e5; 5. c7, Qxc7, now white is a pawn up for nothing. For example 6. dxe5 Qxe5+; 7. Qe2 and trade queens a pawn up or 6 ... Ng4; 7. Be2, Nxe5; 8. Nf3 +- . The attack on f2 is not allowed to develop.
Reasoning: the c6 pawn was just going to fall with tempo anyway, so use it to scramble black's setup. Learn to play attacking moves, but also learn to see opponent's solid moves. (I was usually the guy playing the solid moves, boring I know.)
Yup, takes all the air out of blacks play. Nice refutation.
Can you start adding model games to these videos please even if they're miniatures in fact preferably that
I've never played a game where the opponent did any move remotely similar to those assumed.
I feel like in a lot of cases white is going to see the threat to their queen if they take on e. When I have been in similiar spots where I know my opponent wants to trade queens and make my king defend it, I usually will attempt to play an intermediate move to defend my queen so I don't lose right to castle. Not full proof, but i hate moving my king to defend my queen.
White don't need to immediately defend against the fork as long as it can take pawn b2. Then black first need to catch the pawn and then Be3 is enough to defend.
I mean pawn b7 :-)
► Chapters
00:00 Aggressive Chess Opening for Black Against 1.e4
01:02 Kadas Gambit, Scandinavian Defense
02:13 Line-1: If White plays Nh3, protecting f2
05:00 Line-2: If White plays Ke1, protecting f2
07:58 Line-3: If White plays cxb7
I have a question when the black knight in g4 if white play bishop b5 what will happen
Hi bro ur videos are amazing
Thank you so much 😀
Very cool. Oppomemts already not playing the common refutation so move 2-3 is already very different, but definately mnot the same old boring stuff resulting of this.
And what about instead dcc,white plays cxb?..White is wining that way in 6 or 7 moves in the opening...
And how if white move 3. c4 ??
After the 4th move, only 318 billion possible positions…not checkers for sure…
The problem is that never ever an opponent played these moves… 🧐
Should check out the Rousseau gambit. I'm around 700 and have the chance to do the opening quite a lot as black. It's essentially just the Vienna gambit for black.
How if white doesn't move d x e5 ??
Imma a beginner so I'm wondering why is the second move to white a pone behind his first one ?
It's an unintuitive move for sure, but it is one of the best responses. It's a pretty common response in the intermediate to advance level because it's not best to try and hang on to the pawn on d5.
@@kywo5832 thanks but I think I should advance my self to catch players doing it cuz at my level they always protect their pone
Because if white plays c4 instead of d4 we play e6 and get into the icelandic gambit territory. My favorite opening as black.
@@Primitive_Code This.
What if black plays c7?
Try ko to na opening for black surprise sa kalaban ko♟♟♟