I love your videos mann... Because of your video about punishing the scholars mate... I'm no longer falling for that... And now this... Please keep making more amazing stuff for us.... Big fan and lots of love brother❤❤😊
I find it difficult to see the black pieces on the dark squares, have colourblindness. Could you change the shade of the dark squares to contrast more with the black pieces
Sensei, when recommending an opening, one must always give best line of play, lest your starry eyed students get ambushed by all manner of mayham. 1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bc4 Nf6 4. Ng5 d5 5. exd5 Nd4 6. c3 b5 7. Bf1! The key move that preserves the bishop and forces black's hand Nxd5 8. cxd4 Qxg5 9. Bxb5+ Kd8 10. O-O Bb7 11. Qf3 Rb8 12. dxe5 Ne3 13. Qh3 Qxg2+ 14. Qxg2 Nxg2 15. d4 White is better 😊
Black should then answer o-o with bxc4 cxd4 exd4 and it should be a little better for black with white's d5 pawn being defenseless, black having future moves like Be7, Bb7, o-o, take on d5 with the knight, black will end up with a lot of space and activity and with the better position (:
incorrect. 4... Nd4 isn't the best. It is countered with 5. c3 and after ... 5. .... b5 6. Bf1 and after Nf5 that bishop returns wit Bxb5+ .. and later 0-0 and Qf3 and white is unfortunately better. 4. ... Na5 is the only good response!
Thats a bit Harsh i would say, 4...Nd4 is playable at most level, tho perhaps not at GM level or perhaps not beyond 2300 ish. Somebody played this line against me at a over the board game, and I didnt know this line. I did not find 5.c3 as I thought to complicated and saw ghosts about their potential attacks, so I played h3 first and then c3 in the next move. h3 was not correct, I did actually winning that game against a slightly higher rated player. But there was many opportuneties for both players during that game, he lost due to his mistake of allowing some exhange of last officers and he then entered a lost pawn endgame, witch I did see/find. Its called the fritz variation i belive, and although slightly dubious opening. It is a playable and tricky variation that often the one who knows it the best might get the upper hand. In my case, my dubious response clearly got him out of theory and became a double eige middle game with both some tactical and positional themes... but it seemed i calculated the endgame better than him.
I was explained the Trap Line before, but your explanations and demonstrations are on a NEXT LEVEL of clarity. Thank you for this!
You should add the best moves for white as well, not just those where white fallsfor the trick.
You came back finally, Sensei 😊
2:00 also if you play Kg8 it's a forced mate so be careful for that.
I love your videos mann... Because of your video about punishing the scholars mate... I'm no longer falling for that... And now this... Please keep making more amazing stuff for us.... Big fan and lots of love brother❤❤😊
Love receiving comments like this! Thank you!
I face this situation every day thank you now I can deal easily with situation now
😂😂😂
An excellent lesson.
I find it difficult to see the black pieces on the dark squares, have colourblindness. Could you change the shade of the dark squares to contrast more with the black pieces
I’m not even remotely color blind and I find it nearly impossible to see the black bishops when they’re on the green squares.
Those squares are green?? 😮@@stephenusaf6315
Sensei, when recommending an opening, one must always give best line of play, lest your starry eyed students get ambushed by all manner of mayham.
1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bc4 Nf6 4. Ng5 d5 5. exd5 Nd4 6. c3 b5 7. Bf1!
The key move that preserves the bishop and forces black's hand
Nxd5 8. cxd4 Qxg5 9. Bxb5+ Kd8 10. O-O Bb7 11. Qf3 Rb8 12. dxe5 Ne3 13. Qh3 Qxg2+ 14. Qxg2 Nxg2 15. d4
White is better 😊
That is all well known stuff, its real bad practice to lure players into this without showing it is refuted.
Thank you
Question: after we play Qc6, what is white moves their queen to Qf3?
How do you defend against this if you didn't play e6? What if you go for the King's Indian defense for example and play d6 or g6 first?
What if they take Bxd5 after d5?
Punish
F___k me sick line
After c3, b5, White answer with o-o and all you idea is broken
Black should then answer o-o with bxc4 cxd4 exd4 and it should be a little better for black with white's d5 pawn being defenseless, black having future moves like Be7, Bb7, o-o, take on d5 with the knight, black will end up with a lot of space and activity and with the better position (:
incorrect. 4... Nd4 isn't the best. It is countered with 5. c3 and after ... 5. .... b5 6. Bf1 and after Nf5 that bishop returns wit Bxb5+ .. and later 0-0 and Qf3 and white is unfortunately better. 4. ... Na5 is the only good response!
That’s assuming you don’t get a 6th move? You could do something as simple as Qxd5 no?
Ka5 I’ve tried, they have the same B5+ immediately.
Thats a bit Harsh i would say, 4...Nd4 is playable at most level, tho perhaps not at GM level or perhaps not beyond 2300 ish.
Somebody played this line against me at a over the board game, and I didnt know this line. I did not find 5.c3 as I thought to complicated and saw ghosts about their potential attacks, so I played h3 first and then c3 in the next move. h3 was not correct, I did actually winning that game against a slightly higher rated player. But there was many opportuneties for both players during that game, he lost due to his mistake of allowing some exhange of last officers and he then entered a lost pawn endgame, witch I did see/find. Its called the fritz variation i belive, and although slightly dubious opening. It is a playable and tricky variation that often the one who knows it the best might get the upper hand. In my case, my dubious response clearly got him out of theory and became a double eige middle game with both some tactical and positional themes... but it seemed i calculated the endgame better than him.