Rook c1 attacking the bishop. Bishop moves to a5 the only save square. Queen to a4 threatening the bishop and pinning the knight. If they break the pin, you kick the knight with d5 and win a piece in the next move.
this ooening is rare from black, first of all g6 is rare, I would never consider it and when bishop g5, f6 is most popular response. Dont try to play like this and learn sound fundamentals
Number 1. Usually, you wouldn't move a knight to protect a pawn that was never in danger. Number 2: D5 opening since queen is protecting the pawn? Also you can move any other piece as well. Number 3: What if they don't do G6? The chance of your opponent to move there is extremely rare, basically making your center control garbage for nothing. Number 4: Why fianchetto the bishop to protect a pawn that is already protected and is being attacked by only 1 piece? They also don't have to fianchetto the bishop at all if they are smart enough to know the English Opening or just completely forget it. Number 5: WHAT IF THEY JUST DON'T TAKE THE KNIGHT OR THE QUEEN? In conclusion - This opening will basically never happen unless your opponent is a stupid uneducated idiot.
@@MR_DEVIL85if the queen captures the knight, you simply recapture the queen with the pawn and there is a discover attack on the opponent king from the rook on f1. After they move their king, you capture their bishop and you will be left with a completely winning material advantage.
@@TheChess_Corner You should have showed the variation. Seems like you don't know how to play and so you cannot teach. If you could calculate then you'd have seen the variation and refutation to show your audience. Instead, you are playing catchup in the comments because your video is full of holes.
If they push the e-pawn, do NOT take the free bishop with Qxc1?? because they play Bb5+! with a discovered attack on the Queen, now *you* are the idiot. Just play c6, Nc6, Nd7, Bd7 or O-O.
@@Kira-Yoshikage69 if they don't take care of the fork threat, you fork and win their rook. If you are able to get to that position whether they play king d8 which is one of the best moves or not, you already have a winning advantage.
I always go 2. Nf3 so that I can play 3. Ne5 and hope they blunder with f6. As you can tell, my elo struggles to exceed 1100, because my strategy relies on ignoring opening principles and hoping my opponent blunders XD
Because the rook is trapped. Still, it's a gambit. You're always putting yourself in a worse position and hoping for the opponent to make a "human" move that puts them at a disadvantage
If they decide to keep moving their king, just make sure their king doesn't get to the 4th and start bringing your king closer to the pawn. Once they move their pawn, you attack it. and if their king move two square away from the pawn to attack your rook, you attack the pawn and the pawn cannot be saved.
I didn't copy anyone. I would take comparing what I did to what Gothamchess did as a compliment or maybe flattery. I made everything in that video myself.
Nobody will follow through with what you think they will do. Why do so many believe this? 😮
and he sacrifices the QUEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEN!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Castle is not possible here
Yes it is.
@PolandJustGotConquered but white bishop was in the way between king and rook.
1. No. 2. What is your point?
King cannot go through a check while castling. Here he ain't, so it is possible (doesn't matter, that bishop controls the b8 square)
@@ТихонКоняев-е7ж ohhh !!!! Ok... Thanx
Luk 1:37 For with God nothing shall be impossible.
Ain't nobody in 2500 falling for that 😂
This is not rio gambit This is called ruy Lopez opening
@diogorsilva3559 Rio Gambit is a gambit in the Ruy Lopez Opening. The video is a line in the Rio Gambit accepted
@ oh ok thx
@wanna play against me ?
@ what’s your elo?
@diogorsilva3559 I am 2100 chesscom rapid
Nona these moves would happen
Most of these moves will happen
We?????
What happens if they don't play E5?
What do you think?
If you remember all Trix you are a champion 😊
Very helpful
I'm missing something.... halfway through the video, knight captures the center pawn .... why wouldn't it capture the other knight instead?
@@19stalkern They capture the pawn because it's a free pawn. Capturing the knight is an even trade.
What if he plays D5 not D6?
Just take it is a free pawn
What if ...d6 after Ba3??
Rook c1 attacking the bishop. Bishop moves to a5 the only save square. Queen to a4 threatening the bishop and pinning the knight. If they break the pin, you kick the knight with d5 and win a piece in the next move.
Wow that is what I was looking for .. thanks bro 😊
@@azizurrehman9365 you are welcome.
this ooening is rare from black, first of all g6 is rare, I would never consider it and when bishop g5, f6 is most popular response. Dont try to play like this and learn sound fundamentals
Number 1. Usually, you wouldn't move a knight to protect a pawn that was never in danger. Number 2: D5 opening since queen is protecting the pawn? Also you can move any other piece as well. Number 3: What if they don't do G6? The chance of your opponent to move there is extremely rare, basically making your center control garbage for nothing. Number 4: Why fianchetto the bishop to protect a pawn that is already protected and is being attacked by only 1 piece? They also don't have to fianchetto the bishop at all if they are smart enough to know the English Opening or just completely forget it. Number 5: WHAT IF THEY JUST DON'T TAKE THE KNIGHT OR THE QUEEN? In conclusion - This opening will basically never happen unless your opponent is a stupid uneducated idiot.
What if the opponent doesn't play F6?
What If the opponent just control the center right away?
then your trap fails and you lose the game
dang, these are so difficult to notice for a beginner like me. I need to get better at seeing such threats.
Practice makes perfect! Keep at it and you'll start spotting these patterns.
.
Bro what app is this,pls tell😢😢😢
If you are talking about the board. It's Chess.com
Why Rf1? Isn't Rxd2 just mate in the final position?
Rf1 and Rxd2 is checkmate in 1.
@@TheChess_CornerOhh, yeah my bad. I didn't look closely enough to see that Rf1 is a double check. I thought all it did was win the Queen
Very cool
White Q move to g8 ,
Why not capture the rook instead of the night on the triple fork
If you capture the rook, they recapture your bishop and that's 2 points of material gain. Capturing the knight is 3 points of material gain.
Free knight is better than a rook/bishop trade
What if black moves the king to d8 instead of f8? Then what?
Bro you can checkmate instead of quiet pawn move.
There is no checkmate and any check in that position can be blocked.
@TheChess_Corner yea I realised after I typed it
At 30 second Knight check The queen can take the knight this is possibility 💞
@@MR_DEVIL85if the queen captures the knight, you simply recapture the queen with the pawn and there is a discover attack on the opponent king from the rook on f1. After they move their king, you capture their bishop and you will be left with a completely winning material advantage.
@@TheChess_Corner You should have showed the variation. Seems like you don't know how to play and so you cannot teach. If you could calculate then you'd have seen the variation and refutation to show your audience. Instead, you are playing catchup in the comments because your video is full of holes.
bro this is just the icbm for the queen's pawn and for black
If they push the e-pawn, do NOT take the free bishop with Qxc1?? because they play Bb5+! with a discovered attack on the Queen, now *you* are the idiot. Just play c6, Nc6, Nd7, Bd7 or O-O.
What if the opponent won't move his king to d8. For example he can move the rook
@@Kira-Yoshikage69 if they don't take care of the fork threat, you fork and win their rook. If you are able to get to that position whether they play king d8 which is one of the best moves or not, you already have a winning advantage.
d2 was better I think
Re5 then. We need to make sure we can take back with the queen
Tenisson gambit for black pieces
Discord notification at the end op
Attention to details 100% 😁
I’ve played it but players don move their Queen too early even if they accept gambit
magnificent************
bs vid sorry
Nice keep going !
I always go 2. Nf3 so that I can play 3. Ne5 and hope they blunder with f6. As you can tell, my elo struggles to exceed 1100, because my strategy relies on ignoring opening principles and hoping my opponent blunders XD
Capture bishop with black queen
yeap
Free queen. Rook pins the pawn
Why would they capture the B2 pawn
Because the rook is trapped. Still, it's a gambit. You're always putting yourself in a worse position and hoping for the opponent to make a "human" move that puts them at a disadvantage
@ericmordezki4815 greed killed the cat
To prevent that i saw Nf6 fo black to prevent that checkmate😊
Damm, thats smart
What if they moved the king when you're on the 4th rank, would it be a draw or win for white
If they decide to keep moving their king, just make sure their king doesn't get to the 4th and start bringing your king closer to the pawn. Once they move their pawn, you attack it. and if their king move two square away from the pawn to attack your rook, you attack the pawn and the pawn cannot be saved.
Just take the motherfucking pawn and win a rook
WHO tf would play be7
@@marcosatar9584 it's the third most popular move in that position.
Very useful tip!, thanks.
too many if's...
ikr... so disappointed that this isn't a forced line of winning a queen on the 8th move
this happens in kings gambit too
Actually, GothamChess did it first and you just copy it
I didn't copy anyone. I would take comparing what I did to what Gothamchess did as a compliment or maybe flattery. I made everything in that video myself.
This is chess basics. If I make a video about 1+1=2, are you gonna say I copied that from another channel who also explained it? Makes no sense.