Thanks for an excellent introduction to the opening! I can't find the video of the rosseau gambit or hungarian defence mentioned in the introduction. Is it not in the Italian game playlist?
Great to hear that you liked the video. The videos on the Rousseau Gambit and the Hungarian Defense as well as many other variations of the Italian Game are available on our Patreon page or on our website. Website: www.chessfactor.com/courses/243/description/ Patreon: www.patreon.com/chessfactor
@@Chessfactor At 4:41, you missed the bishop taking the knight and rook recapturing. White rook still moves to e1 and Queen is chased away. D1 chases away the knight and queen to e2 is played. Black must protect e8 from checkmate. Black queen to f7 to protect. But white bishop to g5 check is crushing. Black can block with e7 but white simply takes the bishop. Black queen must take and white king delivers checkmate. Every time i have faced this gambit, black never been able to counter this. I would love to hear your analysis of the above.
3:58 If black plays Nc6 then white plays d4 to gain center control.. And if Qxe4 then Re1 attacks the queen and if queen moves then Re8# is checkmate am I right Sir?
Excellent video sequence. I would like to know as to why after Bf7 king plays Kd8 and not Ke7. Also what if after Qg5 white responses with pawn g6 to support the knight and the king will have e7 to escape mate and not lose any piece. Is there any forced mate sequence here. Also after Qg5 what about Nf3 . Thanks in advance
What is your recommended response for black if white plays 4. C3 ignoring the gambit and attacking the knight? (1. e4, e5 2. Nf3, Nc6 3. Bc4, Nd4. 4.c3 4. ? )
I would play 4...Nxf3 and after 5.Qxf3 please don't allow checkmate on f7! I like to continue with 5...Qf6 there as queen exchange is okay for you and if he moves his queen then you can develop f8 bishop to c5 (and this way you control very nicely the centre point of d4) and then you can always finish development with playing the king's knight to e7. It's a little scary to play like this with the queen out on f6, but I recommend this as it's the most precise, and Black has an equal position there.
Hi, I'm here because i almost got my ass handed to me because i accepted the gambit. I won with checkmate as white being down in 6 materials. Happy I got my 800 rating today on day 64 of my chess journey.
I definitely captured the Knight with 4.Nxd4 if the opponent is a little or much stonger than me. But if we're equal or he/she's weaker, I usually play 4.Nxe5 because it's more fun, though in the end I lose sometimes. Lol XD
I just saw 3 videos like this, all with the same position at 4:30. When black MISTAKENLY takes the pawn at e4, this is white's continuation. d5! kicks away the knight., NOW rook to e1 and Queen is trapped. If it moves, e8 is checkmate! I ALWAYS play this "trap" and BLACK is the one who gets trapped! Another variation is Queen realizes it CAN NOT take the pawn at e4 and moves to safety. White continues with d5 harassing the knight or rook to e1 and Queen to e2 threatening the king. OR BOTH! White has the center, is about to connect rooks, a safe king AND AN OVERWHELMING attack. All at the cost of ONE POINT!! Black has a misplaced king, no development and a Queenside rook that might as well go home because it's not in THIS game! The FUN part of chess is ACCEPTING a gambit and REFUTING IT! I ALWAYS accept this gambit and have so much FUN harassing the black knight AND king. I encourage white to accept this "trap" and have some!! FUN!!!
After d5 kicks away the knight, the knight can land on f4. Re1 begs the queen to deliver Qxg2# so Bxf4 and Qxf4 results in Black being up an exchange. White does indeed have the safer king, and can either rescue their Bishop with Bh5 or trade with Bxg8. d5 doesn't even have to kick away the knight, black can develop with something like Bd6 (Bc5 would be a bad idea because now the queen would pin the pawn on d7). This gives back the exchange they won earlier with the position roughly equal, but because the center is open and the king is stuck in the center white definitely has advantage if d5 isn't respected with Nf4
I'm just gonna say this guy doesn't explain this very well. If you want a real explanation, search "blackburne shilling gambit chess talk" on youtube. He explains it nicely.
This channel is my favorite. It explains all essential openings so well. Thank you.
I got hit for the first time by a 1800 and had no idea what happened. Love this gambit when it works
It's a nice one!
9:13 proper defense for white.
Thanks for the great video. I can't wait to refute this gambit :)
Thanks for an excellent introduction to the opening! I can't find the video of the rosseau gambit or hungarian defence mentioned in the introduction. Is it not in the Italian game playlist?
Great to hear that you liked the video. The videos on the Rousseau Gambit and the Hungarian Defense as well as many other variations of the Italian Game are available on our Patreon page or on our website.
Website: www.chessfactor.com/courses/243/description/
Patreon: www.patreon.com/chessfactor
@@Chessfactor you have chess.com
@@Chessfactor At 4:41, you missed the bishop taking the knight and rook recapturing. White rook still moves to e1 and Queen is chased away. D1 chases away the knight and queen to e2 is played. Black must protect e8 from checkmate. Black queen to f7 to protect. But white bishop to g5 check is crushing. Black can block with e7 but white simply takes the bishop. Black queen must take and white king delivers checkmate. Every time i have faced this gambit, black never been able to counter this. I would love to hear your analysis of the above.
Sorry. D5 c.hases away the knight. My bad
3:58 If black plays Nc6 then white plays d4 to gain center control.. And if Qxe4 then Re1 attacks the queen and if queen moves then Re8# is checkmate am I right Sir?
yeah, thats correct!
Excellent video sequence. I would like to know as to why after Bf7 king plays Kd8 and not Ke7. Also what if after Qg5 white responses with pawn g6 to support the knight and the king will have e7 to escape mate and not lose any piece. Is there any forced mate sequence here. Also after Qg5 what about Nf3 . Thanks in advance
10:35 you mean 3? The rook is considered developed
What is your recommended response for black if white plays 4. C3 ignoring the gambit and attacking the knight? (1. e4, e5 2. Nf3, Nc6 3. Bc4, Nd4. 4.c3 4. ? )
I would play 4...Nxf3 and after 5.Qxf3 please don't allow checkmate on f7! I like to continue with 5...Qf6 there as queen exchange is okay for you and if he moves his queen then you can develop f8 bishop to c5 (and this way you control very nicely the centre point of d4) and then you can always finish development with playing the king's knight to e7. It's a little scary to play like this with the queen out on f6, but I recommend this as it's the most precise, and Black has an equal position there.
Hi, I'm here because i almost got my ass handed to me because i accepted the gambit. I won with checkmate as white being down in 6 materials. Happy I got my 800 rating today on day 64 of my chess journey.
Probably the rook checkmate lines where white takes on e5 is gonna work really well on anyone below 1500
After white castles, I would allow the black knight to take the pawn on e4. Then I would move my rook to e1, thereby trapping the knight.
After 4. Nxd4 exd4 5. c3 Nf6 6. 0-0 can black really take and allow the pin? Won't d3 win the knight?
2:21 Am i wrong or you actually can take bishop on c4?
thank you!!! for the content!!!
This is a wonderfull explanation why not to play the blackburn schilling gambit because it is indeed a dubious gambit 3 ... Nd4).
SUPER =DANKE !!
I definitely captured the Knight with 4.Nxd4 if the opponent is a little or much stonger than me. But if we're equal or he/she's weaker, I usually play 4.Nxe5 because it's more fun, though in the end I lose sometimes. Lol XD
I always capture the knight and play Qh5. Very high win rate as well. Completely winning by move 6.
really excellent
After 6. Ng4 blacks best move is Nh6... d5 is ok at best
I just saw 3 videos like this, all with the same position at 4:30. When black MISTAKENLY takes the pawn at e4, this is white's continuation. d5! kicks away the knight., NOW rook to e1 and Queen is trapped. If it moves, e8 is checkmate! I ALWAYS play this "trap" and BLACK is the one who gets trapped! Another variation is Queen realizes it CAN NOT take the pawn at e4 and moves to safety. White continues with d5 harassing the knight or rook to e1 and Queen to e2 threatening the king. OR BOTH! White has the center, is about to connect rooks, a safe king AND AN OVERWHELMING attack. All at the cost of ONE POINT!! Black has a misplaced king, no development and a Queenside rook that might as well go home because it's not in THIS game! The FUN part of chess is ACCEPTING a gambit and REFUTING IT! I ALWAYS accept this gambit and have so much FUN harassing the black knight AND king. I encourage white to accept this "trap" and have some!! FUN!!!
After d5 kicks away the knight, the knight can land on f4. Re1 begs the queen to deliver Qxg2# so Bxf4 and Qxf4 results in Black being up an exchange. White does indeed have the safer king, and can either rescue their Bishop with Bh5 or trade with Bxg8.
d5 doesn't even have to kick away the knight, black can develop with something like Bd6 (Bc5 would be a bad idea because now the queen would pin the pawn on d7). This gives back the exchange they won earlier with the position roughly equal, but because the center is open and the king is stuck in the center white definitely has advantage if d5 isn't respected with Nf4
Love from India
Thank you for your comment!
In Italian hangerian vedio i found this. Refrance and I checked it out..
That's great that you follow our video references! Hope you liked the Blackburne-Shilling Gambit coverage.
I love you men ❤❤❤
I'm just gonna say this guy doesn't explain this very well. If you want a real explanation, search "blackburne shilling gambit chess talk" on youtube. He explains it nicely.