there is another solution with a nice sacrifice involved for the moment at 13:19 -- bishop to H7, takes pawn. rook takes. queen to G6, check black king advances to E7 bishop to C5, check black king to E6 knight to G5, check mate same thing really, but slight variation
And just a side note - QxB looks like it works, but you have to calculate a move or 2 deeper to see that at the end black's N can take white's B on e3. If that wasn't the case, then if white played QxB would work b/c if QxQ then white plays Bc5 mate, and if NxQ, then Nd5 check, forking black's K and Q. But unfortunately, black then plays NxB on e3 and turns out to be an even material swap, although black is worse due to white having either a discovered check if black K moves to the d-file, or only other squares are light, so if goes to e8 white can check with Bb5 and has strong initiative, but if Ke6, black's N on e3 covers the c4 square, so white can't check and he loses his initiative, although still has decent position.
Im playing years in chess. Com and my rate is always 1300- 1400 but with this video I reached to 1570 perfect video thatnks a lot I’m 50 now if I had a master like u in my childhood I would be like Kasparov 😂😂😂😂
I studied a lot of opening traps, 4 hours a day, for like 6 months. Those are just tricks, dont help you at all. Study formal openings and tactics. It will yield better results in the same lapse. But you do have to study a bit.
@@Alientcp These tricks are fun to play though, especially at a lower level. Want to make your high school team while knowing nothing about chess? This is also the way to go.
Great idea, but practically I feel most would know now to move the queen to b4 so I recommend taking with the Knight, if you choose to play this at all
But taking with knight blocks the d block meaning both queens won't be moved and the rook on f8 won't move either meaning white would have sacrificed his pawns for nothing????
Hmm ... I am the Philippines. Though I was a bit too late to learn to play chess until I was inspired me to go back in the board game again ... with of course giving credit to the Netflix's The Queen's Game led by Anya Taylor-Joy aka Beth Harmon. As I came across with this video, I came to realized that like me needs to rehash more to improve what was lost in my younger years ... my love and interest playing the board game. I felt more inspired how you deal with options you gave which seem proved more credible to topple the opponent. Just to let you know, from now on, you wil be my light to my winning games forward. I will take note that all the lessons you have, the videos you have, will be a part of my plan to further my knowledge, as I greatly appreciate sincerely your contribution to awaken my old stacked memory. Hahaha Just to let you know, I am now past 70's and retired but not down and out. I am giving this one ... a 21 gun salute ! More Power ! Do notify me well for some updates. Stay safe. 😍😍😍
Answer: 1Q-f2 BxR, 2B-c5+ K-d7, 3BxQ KxN, 4BxB RxB, 5 KxB. What's the score? White has a queen against a rook and a pawn. Black could also give up his queen for the the checking bishop.
There was another checkmate at 8:35 which involves without loosing queen. Queen to c6 check then black got no move but knight to d7 and the queen to d7 capturing knight checkmate.
Between Queen to E4 and Bishop to G4 is much strongest move for the opponent since if the white Queen captured the night A6 then the Bishop G4 opponent can recaptured first the Rook D1 then, it can be a normal move or possible move for the opponent, the variation is not equal besides the position
Hello Igor, I must say I find it difficult to believe that any half decent player would bring his/ her queen out with no support let alone so early in the game without the idea of developing his pieces in the conventional way
So many delightful variations of the game, Igor. It appears so simple and elegant with moves. The only one question that have is how to remember all those openings because sometimes takes so many games just to get some one in trap. Nevertheless, all is good, прекрасный английский и очень интересное объяснение. Игорь, ещё к вам нескромный вопрос. Если у меня в среднем 1,500 рейтинг, я знаю ещё пока низкий, но как узнать при каком разряде какой соответствует рейтинг?
I think its just visualising what if scenarios in your head. The best players can do this really quickly and remember a lot. I forget where my pieces have moved to in the 2nd or third layer scenario lol
After I went Bishop to E3 my opponent went Queen to E7 and prevented me from long side castling. I chased the queen with my bishop and they blundered but I'm sure that's not the strongest move. What should I do in the future?
That's the thing about tricky gambits youtubers will post them up thinking they'll get veiws and tell people that these traps will be work fantastic if your opponents just plays natural book moves what they don't realise is that some patzers who don't even have proper tactical accumen to defend their position just memorise these traps and claim themselves to know the certain opening what these patzers don't understand is that they only know a trappy line of the opening and since they just memorise it they don't really build up their understanding and when someone plays a classical lines with them they just crumble into pieces trappy lines are not starters to the main course it's the sweet desert after u learn all the technicalities in an opening
*BE CAREFUL!!* - I lost a tournament because I got my opponent in a double check mate and he cheated. The double check mate move is legal but it also allows for your opponent to easily cheat against you if you are not careful. The judge looked over our chessboard three times, when my coach from afar was watching the monitors and yelling that I had my opponent in check mate, and my opponent illegal moved out of it. Because my opponent took around 7 minutes to move (he had time and we were on the clock) I lost sight that I had him in a double check mate and that is what my opponent was waiting on and counting on. It stung because that was for our school trophy and we have not won a chess school trophy ever.
I need help, I want to counter my friends opening but I don’t know how. First he opens pawn B3 then after that bishop B2. Is there any way I can infiltrate with knight with him opening like that?
💡 Register to GM Igor Smirnov's FREE Masterclass "The Best Way to Improve at Chess INSTANTLY" - chess-teacher.com/masterclass
l
@@feb5847 thanks
@@feb5847 tanks leter
there is another solution with a nice sacrifice involved for the moment at 13:19 --
bishop to H7, takes pawn. rook takes.
queen to G6, check
black king advances to E7
bishop to C5, check
black king to E6
knight to G5, check mate
same thing really, but slight variation
That's what I thought he was originally going to do. Good eye. :)
Igor, I really enjoy your presentations. Thank you for the interesting and useful hints for chess.
Many thanks!
Hi Igor, thanks for this video. You are a great teacher and I appreciate how clearly you explained this gambit. Thank you!
I play this trap often and from it I have developed my own gambit , it's like a reverse englund gambit .
"Dnulgne" Gambit ?
@@WeCube1898
Hahahahahahaha. Brilliant.
Teach us
That's like asking me how much money I have in the bank , I can't give my secret away , the less people that know about it the better for me .
@@roddychristodoulou9111 don't show off bro.. as a 1900 elo I know how to crack any lines..
.
Just wanted to know who are you?
Thanx for these classes
Thank you for your teaching I will use them. I am enjoying your youtube
Glad you like them!
And just a side note - QxB looks like it works, but you have to calculate a move or 2 deeper to see that at the end black's N can take white's B on e3. If that wasn't the case, then if white played QxB would work b/c if QxQ then white plays Bc5 mate, and if NxQ, then Nd5 check, forking black's K and Q. But unfortunately, black then plays NxB on e3 and turns out to be an even material swap, although black is worse due to white having either a discovered check if black K moves to the d-file, or only other squares are light, so if goes to e8 white can check with Bb5 and has strong initiative, but if Ke6, black's N on e3 covers the c4 square, so white can't check and he loses his initiative, although still has decent position.
Thanks. Please teach more such interesting techniques
Good video, good teacher. I subbed
Been trying traps all day & everyone is playing conservative. Grrr I learned & won with the Fishing Pole trap yesterday though 🙂
Very good....lots of variations
Loved this Gambit. Will try it out. Just amazed at how vast and Beautiful Chess is
Thank you, excellent video and content.
Great videos easy to follow good explanations
Im playing years in chess. Com and my rate is always 1300- 1400 but with this video I reached to 1570 perfect video thatnks a lot I’m 50 now if I had a master like u in my childhood I would be like Kasparov 😂😂😂😂
I studied a lot of opening traps, 4 hours a day, for like 6 months. Those are just tricks, dont help you at all.
Study formal openings and tactics. It will yield better results in the same lapse. But you do have to study a bit.
@@Alientcp These tricks are fun to play though, especially at a lower level. Want to make your high school team while knowing nothing about chess? This is also the way to go.
Great idea, but practically I feel most would know now to move the queen to b4 so I recommend taking with the Knight, if you choose to play this at all
But taking with knight blocks the d block meaning both queens won't be moved and the rook on f8 won't move either meaning white would have sacrificed his pawns for nothing????
This looks like a real fun line to play out. I will have to try this one out
Found another elegant checkmate in two at 8:30. Simply, Qc6. Nd7 Qd7 mate
What about the bishop on g4 though??
These vids are absolutely amazing, thank you!!
Everytime after I watch a Video of yoirs i play a brilliamt chess game❤️
Hmm ...
I am the Philippines.
Though I was a bit too late to learn to play chess until I was inspired me to go back in the board game again ... with of course giving credit to the Netflix's The Queen's Game led by Anya Taylor-Joy aka Beth Harmon.
As I came across with this video, I came to realized that like me needs to rehash more to improve what was lost in my younger years ... my love and interest playing the board game.
I felt more inspired how you deal with options you gave which seem proved more credible to topple the opponent.
Just to let you know, from now on, you wil be my light to my winning games forward. I will take note that all the lessons you have, the videos you have, will be a part of my plan to further my knowledge, as I greatly appreciate sincerely your
contribution to awaken my old stacked memory. Hahaha
Just to let you know, I am now past 70's and retired but not down and out.
I am giving this one ... a 21 gun salute ! More Power !
Do notify me well for some updates. Stay safe. 😍😍😍
No one have time to read all this man
Make it simple
Take it easy
My answer was Qxc7, if black takes back with Nxc7 then white delievers checkmate by Nxc7.
Great ! Still learning a lot from you Igor.
Superb!
Thank you! Cheers!
Wow... this is going to be my 3rd opening after the Vienna and the Dragon Sicilian defense. I love it
What about the tennison gambit?
Try learning fried liver attack. It's so much fun and works against a lot of lower rating players
Beautiful. Thank you✌👏👏👏.
Great gambit really. Thanks for the video.
Thanks sir❤️
Thank you GM i've learned a lot
3:10 wouldn’t black attack the queen using bishop protected by knight?
Only if they want to lose b7 and invite a whole lot of grief defending from there
Answer: 1Q-f2 BxR, 2B-c5+ K-d7, 3BxQ KxN, 4BxB RxB, 5 KxB. What's the score? White has a queen against a rook and a pawn. Black could also give up his queen for the the checking bishop.
excellent opening,thanks
No problem 👍
Glad to find your channel.
In 9:01 after taking Na6 by queen.if bishop cross d1 define the continuevesen
courageous and inspiring opening gambits concealing overwhelming precision surprise; makes chess the game it is. what else you got
Wow love these lessons!
The "oh no my queen twice" gambit accepted ^_^
There was another checkmate at 8:35 which involves without loosing queen. Queen to c6 check then black got no move but knight to d7 and the queen to d7 capturing knight checkmate.
Bishop d7 though
Saying the queen is so much more cool though
3:41 black play Qd6,Qd7,Qd8
Thank you
Magaling din sir gm igor. Salamat ang dami kung nattunan sa mga move mo. God bless,,,
Great! Thank you so much!
as usual another gold mine.
great explanation thank you
Between Queen to E4 and Bishop to G4 is much strongest move for the opponent since if the white Queen captured the night A6 then the Bishop G4 opponent can recaptured first the Rook D1 then, it can be a normal move or possible move for the opponent, the variation is not equal besides the position
Why didn't you mention the two gambits: Bkackmar-Diemer and Ryder?
Hello Igor, I must say I find it difficult to believe that any half decent player would bring his/ her queen out with no support let alone so early in the game without the idea of developing his pieces in the conventional way
queens can do serious damage to the unsuspecting
Fascinating gambit. Thanks for sharing :)
Many thanks.
Great video!! How's Minecraft these days? 😆
Loved you explanation.
Btw Minecraft ID?
Best be prepared to play against the Caro if you do this. As black, my answer to 2. e4 is c6.
What is the name of the opening gambit you showed
Hi thanks for coaching. how should play after d4 d5 e4 d×e4 Nc3 Nf6 f3 e×f3 Q×f3 C6? Please answer thank you again
Wow really helped me alot in Chess Royale. Thanks Igor!
B e3 then surely Bg4 - Black keeps its two pawns advantage.
Sir
Many many thanks for this vedio
JENIUS
So many delightful variations of the game, Igor. It appears so simple and elegant with moves. The only one question that have is how to remember all those openings because sometimes takes so many games just to get some one in trap. Nevertheless, all is good, прекрасный английский и очень интересное объяснение. Игорь, ещё к вам нескромный вопрос. Если у меня в среднем 1,500 рейтинг, я знаю ещё пока низкий, но как узнать при каком разряде какой соответствует рейтинг?
8:54 What about Qxc7, Nxc7, then your knight captures on c7 and its checkmate? (Well only if you opponent is stupid)
What is the key to seeing all those complex moves ahead?
I think its just visualising what if scenarios in your head. The best players can do this really quickly and remember a lot. I forget where my pieces have moved to in the 2nd or third layer scenario lol
Whats that an app or website please help me guys
Wonderful!
Some people play e5 after Nc3. Wish you explained that line too :)
very nice..
9:25 is not a check
Wonderful
Great stuff, ten out of ten!
Love this!
Thanks so much for repeating
For the reply of Be3 if black played Qd8 to prevent long castling how white will exploit. Pls explain.
Anyway nice aggressive opening
6:23 why not A2 to A3 pressuring black's queen and therefore E3 to C5,forming the checkmate?
A3 Qa5 i guess
@@willyyonathan2062 ahh didnt see that. Thanks!
Beautiful 😍game
After I went Bishop to E3 my opponent went Queen to E7 and prevented me from long side castling. I chased the queen with my bishop and they blundered but I'm sure that's not the strongest move.
What should I do in the future?
Maybe lunch a ballistic missile, that way seems to work.
Hope my opponent doesnt watch this
Your good if he does you still have a good game
What if black plays pawn to c6 after white castles?
1. d4 -Nf6 XD. Not allowing that, im planning my own gambit, the Benko.
What if the queen moves back to D8 after being attacked by the bishop on e3?
This is my doubt too!!
Really beautiful
That's the thing about tricky gambits youtubers will post them up thinking they'll get veiws and tell people that these traps will be work fantastic if your opponents just plays natural book moves what they don't realise is that some patzers who don't even have proper tactical accumen to defend their position just memorise these traps and claim themselves to know the certain opening what these patzers don't understand is that they only know a trappy line of the opening and since they just memorise it they don't really build up their understanding and when someone plays a classical lines with them they just crumble into pieces trappy lines are not starters to the main course it's the sweet desert after u learn all the technicalities in an opening
Queen to b8 after knight recapture knight to c7
What about if he play f4 instead of knight.??
Of course, black can play French or Caro Kann on move two.
At the 8:25 8.25 minute mark, couldn’t you checkmate him with Queen C6?
What if queen goes on e5 after we put bishop on e3?
*BE CAREFUL!!* - I lost a tournament because I got my opponent in a double check mate and he cheated. The double check mate move is legal but it also allows for your opponent to easily cheat against you if you are not careful. The judge looked over our chessboard three times, when my coach from afar was watching the monitors and yelling that I had my opponent in check mate, and my opponent illegal moved out of it. Because my opponent took around 7 minutes to move (he had time and we were on the clock) I lost sight that I had him in a double check mate and that is what my opponent was waiting on and counting on. It stung because that was for our school trophy and we have not won a chess school trophy ever.
you know pipe dreams from your fantasies aren't real
If it was double check "mate" you won . Mate is mate
what If he doesn't take with the queen on d4 at the start?
Thanks... #ChessLivesMatter 🎗♟🎭
Sooooo good
What if black was to play b4 instead of playing g4 how do we go on bout that as the white player
Why black bishop didn't kill queen
What if the queen just goes back home after you threaten her with the bishop?
Yesterday against 1600 player I won using this trap. Worth playable
Are you kidding me the second puzzle the white queen to c6 is a checkmate 😂
you actually think a GM would not see that :D . knight and bishop are protecting the square D7, therefore no checkmate.
Super
Les Blancs ont gagné, car les Noirs ont fait une erreur : f6.
En pratique, un joueur ne joue pas de cette façon.
Wow 😳
I need help, I want to counter my friends opening but I don’t know how. First he opens pawn B3 then after that bishop B2. Is there any way I can infiltrate with knight with him opening like that?
1:05 Me during history exams XD