The Unbeatable Urusov Gambit - Chess Openings Explained

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  • Опубликовано: 6 сен 2024
  • Jonathan Schrantz lectures on the Urusov Gambit in the Bishop's Opening. Black had better be careful, or the white Queen and Bishop will be kicking him around.
    2016.05.16
    Nikolay Semenovich Tereshchenko vs Georg Rotlewi, All Russian Amateur (1909): C43 Petrov, Urusov gambit
    Yakov Isaevich Neishtadt vs NN, URS simul (1950): C43 Petrov, Urusov gambit
    Boris Avrukh vs. Almira Skripchenko, 2001: C43 Petrov, Urusov gambit

Комментарии • 849

  • @NXeta
    @NXeta 8 лет назад +1394

    "I'll test the audience once again, give yourselves a moment to.."
    "KNIGHT TAKES F7??"
    There's always that one guy

  • @dw29421
    @dw29421 7 лет назад +1904

    When you think you're learning something complicated and an 8 year old walks in

    • @aionlover3981
      @aionlover3981 5 лет назад +354

      But he's an Asian 8 years old, so it's like an american 21 years old equivalent or something like that.

    • @StefanSpycher
      @StefanSpycher 5 лет назад +28

      EXACTLY what i was thinking. lol .

    • @Canttouchthis04
      @Canttouchthis04 5 лет назад +78

      You gotta watch out for little kids who are super interested in something. They learn AMAZINGLY quick and become very proficient. Everything is easier to learn when you're younger. I had every single person on every American bill ever in circulation memorized at five years old lol. Idk why, but it was interesting to me at the time. Same went for videogames, baseball, and soccer. I was playing super mario Bros at 3 years old and beat it at 4. I've met plenty of little kids who were scary good at what they loved.

    • @lamphaven3087
      @lamphaven3087 5 лет назад +23

      I’m that kid

    • @don__hector7845
      @don__hector7845 5 лет назад +2

      @@aionlover3981 lol

  • @MutinyFever
    @MutinyFever 8 лет назад +63

    Thank you for this gambit, Jonathan. I've been a King's Gambit player for many years, and I've been looking for another opening with the fun of the KG but a little more solidity. I've been playing Bishop's Opening since I watched this video, with the Urusov whenever my opponent allows, and I have had great success. Rare to find an opening that I can adopt with success so easily. This is extremely comfortable to play.

    • @trevbarlow9719
      @trevbarlow9719 5 лет назад +2

      Same. Loads of traps that can arise from this.

    • @anishnehete
      @anishnehete 4 года назад

      😃 😃

    • @MrChrisdube
      @MrChrisdube 4 года назад +1

      I like the Albin (e5) as a reply to the Queen's Gambit.

    • @f.d.3289
      @f.d.3289 3 месяца назад +1

      yes. i only recently disscovered the Urusov Gambit via Stockfish and the Lichess database and booooy I was blown away -- this is so easy to play, your moves are all natural (even the sacrifices) and Black's natural moves are usually blunders XD
      This is exactly what a gambit should be --- it's pretty sound, you totally open up the center and your pieces totally rule the board by move 8. I finally found my perfect gambit :)

  • @deadfIag
    @deadfIag 7 лет назад +170

    Aaron, please don't leave that door open.

    • @Jacob-sb3su
      @Jacob-sb3su 7 лет назад +16

      for the love of god Aaron.
      Usurov
      USUROV

    • @ezramorrison7330
      @ezramorrison7330 7 лет назад +3

      Urusov*

    • @berndwaldow3401
      @berndwaldow3401 7 лет назад +12

      It's a scary world outside, so don't go outside, stay home and play chess for your whole life -like Jonathan did, i think...

    • @AT-qm8gv
      @AT-qm8gv 7 лет назад +12

      I left the door open

    • @marcosmadeira4130
      @marcosmadeira4130 3 года назад +1

      @@AT-qm8gv now the scarry monster are coming after us

  • @mariusdafunk
    @mariusdafunk 8 лет назад +17

    6:27 put such a huge smile on my face. thanks for another entertaining and insightful lecture!

  • @rockyg147
    @rockyg147 7 лет назад +28

    I'm learning Chess,respect too you.Wish you all a Happy New Year.

  • @edwardbottle1018
    @edwardbottle1018 8 лет назад +9

    I'd like to see the chase variation of the Alekhine but I'm happy to watch whatever opening you decide to do. Keep up the great work!

  • @rlittlefield2691
    @rlittlefield2691 7 лет назад +214

    I have played this for years, now I know there is a name for it.

  • @eduardbeiline8353
    @eduardbeiline8353 8 лет назад +44

    Thank you Jonathan for the wonderful video. You made my day!

  • @blubberbooty
    @blubberbooty 7 лет назад +1

    I Love this channel! I am 56 years old and i've been playing chess for 50 years! I was in my first tournament when I was 6. I learn a lot watching this young lad. I would simply love to challenge him to a game. Rete or not here I come. Get it?

  • @OswaldChisala
    @OswaldChisala 8 лет назад +220

    So, this will definitely seem dumb, but the first 16 seconds sounded like he was on an old school freestyle rap 🙌🏽😂. Okay, back to the video.

  • @p1nesap
    @p1nesap 8 лет назад +13

    great rapport amongst CCSCSL instructors shines through.

  • @beeble2003
    @beeble2003 3 года назад +1

    Been a while since I watched a Schrantz lecture. Forgot just how good he is.

  • @jaredmcgary159
    @jaredmcgary159 6 лет назад +3

    This guy is a beast and a great teacher, keep up the good work your respected by many of us in the chess community. Also never dumb it down for thee unpassioned or slow people, keep setting the highest standards so we can reach it. love watching your videos personally knowing you bout to go in. keep that firery personality that sets you apart from the rest.

  • @kevinmcmahon50
    @kevinmcmahon50 7 лет назад +4

    Thanks Jonathan. Great video that I've watched a couple of times now and is really easy to follow.

  • @gordonabner7857
    @gordonabner7857 6 лет назад

    I love people like you willing to teach with the same energy as you would use to play the game.....Thank You for that and all you have done for the Game.........

  • @walterparker2641
    @walterparker2641 8 лет назад +20

    Easy to follow and very succinct lecture.

  • @superposition9497
    @superposition9497 7 лет назад +141

    that little dude aaron was funny

  • @gratitude62
    @gratitude62 8 лет назад +1

    great vid, and definitely my style in the making. thanks a lot...it was fun watching how much you enjoy the material.

  • @badjaeaux
    @badjaeaux 7 лет назад

    probably the best chess teacher on youtube so far

  • @thomasrogers3008
    @thomasrogers3008 7 лет назад +1

    Whenever people play E5 against my E4 i play this and i have a brilliant time with it. Thanks Jonathan and Saint Louis Chess Club. Have been trying to learn the Max Lange attack, Morphy attack and a couple of other E4, E5 lines to compliment my knowledge of variations in this sort of opening too.
    I've found that barely anyone will take on D4 but people do often take on E4 with their Knight, leading to some exciting lines. A lot of people are playing D6 against me too at the moment (when declining the gambit) this is a bad move and fun to exploit - imo.

  • @kwiecienk92
    @kwiecienk92 8 лет назад +1

    I'll be devoted to one subject. During the 17th European Individual Championship I watched and tried to analyze some Grunfeld games. I was especially interested in Piorun-Kunin at round 7 (it is still in progress as I'm writing) and was wandering what you think about these lines. It covers the material you said you are going to explain anyway:
    1. d4 Nf6
    2. c4 g6
    3. Nc3 d5
    4. cxd Nxd5
    5. e4 Nxc3
    6. bxc Bg7
    7. Nf3
    There were some other crazy games in Grunfeld as well (vide Swierszcz-Stefansson round 5). Probably even more than I am aware of, since I have little time now and am able to follow only the games of my countryman.

  • @mrpossibilities
    @mrpossibilities 4 года назад +12

    It’d be nice if every now and then, when a teacher is showing us a new line, if they just showed the whole line before starting to interject alternative moves. It becomes overwhelming and frustrating. At a given point, the amount of alternate lines pile up in my brain and it wnds up being just confusing. Just show me how the original line goes and then we can go into the details of alternative moves each side can play.

  • @Britishbirdsnests
    @Britishbirdsnests 5 лет назад +1

    My favourite after the accepted gambit is bishop captures on f7 followed by knight to E5. Requires very accurate defence from black to count whites attacking options

  • @uluafaese8393
    @uluafaese8393 8 лет назад +15

    "You left the door open!" Lol. Love this video. Love the classroom environment.

  • @gonzalo4658
    @gonzalo4658 4 года назад

    This is the only chess guy that just gets straight to the point and starts moving pieces.

  • @DavidU1957
    @DavidU1957 7 лет назад

    Nice presentation Jonathan... you have breathed life into this line

  • @melodychest9020
    @melodychest9020 8 лет назад +1

    By far the best lecture from Jonathan to date! Up there at the 1800 level and beyond! So many tactical continuations the likes of which would be so tricky in a tournament game for under 1800s. Would love you to cover the Scandinavian as we get that a lot in online blitz games with black attacking right off the bat! Thanks for a well researched video on the Urusov .. excellent!

  • @htasul
    @htasul 8 лет назад +42

    He looks exactly like my old biology teacher, except he was Welsh so it didn't feel right to watch - still great video though.

  • @orionp.9476
    @orionp.9476 6 лет назад +15

    17:05 "Bishop takes d5" -- "That's bullsh-" "well yeah something had to take d5." lolololol I love these lectures.

    • @ProudNitro
      @ProudNitro 3 года назад

      lol he actually says "I was close" but you're right, on 2x speed it sounds like "That's bullshit"

  • @ldeans5620
    @ldeans5620 7 лет назад

    I think it's unlikely I'll ever actually use the Urusov gambit in over the board play, but Jeremy's lecture has probably improved my chess playing anyway.

  • @BioNic369
    @BioNic369 4 года назад +1

    When practicing against the AI, it always responds with 6. Nc6 after 5. d5, which I'm not sure how to exploit that. Ideas?

  • @williamh6218
    @williamh6218 7 лет назад

    I built this lesson into Lichess so you can play along with the lines. Check it out! lichess.org/study/SpzzM5zf

  • @Supware
    @Supware 6 лет назад

    I'm really enjoying Schrantz' lectures. Seems to really know his stuff and communicates it perfectly

  • @yoannhappe9281
    @yoannhappe9281 8 лет назад

    ECO Code seems to be C24: Bishop's Opening, Urusov Gambit, Keidansky Gambit
    instead of C43: Petrov, Russian Game, Modern Attack (found on chesstempo)
    Nice and clear lesson, I'll see the other ones!
    Funny to see that in every chess club there's always one painful guy in the audience :))

  • @andreasavraam6898
    @andreasavraam6898 7 лет назад

    in the d6 variation,in 29:45 min,if 15. ... Nxe7 then 16. Bxf6, what happens afterwards,there is a variation 16. ... Bg6 and if 17. Qh6 then 17. ... Nf5 prevents the mate on g7 and attacks the queen and is also protected by the bishop on g6,so i assume better for white would be 17. Nd4 preventing the black knight from going to f5,then the only response for black would be 17. ... h5,otherwise the white queen is going to h6 with mate to follow. after that white could play 18. Qg5 attempting to go to h6,or 18. Rg1 pinning the bishop and threatening to take the pawn on h5 with mate to follow,in both cases the only response from black is 18. ... Kh7. Then white could play 19. Ng5 attampting to take the black knight on e7,but i think in the Rg1 variation much more aggressive is 19. Ne4 threatening check on g5. The bishop can't take on e4 because then the queen would take on h5. another continuation for white is if he plays 17. Re1 or 17.Kd5 , which both lead to opposite color bishop but white has 2 knights extra and black has a rook extra and an extra pawn, which it's unclear. long story short, i can't find a continuation with definite mate or large advantage for white, any comments or something i missed?

  • @CharlySardo
    @CharlySardo 6 лет назад +1

    I played this as my main line to a rating of 1994 USCF. It was not the gambits fault I did not progress. Even better, my main line as black was a Latvian against e4. I had a 6 round "40 in 2" tournament with a performance rating of 2372 with this repertoire. (ok everyone doesn't take both pawns or even play e5... and of course there were some KID's and Gruenfields) but this was all I wanted to play. Urusov and Latvian. Don't even ask about my Be3 French.

  • @Josh38414
    @Josh38414 7 лет назад +6

    There are so many problems with this.
    At 14:00 QE7 and even after they accepted they get out easy. This move is never mentioned here.
    At 15:42 the problem is you say there is a better move, which they didn't play, and when we play against that better move, we have no idea what to do then.
    This comes in huge at 17:50 where without black making that stupid move, there is no pin on the bishop, and it just takes your rook.

    • @CLAX1337
      @CLAX1337 5 лет назад +1

      You have not explained clearly. 14:00 is white to move, and Qe7+ accelerates white’s development, while also putting the queen on the most scrutinized square on the board.

  • @user-MetalAngel
    @user-MetalAngel 7 дней назад

    Actually, even if your opponent plays Nc6 before Nf6, you can still play d4. So, play would go like this:
    1.e4 e5 2.Bc4 Nc6 3.Nf3 Nf6 4. d4... and after black takes exd4, then you push 5. e5 driving away the King's Knight.

  • @rcksnxc361
    @rcksnxc361 7 лет назад +6

    Well I suck at chess but I finally beat a level which I couldn't have beaten without this trick
    I used this gambit... It kinda declined but I made another "variation which wasn't mentioned here" where I sacrificed a rook for "queen or checkmate"
    I got the queen and checkmated like a few minutes afterwards... Woo finally :D
    Thanks for the trick

  • @FrankBakulov
    @FrankBakulov 3 года назад

    This video is all about the beauty of chess! Wonderful

  • @stevem9529
    @stevem9529 6 лет назад +1

    At 8.39 black bishop has white king in check, so does this not mean the castle that follows about 10 seconds later is illegal?

  • @shriramsverma
    @shriramsverma 5 лет назад

    At the time 49:46 in video
    queen goes to F8
    there is mate in 2
    Followed by Qg5+
    The only way to protect the king is Qg7
    Q*g7+ mate

  • @HughMorristheJoker
    @HughMorristheJoker 2 месяца назад

    That 1909 game was a classic. I was there!!

  • @krileym
    @krileym 3 года назад

    6:24 - (Aaron Lin enters stage right, leaving the door ajar, fearing neither monsters nor creepy crawlies, promptly prepares notebook, and swiftly writes URU SOV, with proper spelling)

  • @viettungnguyen1692
    @viettungnguyen1692 4 года назад

    Very great video but a small issue i found that in 29:47 if Black play Nxe7 is the good move because then Bg6 and if you play Qh6 Black will play Nf5 aim for your Queen and take back the advantage :)

  • @hennessey415
    @hennessey415 3 года назад +1

    17:29 knight takes black bishop, (white bishop is pinned). Blk queen takes knight on g5 queen takes queen pawn takes queen, white knight c7 fork rook and king?

    • @chinmayaprakash
      @chinmayaprakash 9 месяцев назад

      At the given timestamp, White is already down a minor piece and after Nxc7+ Ke7 Nxa8 Rxa8 material trade-off is even. But White would be hard placed pressing its advantage of a superior pawn structure against Black since it is down a bishop and a knight against the black rook.

  • @patarsianturi3756
    @patarsianturi3756 3 года назад

    so interesting to follow this class, nice teaching from the Master

  • @jemir8012
    @jemir8012 7 лет назад

    Thanks for the nice chess videos. I am new in chess but i found your lecture helpful to new chess enthusiasts. I hope i can request chess opening someday..

  • @lecioperyjunior1690
    @lecioperyjunior1690 7 лет назад

    3:00
    "First of all we take e5"
    Opening Qd5 threat is useless considering Qf3 threat is already at hand, specially Nf6 can be followed by xe5 forcing Qf2 and the enemy has his queen already moved and blocking black bishop.
    Also, in 4:04 you don't really need to capture with the bishop. You can kick the knight using f4, and then the knight Ne6 to allegedly block e5 pawn, but you can proceed with e5 and if knight escapes is mate. Even the Nb4 countermeasure threatening the queen can be answered easily with Qe2.
    Not really sure he missed all of this or if I am missing something clearly obvious that completely nullifies whatever I said.

    • @lecioperyjunior1690
      @lecioperyjunior1690 7 лет назад

      I almost forgot: at 16:48, Qh5 is the charm. His attempts to "not die" seems to have almost failed. After Qh5, f7 is pinned. If g6 or black queen is moved anywhere, then white Qxd5 and knight is lost. If Qxd5 taking white queen, Rxd5 and queens have just been exchanged, without material recovering from black.
      If any other random move is done, except castling, like doing c6, then white can Rxe6+ and f7 can't do squat about it. Even further, King can only escape to f8 because Qd7 implies in a loss of queen after Qxd5. Actually, if I were playing black at this rate, I'd rather believe that I had sinned badly because apparently God has deserted me.

  • @jacobrivas3359
    @jacobrivas3359 7 лет назад +13

    3:34 i didnt know the hodgetwins like chess

  • @stingraymarines5168
    @stingraymarines5168 2 года назад

    Thank u sir jonathan..your videos are very helpful..hope to play a game with you in the future😊

  • @topneorej
    @topneorej 7 лет назад +311

    47 dislikers preferred another color chess board XD

  • @sam.0021
    @sam.0021 7 лет назад

    at the beginning... why is slamming the knight in for the fork delayed or not even played for d3? ive never played competitive chess just with family/friends and whenever they dont follow openings and play these very aggressive moves (going for the bishop + knight fork OR pushing pawns to attack pieces rather than develop) i get a bit sidetracked and sometimes make horrendous blunders... help?

  • @giacomoguarnieri2461
    @giacomoguarnieri2461 8 лет назад

    Very nice opening, and very nice explanations! Many thanks!

  • @sinisamilisavljevic8833
    @sinisamilisavljevic8833 3 года назад +2

    "Creepy crawlies? I just came from there, no sign of them."

  • @x.jayrex
    @x.jayrex 3 года назад

    29:55 Bishop g6 ? if Qh6 Nf5 Trade Queens? if Rg1 Qd7 threatening Nf5 and if Rxg6 fxg6 the Queen helps out. With two Rook sacs from white Black should has material compensation for his open King right? Does that work?

  • @FourthRoot
    @FourthRoot 7 лет назад

    At 16:51, what about Rxe6+ followed by Qh5 and Ne5.
    eventually black's king will be either very exposed or white will regain material and have a better position.

  • @nevelleven
    @nevelleven 6 лет назад

    At point 12.04 in the video white can take pawn d5 with bishop if black queen takes bishop knight c3.

  • @Monuments_to_Good_Intentions
    @Monuments_to_Good_Intentions 6 лет назад

    this video helped me up my rating by well over 100 points, not sure what it did, but thanks! I find most people dont take with the knight, and some rarely take with the pawn. but I really like taking away the persons right to castle.

    • @Monuments_to_Good_Intentions
      @Monuments_to_Good_Intentions 6 лет назад

      now only to work on my end game, I still suck without the queen, trying to use it as least as possible.

  • @dcipher2612
    @dcipher2612 7 лет назад

    12:05, Bishop D3, then after block move, D3 takes E4, then after D5 takes E4, rook takes E4. Then possibility for F3 to take D4 and the bishop takes and then queen takes backed up by rook no?

  • @exquisitecorpse4917
    @exquisitecorpse4917 8 лет назад +8

    The Benoni is a good one to cover - it's actually sound, there are a lot of example games, and it's sharp enough to create "interesting" games for the bloodthirsty spectators
    (though I don't mind seeing something solid once in a while....all of this sacrificing on f7 is like eating ice cream for every meal)

    • @user-ts2co4ov5h
      @user-ts2co4ov5h 5 лет назад

      Benoni is hardly ever played in GM games now...Black loses too much

  • @rk1darko
    @rk1darko 4 года назад

    19:48 White can play Knight d2 or Pawn g4 to prepare an escape for queen before black plays Pawn g6.

  • @hjalteandersen1473
    @hjalteandersen1473 5 лет назад +1

    Add 17:38 - isn't white down material if black recaptures the rook with Nxd5 rather than Bxg5?

  • @Wuschel1990
    @Wuschel1990 8 лет назад +3

    12:09 What do you have against the move Bxd5 Qxd5 followed by Knight c3? you have to move your Queen and I can take the Knight on e4 with my Knight on c3.

    • @chinmayaprakash
      @chinmayaprakash 9 месяцев назад

      Only that you have given up a good bishop for a bad knight in order to win back a pawn. And after Nc3 Qh5 Nxe4 O-O, Black has solved its development problems with ideas of Bg4 and Nc6. And it is still up a pawn and holding on to its bishop pair.

  • @xc5103
    @xc5103 8 лет назад +2

    Hahaha I like how this guy lectures. Very good.

  • @jericosha2842
    @jericosha2842 4 года назад

    I like this teacher. Easy to follow

  • @Sultano85
    @Sultano85 6 лет назад

    I always played Danish gambit so far but I d like to change on it, the problem is if black response with 2....Cc6 or Ac5, there is somethig different to avoid the 2 Knight game or Italian game?

  • @romangargiulo8350
    @romangargiulo8350 7 лет назад

    Jonathan says there are no tricks with the Knight in the position as 31:30 here against bishops taking on h6 but I've been playing this gambit against the machine and in a similar position she plays Kd4 and I could not find any good response to that. Any ideas??

  • @danielmartin9527
    @danielmartin9527 3 года назад

    what do i do if after Pe4, Pe5, Bc4 he plays Qh4 ?
    i am currently trying it out against bots before i play real ppl and the 1300 bot play QH4 every time and every time i played it out i get draw or lose so idk what i'm doing wrong

  • @doce.9755
    @doce.9755 7 лет назад +1

    a better game to show would be Timoscenko vs Karpov, Fendrisch vs Steiniz and another one where in Lasker was black. All the three world champions where destroyed by the urusov in these games.

  • @thomasbrooklyn1820
    @thomasbrooklyn1820 5 лет назад +1

    One of my favorite violin riffs.

  • @chriszablocki2460
    @chriszablocki2460 Год назад

    Seems effective. RUclips REALLY thinks I should know this one.

  • @stevewithington7640
    @stevewithington7640 7 лет назад +3

    Brilliant video! Loved some of the turns of phrase. Thanks ☺

  • @miked2543
    @miked2543 3 года назад

    8:56.... Ya, I'm cool with transposing into the Danish. In fact, I think I prefer the Danish through transposition than by attempting it outright.

  • @arumugamsatasivam85
    @arumugamsatasivam85 4 года назад

    Really very good I am coming up age of 50 I have playing since agg of 8 every Sunday we play chess, i will try this

  • @augustgreig9420
    @augustgreig9420 7 лет назад +5

    Wow. When I played in middle school, I found this opening and believed it unbeatable. Amazing I was right.

  • @Majora1988
    @Majora1988 8 лет назад +5

    So I think a solid opening might be a good idea since we did a bunch of fun gambits in a row. How about the classical QGD or Slav?

    • @Majora1988
      @Majora1988 8 лет назад +2

      +Majora1988 I definitely learned not to accept this gambit as black, though I would be much too scared to take with the knight after queen takes. Great lecture again Jonathan!

    • @htasul
      @htasul 8 лет назад

      that's a paddlin'

    • @teresitaginacabioc198
      @teresitaginacabioc198 7 лет назад

      Majora1988 what abut if night takes the dpawn and if he reply Qh4

  • @GirGir183
    @GirGir183 8 лет назад +7

    Lol, at 6:24 I thought he was talking to his opponent on the chess board. I thought Erin Lynn was his ethereal chess opponent. I thought he was referring to the act of "not castling". "Leaving the door open" meant something different to me. Don't you know there's bad guys out there. Close the back door and prevent the scary monsters from getting in......pure chess.

  • @lukeroderickhugo2021
    @lukeroderickhugo2021 7 лет назад

    beginner question. why wouldn't black move pawn to h6 to put pressure on the white bishop that threatens the horse on e6 and the queen?

  • @OmniRadio
    @OmniRadio 3 года назад

    I really love this opening and the multiple possibilities that will happen

  • @outputcoupler7819
    @outputcoupler7819 7 лет назад

    I'm pretty bad at chess, and was wondering why black doesn't play Ne7 at 20:50. After running through a bunch of ways it could play out in my head, it seems like black might be able to keep the knight on the board, but he's still getting mated either way so it doesn't really matter.
    Am I off base here?

  • @meganekko-moe1754
    @meganekko-moe1754 7 лет назад

    46:59 There are one move that takes you to a checkmate with white. Move rook in E4 to E8, then the black rook eats that, and you eat that rook with queen. If he doesn't eat the rook at first, you eat his rook with the queen and checkmate.

    • @kingdespair4918
      @kingdespair4918 2 года назад

      You're only thinking offensively. After e4 rook moves to e8, blacks queen moves to a3 square forcing white to move his king in b1 and mate on the next move. This is why white needed to move his d1 rook to create an escape route for whites king.

  • @yashcherivirala
    @yashcherivirala 6 лет назад

    at 19:32 why Kf8 is the best move ? I think playing g6 gives more advantage to black. Am i missing something here ?

  • @aquaknight21
    @aquaknight21 7 лет назад

    At 12:30 mins, why not defend the black horse with the queen, he would be forced to castle to the right or attack with his queen or he would find a double attack on queen to king and horse to rook 1H. Seems like a better move and easy counter to your left castle strategy.

  • @missjessgem
    @missjessgem 8 лет назад +2

    how about a video about the Deutz Gambit? 1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bc4 Bc5 4. O-O Nf6 5. d4

  • @stevejobs9851
    @stevejobs9851 7 лет назад

    Dear Sir,
    I have a better move instead of Qh5 at 42:00 time. I think Qh5 is good but the following below is also not bad. Please correct me if I am wrong.
    White Black
    ==============
    Qh6 Rg8
    Re8 Qxe8
    Rd1xND7 Resigns

  • @roycastanares6597
    @roycastanares6597 7 лет назад

    Hello Sir, this has a counter attack for black,
    What if I play 1. e4 e5 2. Bc4 Nf6 3. d4 Nxe4 4. dxe5 and what if black play Qh4, clearly black has the advantage. Please clarify.

  • @ConSoul
    @ConSoul 7 лет назад

    12:05 - why cant bishop capure pawn and if queen takes, NC3 wins back the material?

  • @smashu2
    @smashu2 8 лет назад

    I play the Urusov with move Order 2 d4 than 3.Bc4 (3.Nf3 can also lead to it but Bc4 invite Nf6 more) instead of 2Bc4 it feel i get into the gambit more often with that move order.

  • @yashcherivirala
    @yashcherivirala 6 лет назад

    In the main line after Black accepts the gambit and Qd5 why should Black's knight look for a retreat ? Qe2 seems like an advantage for black.

  • @Brandon-pf7oq
    @Brandon-pf7oq 7 лет назад

    Wow many gambits I enjoy stem from e4 d4! (I also enjoy playing the Scotch Gambit which conveninetly opens up many things)

  • @Leprutz
    @Leprutz 7 лет назад

    I do not understan the greatness of the very first move taking bishop f1 to f4? Why wouldn't black move pawn d7 to d5 and render the bishops move completely useless by forcing him to retreat? Someone please explain? thank you.

  • @ElwoodPDowd-nz2si
    @ElwoodPDowd-nz2si 4 года назад +1

    I'm 52 and just starting to play chess. I think I'll start with a beginner level video.

  • @1dubsterr
    @1dubsterr 3 года назад

    At 5:10 or 5:11 why is it better to develop the knight than to trade queens and either make their knight retreat or mess up their castling queen side?
    Please.

  • @iDontcare_000
    @iDontcare_000 7 лет назад

    13:53, What about bishop to F7, Queen take, King to E3, (Black Counterplay whatever it is), Knight to G5. then outplay massivily from there to checkmate? what do you guys think?

    • @DanielHimHun
      @DanielHimHun 7 лет назад +1

      You mean King takes on F7 than it is white's move. After Knight to g5 black just goes G8. White cannot check because of Pawn d5 which is guarded by the knight and also the Queen. If after the bishop sac you try to check with the Q by Qdc4 it runs into the same pawn on the D-file.

  • @ttrc4466
    @ttrc4466 7 лет назад

    Hi id like to ask in the position at 48:31, why doesn't bishop c8 take d7. that solves all mate threats that I can see. can someone explain this to me?

    • @ttrc4466
      @ttrc4466 7 лет назад

      sorry, just realized mate on g8

  • @FedorManiac90
    @FedorManiac90 6 лет назад

    I have been looking up different openings for years and not one shows mine. I control the center while having 1 knight and 1 Bishop 2 pawns for attack and then I have 2 pawns 1 Bishop and 1 knight to defend the other 4. I use 4 pawns and both rooks to guard the king and queen. I rarely castle because it's a wasted move I feel. I only bring my rooks and the queen out to check and mate. I'd rather take most of my opponents pieces before I kill. The master strategist only seeks victory once all the battles have been won. I will castle however of there is no moves for me to push forward.

  • @mikhailchigorin4214
    @mikhailchigorin4214 8 лет назад

    Please do a black POV QGD with Be7. Petrosian system. Also a Benoni coverage from white and black. I think when you cover one opening cover it from both sides.

  • @aaronrojas7390
    @aaronrojas7390 5 лет назад

    At 30:16 it’s a checkmate in 2 if you move the queen to G5