Townes vs Harmon | The Queen's Gambit |

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  • Опубликовано: 13 янв 2025

Комментарии • 81

  • @windy2610
    @windy2610 4 года назад +105

    It’s a shame that she never get the chance to get closer to him. Their sceen chemistry is bomb.

    • @asing7876
      @asing7876 4 года назад +17

      That’s cause he was gay. Did you not see the part in the hotel room in Vegas? The gay “roommate?

    • @davidnaish1389
      @davidnaish1389 4 года назад +4

      Agreed. This is my favourite bit of my favourite series ever. I love her look of disappointment when he takes the pawn with his rook which turns out to be fatal. And the coy way she lightly touches her hair when he looks at her as she's chasing his rook. Love it.

    • @justynawojcicka5056
      @justynawojcicka5056 3 года назад +3

      Even if they havechence to be close he was still gay

    • @waynemcshane4731
      @waynemcshane4731 3 года назад +7

      DONT FORGOT HE WAS GAY.

    • @Heavenisabedroom
      @Heavenisabedroom 3 года назад +2

      he's gay

  • @Carrinthe
    @Carrinthe 4 года назад +43

    It's a really beautiful position, I love that they put so much effort in making sure the chess was good.

    • @Truxxxor
      @Truxxxor 3 года назад

      For every game seen in the series, they used IRL games from GM's. They even had several Chess GMs helping them out making sure the games were solid

  • @CribNotes
    @CribNotes 3 года назад +6

    The music scoring for this scene supports the action we're seeing brilliantly. Wish you uploaded the whole thing.

  • @matthewbrown8679
    @matthewbrown8679 4 года назад +28

    I love how Townes circled Harmon's name without even looking to see what her move had been. Nice little detail.
    The overview was also nice. It was hard to see how all his options after rxp were bad from that side view.

    • @wyethwalker3088
      @wyethwalker3088 3 года назад

      I think he was just moving over to notate his moves, but yes a nice gesture :)

    • @AlexHernandez-yj6qe
      @AlexHernandez-yj6qe 3 года назад +2

      Because he was gonna lose his rook no matter where he moved his king to. After that, his loss would be inevitable

    • @razaninaufal
      @razaninaufal 3 года назад

      he will lose his rook no matter what. an endgame with no rook against knight+rook is significantly losing, even if you have 3 pawns and your opponents doesnt have any, its still losing since you don't have any piece defending/supporting them

    • @woolyimage
      @woolyimage 3 года назад

      I watched Magnus Carlsen's review of the game and it took me as a low level player several minutes to see what he did in about 1 second, in that after Townes took the pawn(not sure if thats shown here) he was going to be pushed back into this position where the rook had nowhere to go.

  • @ElijahSinclair1220
    @ElijahSinclair1220 4 года назад +14

    What an interesting point of view of the scene. I’m only just now learning the basics of the game, so this is rather helpful
    And of course the show is spectacular

    • @Carrinthe
      @Carrinthe 4 года назад +5

      You could put the position in a chess engine and you will see that after Beth plays Kg7 Townes would lose the rook wherever he places it. By direct capturing or with a knight fork. It's a really amazing position.

  • @Freezient
    @Freezient 4 года назад +13

    Thank you for sharing this. I couldn’t really see what’s going on much, i was curious when he says “you’re humiliating my Rook”

    • @thatsawrap5235
      @thatsawrap5235 4 года назад +1

      A rook is a fairly powerful attacking piece in chess, and Harmon keeps forcing Townes to retreat with it one move at a time.

    • @Freezient
      @Freezient 4 года назад

      @@thatsawrap5235 I see. Just wondering, What if he moved his rook to E5?

    • @thatsawrap5235
      @thatsawrap5235 3 года назад

      @@Freezient It's hard to see without a bird eye's view, but Harmon would fork the rook on E5 by moving the knight to F3. The rook is completely trapped on the 5th rank, which can either be forked by the enemy knight or captured outright by the enemy rook or knight.

    • @Freezient
      @Freezient 3 года назад

      @@thatsawrap5235 Black Knight to F3? how many moves will that take, isn’t that too far away?

    • @thatsawrap5235
      @thatsawrap5235 3 года назад

      @@Freezient Just a single move. The white king is on D2, and the black knight is on D4. If Townes put his rook on E5, Harmon's knight to F3 would fork the king and rook, and the rook is lost.

  • @grrrlbreaker
    @grrrlbreaker 3 года назад +1

    Enjoy the play by play on the side screen.

  • @CribNotes
    @CribNotes 3 года назад +6

    Dramatically this scene is a fantastic pivot point in the tournament cause all the chess geeks there probably know each other and suddenly out of nowhere comes this weird unknown red headed girl who starts smoking all the best players.
    The men watching Beth vs Townes having discussions like: "Hey, have any of you guys ever seen this chick before? Who the hell is she? Does anybody know? She's a fuckin monster!!"
    Such a great series.

  • @cesareltraviezo9882
    @cesareltraviezo9882 Год назад

    And if twones instead of eating with the rook had made king to e3 or c3, what would Beth have done?

  • @arrowghost
    @arrowghost Месяц назад

    "Townes unfortunately what he played to save the rook actually LOSES and Blunders the game by playing Rook A5. And after Harmon played Knight B3, forking the Rook & checks the King, and it was in this position on move ?? that Townes resigned the game as there's nothing more to be done here." -- Agadmator.

    • @LucianDevine
      @LucianDevine 29 дней назад

      Not a blunder. The rook literally had no safe move. Every square was either directly threatened or a forkable check with the knight. So Beth wasn't lying when she said that it wouldn't have to suffer much longer.

  • @pashi47
    @pashi47 3 года назад +1

    It’s hard to see, but after KG6 the rook is literally trapped. Every square is covered by either a knight fork or just a capture. Insane

    • @LucianDevine
      @LucianDevine 29 дней назад

      If he resigns, does the rook end up spending an eternity in suffering and embarrassment, because it was never captured?

    • @danielstewart8106
      @danielstewart8106 28 дней назад

      Why couldn't he have gone to E5?

    • @LucianDevine
      @LucianDevine 28 дней назад

      @@danielstewart8106 Knight to F3 fork.

    • @danielstewart8106
      @danielstewart8106 28 дней назад

      @@LucianDevine Aha! Thanks. I'm obviously not that good at chess.

    • @LucianDevine
      @LucianDevine 28 дней назад

      @@danielstewart8106 No worries. It takes a bit to see that the second he takes the pawn on H6, his rook is dead.

  • @WillyTheGreatTheReal
    @WillyTheGreatTheReal 26 дней назад

    The white rook is not going anywhere.

  • @phen-themoogle7651
    @phen-themoogle7651 4 года назад +3

    What game is this based on?

  • @samkochel6990
    @samkochel6990 3 года назад

    Why not rook to b5? What am I missing?

    • @benkochess
      @benkochess  3 года назад

      The Knight is on d4, just take your rook on b5 😉

    • @samkochel6990
      @samkochel6990 3 года назад +1

      @@benkochess OMG...just the opposite of Townes I was so looking at the forks on C and E, I forgot the easy take. Why not take on H6?

    • @LucianDevine
      @LucianDevine 29 дней назад

      @@samkochel6990 He did take on H6. That's the problem. It led him down this road. Once he took on H6, his rook was dead. He just didn't know it yet.

  • @blackiestevenroblessantos3345
    @blackiestevenroblessantos3345 3 года назад

    0:12 Rook d6 win the game

    • @LucianDevine
      @LucianDevine 29 дней назад

      How do you figure? Black's rook captures your rook. If you move your king to threaten the knight, black moves it. If you move your pawn to threaten queening, black moves it's rook back to cover and pick it off. This is an easy win for black.

  • @rsdr7558
    @rsdr7558 3 года назад +1

    The king is in G8

    • @LucianDevine
      @LucianDevine 29 дней назад

      True, but it doesn't matter either way. As long as the king can get to G7, the result is the same.

  • @davidnaish1389
    @davidnaish1389 4 года назад +1

    I'm only a novice compared to this level but I don't understand why white moves his rook over to an obvious fork. If he saves his rook does he not have some advantage with his remaining pawns?

    • @benkochess
      @benkochess  4 года назад +6

      His move 1.Rh6? was mistake and after 1...Kg7 2.Rh5 Kg6 he doesnt have where to go with rook, because of on 3.Rh4 or 3.Re5 is a fork 3...Nf3 and win, or on 3.Rc5 or like in the game 3.Ra5 is fork with 3...Nb3,.... yes, instead of 1.Rh6? he could play some other move and it would be ok. But chess is like this, if your opponent doesn't make mistake you can not win the game :-)

    • @davidnaish1389
      @davidnaish1389 4 года назад +5

      @@benkochess Thank you very much for your reply. I see it now - every single move of the rook and it is captured. Wow. This, by the way, is my favourite series ever.

    • @Pebbe496
      @Pebbe496 4 года назад +4

      @@benkochess The knight on d4 is massive! It's totally not obvious (to me) that it alone takes away 7 spaces for white's rook either directly or by threatening the fork. This is a brilliant position.

    • @alexandruprocopovici4653
      @alexandruprocopovici4653 4 года назад +1

      @@benkochess that is your opinion! Even if your opponent doensn't make any mistakes you still can win if played properly!!!

    • @alexandruprocopovici4653
      @alexandruprocopovici4653 4 года назад +1

      @@benkochess and Rh6 isnt a mistake!

  • @Saif-ms1dp
    @Saif-ms1dp 3 года назад

    Why would he put the rook there, i mean the fork was obvious

    • @woolyimage
      @woolyimage 3 года назад

      Study the position and you'll find that there was nowhere he could go. It took me a little while to figure out.

  • @EtzEchad
    @EtzEchad 3 года назад

    That last move of his was idiotic. There wasn't any reason for it.
    He should've resigned two moves earlier.

    • @Carrinthe
      @Carrinthe 3 года назад

      Sometimes you need the time to compose yourself and come to terms you are loosing.

    • @woolyimage
      @woolyimage 3 года назад

      Some people just can't resist taking pieces and often regret it after . Guilty as charged here lol

  • @hummingfrog
    @hummingfrog 3 года назад +4

    How does black win this? I see a rook against three pawns, but two of the pawns are queening threats and the remaining one could be. So how does the rook stop them all? I assume this must be some long endgame dance that's over my head.

    • @gspaulsson
      @gspaulsson 3 года назад +4

      Without any pieces to defend them, white's pawns are easy picking. Rb8 picks up the b pawn, then the rook over to the h file and that pawn is helpless. The third pawn isn't worth bothering with: a N-R combination is an easy mate with the K moseying along to help out.

    • @hummingfrog
      @hummingfrog 3 года назад +2

      @@gspaulsson Oops, I had the board upside down, so I thought white had two pawns in queening position on the sixth rank, and that the black knight would be taken after it took the white rook. In my defense, the three pawns weren't moved during the video -- if they had been I would have noticed they were going the wrong way. (I'm not a strong player, but I'm not *that* bad!)

    • @SheepzWhiTeX
      @SheepzWhiTeX 3 года назад +1

      so usually rook and knight cant win against just a rook with good defense so he should be playing towards a draw, but basically his pawns block all the squares leading to beth being able to trap his rook with her king; he carelessly took her last pawn and then there was no tile for him to go to