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Insanely Aggressive Nakhmanson Gambit

Apr 29, 2024
Hi everyone, I'm Kevin from thechestwebsite.com and we have a really fun game that we're going to go over today and that's the nakmansen range. There are a few ways you can get into the nachmans position and

gambit

more. The most common way I have seen in my own games is e45 and then f3 knight c6 and then bishop to c4 entering the Italian game followed by knight f6 d4 and then after they take your castle on the king's side white will look for give. accumulate material and the only thing white wants in return is a rapid development specifically of the main pieces, the queen and the rook here will be very involved in the game and then after the knight takes here on e4, the key move in the game is knight two c three now I recognize that they have to take the pawn here on d4 and the knight has to take here on e4 so you can play the papers in the full range, so you won't always have the option to do this, i will make another video if you want to see it feel free to let me know and i will make a video on the rejection lines in case they don't continue like we want them to even right here you could take it with your horses here at c3 we are going to cover if they take with their pawn and this position is the best move for them to make with their pawn, but it is also the most complicated and difficult, I think for them we will be looking at pawn bets here on c3, if you want me to do other variations on the lines of decline or if they take with their knight here on c3, feel free to let me know, but from here the main line is for the bishop to take here on f7.
insanely aggressive nakhmanson gambit
I can see that White is just giving up a ton of material, he already gave up the knight here on c3, now he gives up a bishop here on f7 after the king takes the queen, raises here to d5 and has a very, very attack. strong, now there is no way for any of the pieces to block this king here, so the king really has four different options, it will come here to g6 f6 e7 e8, so we will look at all those variations and how white can attack Better the black king, so we'll enter. The first counterclockwise move you could see is the king to g6 seems the worst, only if you're looking at this, I'm not sure why they would try to push their king even further, but I always like to make sure to go over all the variations in case you see some terrible moves from here every time your queen can go down and your opponent's king is in the center of the board and you can control them and start attacking.
insanely aggressive nakhmanson gambit

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insanely aggressive nakhmanson gambit...

I always recommend it, so the queen takes control of e4 here and then from here there is nothing. There are many great options here if you play king 2 h5. You can see in the dark squares that they're already blocked by this bishop here on c1, so that's going to be very, very important in a lot of these variations that we looked at, but king a. h5 is getting into even more trouble uh g4 is going to be checkmate if they decide to come back well this is not going to work either because knight two g5 this is going to end very very badly, or they are going to lose their queen here on g5 later of the bishop taking here on g5 or they are just going to lose the game, then the king to g8 will lose to the queen d5, that will be checkmate or if they play the king again 2f6 every time your king is right in the center of the board and your opponent has so many pieces involved in the action that it won't end well.
insanely aggressive nakhmanson gambit
Queen two for four, king will have to come here to g6 and then you will start a massive attack here, pawn here to g4. getting ready for the queen to come down here to h5 uh there's just no way to stop this maybe if they try g6 a discovered attack with e6 now the bishop here on c1 is attacking the king and then it doesn't matter if they get the queen involved in the game uh this will eventually lead to a checkmate, so it won't be good to go back to the beginning here g6 is going to be a very, very poor move at the beginning of uh this opening here another option that You can see is the king 2f6.
insanely aggressive nakhmanson gambit
This is a pretty difficult line to find. Here the computer says that this is the best line that Black can continue, so we will see many different ways that White can attack this, but just because the computer says that it is the best line does not mean that a human will find the better moves because whoever looks at this and says yes, I just want to get my king to the center of the board and let my opponent make the first blow. and start attacking all day. I think it's a pretty difficult way for Black to continue before we get to White's response.
If you haven't already, hit the Like button. Definitely support the channel. Also let me know that you like snackmans across the range. And if we get enough likes, I'll make other videos on variations of rejection lines, as well as some other accepted lines if you take with your gentleman here on a c3, so if you haven't liked the video yet, please also subscribe, with Good luck if you subscribe. to the channel, I know many of you have, feel free to press the bell icon if you want to be notified every time I post new videos from here, White will play the rook 2 e1 if he can't immediately take with his queen and check.
It is always good for your opponent to have more pieces involved in the game and this puts a lot of pressure on Black. Now you can immediately see that this knight here on e4 is under attack. Now one thing Black might want to try to do is hold on to this. material advantage we give up a lot of material we give up that knife we ​​give up the bishop here on f7 but if they try to hold on to the knights here they won't do well so there are really two options you can see here they are d6 and c5 both of them are going to lose d6 here uh , see, it will still involve more pieces in the game and end in a checkmate, so the knight to d6 here, the bishop to g5, can't really get there.
Back here to f7 or the e-file because of the queen and the rook here, so it's going to get to the king side of the board and eventually it's going to go into a checkmate, not here to h4, check, uh, bishop here to e7, this one It is a discovered attack. Uh, yeah, you might end up taking the queen, but it feels good to tell your opponent that you don't have to do it to win the game. Those are the good moves that I like in chess, so yeah, you could do here on d8, but this is good.
Also, from here it's just them blocking, but it's just a waiting move. Eventually you are going to win the queen of the game here on g5 and the game is over if we return instead of the knight 2 d6, it doesn't matter if they played knight to c5 here it will be the same bishop to g5 in the end this is going to end very badly like this we've already seen this they're going to lose this knight here's pretty much how they're going to continue from here on out now you could see okay maybe we want to play bishop up to d6 trying to block some of the critical squares they're going to go to White to maybe involve the rook in the game here, from here on, white will play the rook. take here on e4 definitely wants to take this material and get another strong balm for the action this is also preparing bishop for g5 attacking the king is protected by the knight here on f3 all white does is support each other and put a lot of pressure on Black and you can say from Black's point of view that yes, he has material up, but it's just blocked everywhere, the light square bishop is not involved in the game at all, this rook here on a8 definitely is not involved at all, so yes, White has given in.
There are no good moves for the king if he wants to involve his rook in the game. Well, this is this. is going to end badly this is going to be a mate right here bishop to g5 check the king g6 knight here to h4 uh king h5 uh pawn here to g4 and this is going to be done so it won't be good if they recognize that Hey, the bishop wants raise here to g5, maybe they will play h6, but now the threat will be after the knight reaches h4, white is threatening the queen with f5 and this is a deadly attack here, so black can try to do it. stop that and there are a few ways they could do it, the first would be g6 this stops the critical square here on f5 but then you could see the queen on d3 it's not an immediate threat but there are so many things white is threatening here , they can still get their dark description ball into play, the rook can have an open attack here with the queen reaching g6, so this keeps the threats open for Black and, if you look from the points of view of the black, the queen is still blocked by the light square bishop, don't go anywhere every time they move something like b6 while they are way behind in development, involving your rook in the game is not always beneficial now if come back and say I don't want to play g6 because I'm just extending more pawns on the king side of the board it doesn't seem like I'm really protecting it that much, maybe the bishop here on e5 is protected by the knight who recognizes that they may have to give up some material, but then also look to push. forward with d6 at some point from now I like to move the rook to f4 and the main reason I like it is because it almost feels like you're in setup mode, especially once you get really good at the Neckmanson

gambit

and you're playing extremely fast because So far we should be on Bookline for your preparation because hopefully you'll watch these videos and apply them to your games.
You don't have to think much, but it seems like why would we play this? They know they could take it here at f4. and then you can look at it and say: I don't want to take me here with my bishop, if you do that, okay, we definitely have an answer for that, but if you don't do it, you will lose immediately, so one of the moves you could try are uh king, let's see if they just come here to g5 um definitely come into our terrors towards that's not good, but the rook here to f5 the king takes here the queen here to the bishop e4 and then this will be checkmate.
Right now, if we go back and say, okay, what if he doesn't come to g5 because that seems kind of ridiculous, but bishop here on e5, rook f4 and then maybe they play king here on e7 seems like a safer square? but not really because now white can play knight on g6 check this is also to fork the rook here on h8 but it doesn't matter because the queen on f7 this will be checkmate so they really need to take the rook here on f4 but it's okay because that's what we are prepared for after the bishop takes the queen he is going to come here to f5 check that the king returns here to e7 the knight up here to g6 this is all kinds of forks attacking the king bishop and the rook here after the king raise here to e8 now the bishop can take here on f4 and you still have so many threats that white has how does black really continue from here? why they are going to push their rook here to e1 all the main pieces for White are involved in the action now from here the last way they could prevent the queen from coming to f5 is if they play knight to e7, a difficult move that I think I find, but in this case I would still bring the queen back here to d3 now.
This is all if they play that bishop to d6. Now the computer thinks the best line is for Black to play the knight to e7. I think this is an almost impossible move unless you've seen this video or studied the opening in general, uh, for Black. To play, yes, he is attacking the queen, that's fine, but this blocks the dark square bishop and the queen, the light square bishop, which we already know is blocked, the king's in the center of the board here on f6 this is an extremely difficult line to find here because the queen is under attack just go ahead and take here you already have a very

aggressive

rook here on e1 you are going to play bishop to g5 at some point how can they really continue from here ?
They could try to open with their pawn. so maybe pawn to d5 and then you have queen two f4 uh check maybe bishop to f5 blocking that if they played knight to f5 well this is a big mistake because queen 2 g5 check and they are going to lose their queen, that is not going to Be good, but sometimes they don't know what the best line is to do this, especially if you're playing a blitz game or something, you'll see this knight move to f5 and you'll capture the queen here on d8, but let's say they play bishop to f5, well okay, you probably couldn't g4 because they have the queen move after g4, they could play the queen to d6, which I think is pretty good, but the move you have is knight to d4. it keeps a lot of the threats you're looking for in play, you can start to get your rook involved in the game, your bishop involved, you still have your queen two g5, at some point you could eventually play the rook here all the way to e6. the bishop is being pinned by the queen, so the knight here to d4 I think is the way to go if now, if we go back a few moves, if they don't play d5, maybe they play d6, same as the queen here to f4. is if they play bishop to f5, I think in this case you can play g4, the queen can't go down here to d6, which I think is the best variation for black to continue here, so white still has a lot of good threats here if you look at Black's point of view, it's really difficult to look at this and say that I feel very safe in this position.
I feel good about winning this even though they have a minor piece advantage here. This is hard. Plus, you know they could lose that because of this bishop. right here on f5is being pinned so we've seen king 2 g6 we've seen king 2 f6 the next version we'll look at is king 2 e7 this is a pretty terrible move, same as before we go ahead and take with our queen here on e4 and check and then , how does black really continue here? There aren't many good moves if it's f7. Well, now the g5 knight is a killer, the same as we saw before.
They are practically going to lose their queen. low, we take with our bishop right here, if they don't, they don't have good options for their king, king here on g8, this will be checkmate and if they go low here, maybe king 2 f6, well this will eventually happen. to lead to checkmate king 2f4 the kings would start turning towards the kings of the board and the same pairing pattern we had before this will eventually be checkmate so if we go back and say what if they don't come to f7 uh what What if after here they play king to f6?
Well now bishop two g5 and this is just losing the queen after they come here, you don't have to take it right away, they're still between moves because they don't have a good way to defend whatever you're doing, so queen to d5 pass now if they bring their queen or king back here to e8 now you can take their bishop to the king to d8 now you can play knight to g5 just threatening even more moves knight two f seven check this is forking the rook here on h8 you can Swinging your rooks, getting them involved in the action, everything will improve for White in this position, which brings us to the last variation that we will cover in this video and that is if they play king 2 e8 now, I think this is the most logical move to blacks, but it's still not that good and it's very difficult for them to continue now in this place, so this is the only time I'm going to recommend.
By not taking with your queen here on e4 and instead of playing the rook on e1 you will recover this material. I just don't think you need to take it right away. The idea is that eventually, once you take with your rook, you're going to play your bishop here on g5 uh and put a lot of pressure on your opponent, get your other rook involved in the game, so knowing that our bishop could come here to g5, they might say well, let's go ahead and stop at it, let's immediately play h6. Unfortunately this loses, this will be checkmate right away, so keep in mind that you can play the queen two h5 and then after the king to e7, the rook takes here the knight to e5, the rook here to e5, this eventually will lead to a checkmate. he just chases you around the board here, um, or tries to move so he has to chase his king around the board, but eventually this will end up in a checkmate, a cool checkmate if you haven't marked your opponent like this in the game. maybe they have a chance if they try that in the game now h6 is definitely a mistake here so you won't see that very often but one thing you might see is d6 knowing they can't hold this stuff here on e4 they can play d6 to try to open the board so that your light square bishop gets involved in the game because for the most part all the variations in the range dakminson this bishop here on c8 this rook here on a8 are not doing anything, but yes Look, this first move is to go ahead and take with your rook here on e4, put your opponent in check and start attacking now from here, the bishop to e7 makes a lot of sense, the bishop to g5 attacking the square right here and then from here you can see. there are a lot of options, maybe they decide to start attacking here, take here on b2, go ahead and bring your rook here to e1, just line everything up on the e file, if they go down here, take, okay, okay, you're just going to moving your rook here back to e1 you have so much pressure on your opponent it can be difficult for them to deal with now if we go back and say uh what if they don't take here and if instead they play well h6 then I would go I just go.
Go ahead and take here on e7, okay, they take with their knights here. You could play queen up to h5, putting a lot of pressure on your opponent. You are going to play as a rook here until e1. It's very, very difficult for them to continue from here. the queens blocked his rook here on a8 they are not doing anything white has a very

aggressive

stance now if we go back a little more and say from here what happens if they play king 2 f8 because maybe they want this bishop to move freely and not be pinned by this rook here on e4 white is going to follow up with the rook here on e1 and say yeah we want to get our material involved in the game, we don't really care if you take our bishop right here because that will make you lose.
That will be checkmate because after knight 2 g5 there is no way for Black to stop the checkmate from here. The queen's threat to f5 or f7 is all too real. uh, go ahead and take the rook here, still threatening the queen here with the same issue. to f7 eventually maybe bishop to e6 maybe they have to take their queen here but at the end of the day everything is going to lose and end in checkmate, so if we go back, that was if they played a d6 from the beginning. Another thing you can see is that okay, rook to e1, I'm just going to play bishop here to e7, you're still going to take with your rook here getting ready for bishop here to g5 and there aren't many good ways to stop.
Let them look at this and say yes, I want to stop that with h6, this is the critical square here trying to get to you, you can actually just take with your bishop here on h6, they can't take with their rook, this will be checkmate here. on g8 they also can't take freely with their pawn here because the queen two h5 king here to f8 and then the rook 2 f4 bishop has to stop it here and then the queen to g6 threatening uh taking here with the rook here on f6 so maybe d5 opens up for the light square bishop, but then the rook takes here on f6 again, it's so hard to stop that they'll lose their queen and White will have a very, very good attack, so they can't really stop the Bishop come here. g5 here so there are other options if they play rook to f8 well then queen 2 h5 check if they want to stop this you can take material here on h7 you are just destroying their king side of the board if instead they say let's play d6 trying to open up again, you never know how your opponent is going to approach this, but a lot of times you just want to get material into the game here, well, now bishop 2 g5, like we talked about, if they take material, same as you.
You will come here to e1, you will come down, you will change material, but eventually you will bring your rook back here to e1, so that is the nakmansen range, try to go over as many variations as you can find, especially on the lines accepted from the beginning if they take their knights here from the beginning I want you to be prepared for how you're going to continue the bishop take the king take here the queen comes here and gets to d5 and starts the attack, so that's pretty much all you have Let's see, but let me know what what they think about this video and the fencing game.
Try it, tell me what you think. It's always fun to chase your opponent around the board and there really was no counterattack. there are no lines we haven't gone over, well if they do this they will have a pretty strong attack against your side, white will just attack and as long as he knows how to continue his attack black will have a hard time. There are so many guys you can fall into if you don't know the right line, so thank you all so much for watching again if you haven't already, please like the video. uh trying to spread the word about these fun tactics, especially these ones.
Videos of chess openings that I'm doing, so thanks for watching and I'll see you in the next video.

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