Bro Sacrificed The Queen To Get A NEW QUEEN!
Vložit
- čas přidán 23. 04. 2024
- That's why they say you should develop your knights in the opening!
Learn 3 Ways To Improve Your Chess Results
FREE Masterclass ► chess-teacher.com/masterclass
#IgorNation #Shorts #ChessTrap #ChessTraps #QueenSac #ChessTrick #ChessTricks #ChessTricksAndTraps #OpeningTrap #OpeningTraps #PawnPromotion #ChessSacrifice #ChessOpeningTrap #ChessOpeningTraps #ChessOpeningTricks #Chess #BestChess #ChessShort #ChessShorts #ChessShortClips #ChessShortVideo - Sport
Learn 3 Ways To Improve Your Chess Results, Get GM Smirnov's FREE Masterclass - chess-teacher.com/masterclass
Okay cool.👌🏻😎
how did bro get in this position 💀💀
Yes 😂 I want to see analysis of the whole game. The opening must have been very interesting. 😂
yeah lol how tf did the e pawn go to b2
Using the queen too much.
@@masonutb5bg606white sac 3 of its pawn it seems 😂
At first I thought it was a Danish gambit(initially declined) where black didn't start taking pawns until white moved the DSB out, and simply forgot it had to be home to give up the b pawn (happens a fair bit in blitz and bullet when you're first learning it) but the other bishop not being on c4 made me think that's unlikely.
Then I thought the black knight came out to f6 and got pinned by whites bishop and that's why black exploded their kingside to kick it, but then decided to sack said knight for all the pawns but that too cannot be the case as the black pawn on b2 was the e pawn.
So I'm back to thinking it was someone who was playing the Danish gambit without knowing anything about it; as it is all about getting a lead in development. If you sac one pawn it's to get the knight out with tempo, and if you sac 2 it's to get the bishop on the nasty diagonal with tempo. They did neither.
Regardless, this game is a good example of why it's best not to break opening principles without studying the opening you are going for beforehand.
not sure how I'd push that pawn there without it being captured by my opponent lol
Danish gambit for white, its so good when played right
The funny thing, sf just said its best not brilliant when I analyzed 😅
brilliancy depends on elo i think
How do you analyse this? Do you just play against your self untill you reach this position
With a digital engine@@lalosalamanka238
@@lalosalamanka238Stockfish allows you to set up a board however you want. So if there was an exact moment in a game you wanted to analyze, like this video for an example, you can just go into Stockfish and move around the pieces to match the game.
@@gdtargetvn2418no, it follows a small criteria, I don't know the exact criteria, but most brilliant moves follow this:
1. They are a sacrifice
2. They are the best move in this current position.
bro white's right side is completely gone lmao,2 pieces out of 8 are only left
Being aware of counterplay is sooooo important
Always remember that the opponent can't take his own peaces. So a king is save in front of the opponents pawn.
trade queen and then make a new queen 😂
I need to kearn this opening 😂 How the hell did the e7 pawn end up on b2??
There has to be a wild opening because of this position.😏
Not me who didnt see the white pawn there and plays that brilliant move 💀
This is the right kind of sacrifice for draw being from loosing position.
“Bg7” black plays calmly
At first I thought it was a Danish gambit(initially declined) where black didn't start taking pawns until white moved the DSB out, and simply forgot it had to be home to give up the b pawn (happens a fair bit in blitz and bullet when you're first learning it) but the other bishop not being on c4 made me think that's unlikely.
Then I thought the black knight came out to f6 and got pinned by whites bishop and that's why black exploded their kingside to kick it, but then decided to sack said knight for all the pawns but that too cannot be the case as the black pawn on b2 was the e pawn.
So I'm back to thinking it was someone who was playing the Danish gambit without knowing anything about it; as it is all about getting a lead in development. If you sac one pawn it's to get the knight out with tempo, and if you sac 2 it's to get the bishop on the nasty diagonal with tempo. They did neither.
Regardless, this game is a good example of why it's best not to break opening principles without studying the opening you are going for beforehand.
It's 1.e4 e5 2.d4 Nc6 3.c3 Nf6 4.Bg5 h6 5.Bh4 g5 6.Bg3 e×d4 7. e5 d×c3 8.e×f6 c×b2
Probably this , e×d4 mightave occurred instead of h6 and then same variation
Certainly stunning queen sacrifice, thanks.
How about put bishop? Pawn takes bishop, queen takes pawn, exchange queens you take rook. If he does not bishop but takes pawn just take his pawn and you will take rook because he will move queen.
Looks like how one of Tal's games went. 😅
after Bg7, why wouldn't black just capture the pawn with the queen, instead of allowing it to capture the rook and queen itself?
It's the same, even if white queen capture the pawn, the black bishop will capture the white queen and the white rook. Ended up with the even materials, 5 pieces for both side
That is wild
The biggest mystery of all timer: How is this pawn even there like white sacrificed 3 pawn for i dont even know what
Queen can be sacrificed for the pawn
I would’ve never seen that
I didn’t see the pawn💀
As white why not queen takes, then they have to take with knight or bishop, then using the tempo you gained brown bishop to e5 with a double attack on the pawn and their rook?
Bishop to E7 over Queen to E7????? Also ending up with 2 queens?
What about bishop takes on c2
yeah stuff like this is neat but no way I'm ever getting this position
How the hell did the e pawn get to b2
cmon there are 9 pawns
how tf did the e pawn got to b2
How the Pe7 go Pb2
What about W plays Qx-p?
There was no need to sacrifice the queen.... Black could have been a queen up
There is actually. If black blocked with bishop or knight then white queen would take the pawn on b2. By blocking with the queen, black is pinning the white queen to the king and so it can't take the pawn. So white has no choice but to take queen with pawn and rest is what he showed
And then he sacrifices THE QUEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEN!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
How TF did the e7 pawn ended up there?
probably Scotch gambit
Why doesnt he just sac the knight?
Because he's not gonna take it, white will take on b2. The thing is that you sac the queen to get a new one while being up a rook whereas if you sac the knight or the bishop white will save their rook