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| From | Message | Posted by lapsekili uskidscompute.com
11/01/2008 04:40:08 Play online chess | Subject: The Two Knights Defence
Message: e4 e5 Af3 Ac6 Fc4 Af6
How must white contunie?
| Posted by blake78613 uskidscompute.com
11/01/2008 10:39:38 Play online chess |
Message: What language is your notation in, and can you translate to English?
| Posted by jstevens1 uskidscompute.com
11/01/2008 11:14:17 Play online chess | Two knights Defense
Message: Let me see, I think he means:-
1. e4 e5
2. Nf3 Nc6
3. Bc4 Nf6
This is characteristic of the Two Knights Defense and black usually gives up a pawn to inflict retarded development on white by this continuation:-
4. Ng5 d5
5. exd5 Na5
6. Bb5+ c6
7. dxc6 bxc6
8. Be2 h6
9. Nf3 e4
10. Ne5 Bd6
And black is better developed which may compensate for the pawn minus.
Joanne ——— Time stops for no man — Almost everyone, chess player or not, is fascinated with the chess clock. Explaining how the device works to a new class is always a challenge. The two main problems are: 1.Most people think the chess clock times each move, when it actually times the whole game. 2.Most people think the device is one clock, and I have to inform them that a chess clock actually contains two separate clocks. Analog chess clocks were the norm for years until the digital chess clock was introduced. Above: A circa-1920s chess clock from the German manufacturer Schachverein Balingen Below: A digital chess clock made by Saitek is set for a five-minute blitz game of chess. The way it works is quite simple. The chess player with ...
Posted by lapsekili uskidscompute.com
11/01/2008 15:07:54 Play online chess | sorry
Message: I wrote notation in Turkish by mistake.Thanks for answer. ——— World still trying to peg Fischer — Bobby Fischer is a phenomenon whom we see through a glass darkly. Yasser Seirawan, a former U.S. chess champion, said in his book "No Regrets" that, after spending a day and a half with Fischer in 1992, he was convinced that 60 percent of what had been written about him was incorrect. Two meritorious — even brilliant — accounts of Fischer’s life were recently released: the book "Endgame" by Frank Brady and the HBO documentary "Bobby Fischer Against the World" by Liz Garbus. Both deservingly generated praise. But, according to some readers and viewers, neither biography provides a gut understanding of his complex behavior. Garbus seems to attribute Fischer’s difficulties in later life to ...
Posted by ionadowman uskidscompute.com
11/02/2008 12:12:16 Play online chess | Joanne has given one of the main lines...
Message: ... of the Two Knights' Defence, but maybe a bit more detail is called for.
After 1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bc4 Nf6 ...
White can choose between 4.Ng5; 4.d4 or even the more circumspect 4.d3. Some people prefer the non-committal 4.0-0.
There has long been a theoretical controversy whether 2.Ng5 (a "beginner's move according to Siegbert Tarrasch) or 4.d4 is the stronger. Personally, I go for the knight move.
After 4.Ng5, it would seem that Black has to do something about the attack against f7. The most usual response is 4...d5 5.exd5. Now, you might be wondering why Black doesn't just retake on d5 (5...Nxd5). The answer is that White gets a tremendous attack beginning with a knight sacrifice on f7:
4.Ng5 d5
5.exd5 Nxd5?
6.Nxf7+!? ... (A more circumspect approach is 6.d4)
6...Kxf7
7.Qf3+ Ke3 - Just about essential, to keep the d5-knight.
Now White just piles up the pressure on the d5-knight:
8.Nc3 Nb4
9.a3 Nxc2+
10.Kd1 Nxa1
11.Nxd5 Kd6
12.d4 ... and White has a powerful attack against the exposed Black king. This line is known as the Fegatello Attack, or the "Fried Liver" Attack.
Occasionally Black will just ignore the threat to his f7;
1.e4 e5
2.Nf3 Nc6
3.Bc3 Nf6
4.Ng5 Bc5!? - the Wilkes-Barre or Traxler Variation.
White can choose which capture on f7, or just play quietly, 5.d4. Although the knight capture looks the more immediately profitable, the bishop take is thought probably to afford more long-lasting benefits. The problem with the knight capture is that it provokes a very violent response from Black:
5.Nxf7!? Bxf2+!
6.Kxf2 (Kf1 might be better)
6...Nxe4+
7.Kg1 ... Just about essential. If, say, 7.Ke1, Qh5+ 8.g3 Nxg3 is terrible for White.
7...Qh4
Black has a strong attack, but White has good chances of survival.
Back to the main lines after 4.Ng5, Black has a couple of moves other than 5...Na5 to respond to the pawn capture on d5:
4.Ng5 d5
5.exd5 Nd4!? - the Fritz Variation
5... b5!? - the Ulvestad Variation
Both are quite playable and interesting for Black. Maybe we can discuss those lines another time.
Suffice to say, The Two Knight's Defence is one of my favorite openings for Black. It is a pity I rarely get a chance to play it!
Cheers,
Ion ——— Topalov Takes on the Irish National Team — When elite chess competitors take on a number of weaker opponents in simultaneous exhibitions, the stronger chess player has to move from board to board and has little time to formulate strategies. Rarely are the weaker players even on the master level. But in the 1980s, Garry Kasparov, who was then world chess champion, began giving exhibitions in which he took on groups of top-level chess players. They were timed, so Kasparov had to move faster than his opponents. After losing the first of the so-called simuls against a strong club team from Germany in 1985, Kasparov won every other one he played. Between 1987, when he won a return match against the Germans, and 2001, when he beat ...
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