Do not do this OTB

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17th March 2009, 09:06pm
#1
by dsarkar
United States
Member Since: Sep 2008
Member Points: 8094

There are some openings which are so complicated that either one has either to memorize the lines by heart or avoid them altogether in OTB games. One such opening is the 1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bb5 a6 4. Bxc6 dxc6 5. O-O Bg4 6. h3 h5. Black first offers a bishop (which if white accepts too early leads to instant mate), then a rook in exchange for a knight (which if accepted leads to a highly complicated fierce attack where black finally mates white, queens g-pawn, or gets back the material with better position). White can decline the materials for an even game. Statistics show white's higher win rate in OTB.

White departed from theory (book/database line) on the 13th move. Thenceforth I took 1-2 days per move to analyze out the positon (I was no Capablanca or Morphy!). I  started thinking of fighting for a draw on the 18th move (even offered draw, which was refused), as I could not figure out a mate or win! On 21st move white made a blunder, after which I was confident of winning. Finally white made the last inaccuracy on the 23rd move, which led to a rapid mate.

 

17th March 2009, 09:28pm
#2
by oinquarki
The Finest City In The United States
Member Since: Dec 2008
Member Points: 4621

Cool game! Congrats! I'm waaaayyyy to bad at openings to understand any of the first part, but I am strong enough to click the mouse on the "next move" button and that's really all that mattersLaughing

17th March 2009, 09:33pm
#3
by bondiggity
United States
Member Since: Jun 2008
Member Points: 1578

why not the immediate 13...Qxf2  ?

 

why not 22. Kc1  

 

23. Be3 looked pretty strong. Probably could have kept things evenish. 

17th March 2009, 09:55pm
#4
by dsarkar
United States
Member Since: Sep 2008
Member Points: 8094

Bondiggity, I agree with you on all counts... 13...Qxf2 was probably better than Qh4+ as the King's escape route would have been blocked; 22.Kc1 is probably an alternative to 22.Kb3 (Bd2 was a blunder), and 23.Be3 could have stopped black's mating threat - black gets back the material for an even game.

18th March 2009, 06:07am
#5
by bondiggity
United States
Member Since: Jun 2008
Member Points: 1578

Alright. Great game though and very interesting line. I might try using that once :D

18th March 2009, 06:24am
#6
by JetSetter
United States
Member Since: Aug 2007
Member Points: 195

Same idea as the Fishing Pole, which rocked GM Walter Browne in a 40 board simul in Reno. Video here.

18th March 2009, 03:40pm
#7
by Susanti
Sweden and Netherland Indonesia
Member Since: Jul 2007
Member Points: 5052

Oh, that's real disaster for the white. Obviously you are a good butt kicker Sarkar! hehehe,,,,,Laughing

18th March 2009, 03:51pm
#8
by dsarkar
United States
Member Since: Sep 2008
Member Points: 8094

Thanks Susanti!

18th March 2009, 04:06pm
#9
by likesforests
United States
Member Since: May 2007
Member Points: 4407

Here's one of the earliest and most famous games with this idea. It's actually the opening game from the book GM-RAM. I've found opportunities to try it out in blitz but never over-the-board... some day, when Neptune and Jupiter align. :)

18th March 2009, 04:11pm
#10
by likesforests
United States
Member Since: May 2007
Member Points: 4407

White resigned due to 13.Rxf2 Rh1+ 14.Kxh1 Qd1+ with mate to follow.

18th March 2009, 04:26pm
#11
by dsarkar
United States
Member Since: Sep 2008
Member Points: 8094

great game, like forest!

18th March 2009, 05:01pm
#12
by likesforests
United States
Member Since: May 2007
Member Points: 4407

dsarkar> great game, like forest!

I wish it were mine. It was brave of you to try this strategy out in a rated game against a strong opponent. Well done.  :)

15th April 2009, 08:39am
#13
by darkziod
Abaco Bahamas
Member Since: Jun 2008
Member Points: 34

excellent game . i somehow saw that coming.Thats one of the variation i usaully lose to.Anyhow nice moves, the biggest mistake he made was to break his defence and play h3.

5th May 2009, 08:20am
#14
by AfafBouardi
Rabat Morocco
Member Since: Jan 2009
Member Points: 1161

whoa.  As White, I avoid the Exchange variation.  And as Black as you said, that little h5 follow-up is not for the faint of heart.  I saw that Black does well with it at high levels, but I've never been able to comprehend what sort of advantage it gives so I avoid such moves - as my opponent would end up with a bishop extra and I'd be perplexed as to what to do to turn that into an advantage.  

5th May 2009, 08:39am
#15
by dsarkar
United States
Member Since: Sep 2008
Member Points: 8094

if black plays 7.hxg4?? he faces a mating attack: 7...hxg4 8.Nh2? Qh4

white can give back a piece but still black retains the upper hand:

8.other gxf3 (followed by 9...Qh4 in most cases)

11th May 2009, 08:22pm
#16
by DrStrangeLuft
Daytona Beach, Florida United States
Member Since: Aug 2008
Member Points: 2314

Interesting attacking games, but I wanted to scream at the White player for his poor defense.  #1 Don't take the bishop in that situation unless you want to be attacked ferociously.  #2 Don't open lines for the attacker with moves like d4.  #3  When your King is being chased, run for cover.  Don't run to the open board.

11th May 2009, 08:30pm
#17
by dsarkar
United States
Member Since: Sep 2008
Member Points: 8094

good points, DrLuft! Actually his downfall began from 13th move... there are variations in the book where white can refuse the sac with equality.

24th May 2009, 06:10pm
#18
by Triple_A
Texas United States
Member Since: Apr 2009
Member Points: 1613

cool

5th June 2009, 01:09pm
#19
by tanmay_chakrabarti
Uttarpara India
Member Since: Jul 2007
Member Points: 1123

good article

8th June 2009, 03:55am
#20
by ivannino_bolo14
cebu Philippines
Member Since: Jan 2009
Member Points: 341

haha..just passing.....

 

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