Two Knights, Fritz Variation | CRUSH the FRIED LIVER ⚡ Quick Wins #73

Two Knights, Fritz Variation | CRUSH the FRIED LIVER ⚡ Quick Wins #73

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#italian #twoknights #fritzvariation #quickwins 

chess noob Quick Wins! is a series of short videos, to demonstrate very quick wins!  As a beginner, you become aware of the Scholar's Mate and the Fool's Mate, but neither of these show up in real games.  However, there are tricky quick checkmates and wins that occur, even at the intermediate level of chess.

Today's game is submitted by a Team Australia clubmate @nciSquared. They had the black pieces, and their opponent attempted the Fried Liver Attack by playing the Knight Attack against the Two Knights Defense of the Italian Game (1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bc4 Nf6 4. Ng5). Now, this game is a great demonstration to a counterattack against the Fried Liver that I hadn't seen before, and it's one that isn't quite as risky as my favourite up to this point, the Ponziani-Steinitz Gambit!

Black plays the initial moves in the Fried Liver Attack line (4... d5 5. exd5) but then plays the very interesting (5... Nd4), known as the Fritz Variation of the Two Knights Defense. Stockfish considers this a slight inaccuracy, but it's only [+0.1 → +0.5]. More importantly, it's the single most winning response that Black has according to the Lichess community database with a win ratio of Black (56%) vs White (41%)!

Its power is in part that it creates trap against White, that takes advantage of their intended Fried Liver Attack trap against Black! White plays (6. d6), a logical looking move that reopens the light square diagonal so that White has a double attack on the f7-pawn again. This, however, is an inaccuracy and Black can capture the gambit pawn (6... Qxd6), activating the queen and now inviting White to capture the f7-pawn with their knight. White does so (7. Nxf7) and it looks like a great move as there is a fork of the queen and rook. 

However, White is being drawn down Black's plan! Now (6... Qxd6), looks like an attack an attack on White's c4-bishop and Black naturally captures the hanging rook in the corner (8. Nxh8), but it's a blunder! This rook was poisoned at [-9] as Black can now force capture White's queen!  You see, White's queen on c6 wasn't just attacking White's c4-bishop. In fact, that was a ruse; the real target was the g2-pawn! After (8. Qxg2), the board transforms to a very similar structure to the Blackburne Shilling Gambit Trap!

In this game, White doesn't play accurately and self-destructs by freaking out against the king - (9. Bd5?? Qxd5 10. Kf1?? Qxh1#). To be sympathetic to White, a [-9] position is completely losing whether you panic or not! If White played accurate, we have the following line: (9. Rf1 Qe4+) and White is now forced to make a choice. Either block the check with their queen and immediately lose it for Black knight (10. Qe2 Nxe2 11. Bxe2), or block the check with their bishop and immediately lose the game with smothered mate (10. Be2 Nf3#).  GG!

Game on chess.com: https://www.chess.com/game/daily/587975845

Hi!  I'm vitualis, the chess noob, and I run the "Adventures of a Chess Noob" YouTube channel and blog.  I'm learning and having fun with chess! 

I restarted playing chess recently after my interest was rekindled by the release of "The Queen's Gambit" on Netflix.  I mostly play 1 or 2 games a day, and am trying to improve (slowly!).  I document some of my games and learning experiences on my blog and YouTube channel from the perspective of a beginner-intermediate player!


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