Sacked my rook for an end-game advantage

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Viznik

This was a game I just had to share, given the tactics used in it were something I learned here at Beginners & Masters! I believe it was @little_guinea_pig who made the comment once that "it doesn't matter the material disadvantage if you get checkmate", and I believe it was @B1ZMARK who explained to me the idea of how sometimes your position on the board can be more important than just gobbling up pieces.

So, with that in mind, I went into this game without knowing that I would use those exact ideas from those great players to help me win a very tough game!

In this game, I actually intentionally (believe it or not! lol) sacked my rook to get my queen down near my opponent's king, which at the time (and still does) felt like an extreme advantage and only a matter of a few moves until mate.

Let's take a look at the game:

I actually had written a huge thing of analysis, but my computer DIED right before I could post it and lost it all ... so I really don't feel like re-writing everything again. However, as you can see from the game; during the end-game, I sacked my rook to take white's bishop and get my queen down the board. Also, I noticed this caused white's queen to actually be somewhat useless, as it was now at the opposite end of the board and unable to defend it's king. I got white in a M3 pattern and executed a super sweet smother mate.

I would actually be interested on the insight from everyone here as to what they think about this tactic? Should I have or have not sacked the rook to get my queen down the board?

DasBurner

Nice checkmate sequence!

You got Vienna Gambited tho lol

DasBurner
Viznik wrote:
DaBabysBurner wrote:

Nice checkmate sequence!

You got Vienna Gambited tho lol

Lol was that what that was? The opening was ROUGH for me, he was bullying me all around the board for a minute there.

Is the Vienna gambit a strong opening, should I start playing it?

it's technically worse for white if you know theory for it

and there's three branches off the main line that white can choose from.