A Simple Trap in the Petroff's Defense

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Avatar of Sprite

I saw this trap in an old basic chess book I had from a few years ago.  Although I feel like traps aren't worth memorizing (I go for sound opening principles), this one was easy enough for me to remember by only looking at it once, and believe it or not came up in a game I played earlier today.  It goes like this.


Although this trap is relatively specific, I was glad I had spent a minute or two learning it quickly.  I realize there are other ways for black to defend the centralized knight...but I still think it's a neat trap. And again, although memorizing traps isn't the best way to improve your chess (in my opinion), this one will stay in your memory forever after seeing the diagram to the left.

Enjoy!

Avatar of Patzer24
 Yes, 3...Nxe4 is rather bad. You should not always expect your opponent to make the worse move. Sometimes the opponent may have some reasonable chess sense and play 3...d6, then you must leave the tricks at home and actually play some chess.  Wink
Avatar of Sprite

Obviously it's bad, becuase of what just unfolds!  However, your point is a good one.  However, considering this is the only trap I know, I don't think I've been relying on poor play too much Tongue out

Avatar of LepperMessiah07

That's "Poisoned Pawn".

That's the most basic rule you can teach to new players.  

Avatar of Donkey256
I don't play d6 or Nxe4
Avatar of Nimzowitsch2017

ZacharyChiaMin wrote:

I don't play d6 or Nxe4

why'd you post this 9 years later?

Avatar of UnderdogPower

Yeah......Nxe4 is not bad........

Avatar of Laskersnephew

3...Nxe4 isn't as bad as you might think. In the real world, players almost never let White win their queen so easily! After 4.Qe2 Qe7 5.Qxe4 d6 you get a trappy position that is probably better for White, but it's tricky

Avatar of SmyslovFan

Walter Browne used to play this as White in simuls. It was an easy way to get a bunch of games over quickly. I played him in 1980 or 1981 in a simul. I chose the Spanish, got an even position, then blundered in the endgame. He won all his games that day.

Avatar of poucin

As given above by Laskernephew, the judgement "3...Nxe4 loses" is just a urban legend (but it works against beginners or low level players who don't have a clue).

Black has some compensations, maybe not enough, but not so simple for white to get an advantage. Some GM experimented with it.

Anand lost with this :

Recently, He gave some explanations about this game in an interview on chess.com :

https://www.chess.com/article/view/vishy-anand-interview

 

Avatar of Srimurugan108

Smooth effective and efficient this is a classic tactic i am impressed 

Avatar of Laskersnephew

That Anand story is hilarious!  As Ronald Reagan said: "Trust, but verify!" Vishy forgot the verify step. I'll bet he never did that again

Avatar of GM_Uqueio

understood

Avatar of SmyslovFan

It’s terrible to be one of the best players ever, the last world champion before Magnus, and to have their immortal game be a blunder on move 6!

Avatar of Laskersnephew

But the fact that you are one of the best players ever must be good consolation

Avatar of MatthewFreitag

 

Avatar of eHealer6FQN

im just gonna type something 17 years late... im not late to the party am i?

Avatar of BarrientosLucas

Never happend

Avatar of poucin

A trap where white can fall :

Avatar of PoundPatumwan