I've played the Fajarowicz variation for almost 50 years on many ocasions, but I still learned from this video. As it also gives the most important traps and ideas in a nutshell I strongly recommend it for the experienced player as well as for those, who want to add this phantastic line to their reportoire as a new surprise. Well made, great stuff and what a pleasure to see Jonathan having so much fun when showing the most stunning moves. One of the best chess lectures I've ever seen. Many thanks from Slovakia.
I played the Fajarowicz quite a lot in the past myself and I consider this lecture quite inviting to surprise an oponent again. Great stuff from one of my favourite chess chanells. Thanks a lot, dear Jerry!
The ...Nxf7 trap is a recurring theme in several openings, many of which you have covered. Off the top of my head, it happens in the Scandanavia Defense/Tennison Gambit, Caro-Kann/Breyer Variation, and this opening. I'm sure there are others. Basically, it's something to look out for whenever the d-file is open and the queen's are facing each other. I enjoy your videos and particularly like your upbeat enthusiasm. Keep up the good work!
The Budapest is in my repertoire, but when blitzing this variation is far more fun to play. Thank you for these interesting and agressive openings videos!
Just been looking at this with the engine. There's no way my tiny chess brain is extricating myself from that situation. Bb4+ then castles then sac again on f2? No, I can't do that, the stress would kill me.
Thanks for the awesome video! Black missed the best move on TWO moves in a row at 20:18 he played Rg8, then as you mentioned at 20:44, he played gxf2. Great teaching though!
good job man! in general the b6 line alluring the Queen works if white has not played Nf3 (eg on a3 line). Even though Black traps the queen he has lost a Rook a minor piece and a pawn and thus the game if far from over.
Tried it out in a blitz game and won. It's a great variation and addition to the Budapest. Thank you for the lessons. Subbed a few days back. Carry on 👌🏻
29:02 I didn't see Qe7, that's a high level move that eventually traps the white queen if played perfectly. I did see Qxd2 or bxd2 which simply wins a minor piece. I checked with stockfish and it's -6 Qe7 and -5.2 Qxd2 so both winning moves. Great video by the way! I want to try this gambit.
Love how Jonathan goes over opening traps! Great way to initially learn opening on either side. Once these traps are learned, then the main line “book” will make more sense
nice queen trap! there is a similar queen trap I found when studying my Bc4 lines against the old sicilian : 1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bc4 e6 4.O-O d5 5.Bb5 a6 6.Bxc6+ bxc6 7.b3!? dxe4 8.Ne5 Qd4 9.Nc4 Qxa1?? 10.Bb2 Qxa2 11.Be5! {the queen is so trapped that we can worsen black's pawn structure before winning the queen, but Nc3 is also good} f6 12.Nc3 fxe5 13.Nxa2
Thanks for this Jonathan! At 15:21, instead of Bg3+, why not Bc5+? You'll still win the queen and lose the bishop whatever happens but you give white the opportunity to block the check in the wrong way and lose an EXTRA piece! E.g. if e3 or Be3 to block the check, you just take that piece with the bishop and THEN snaffle the queen. If king instead moves back to e1, you just play Bf2, sac the bishop and win the queen. In fact, this variation is so much better I'm tempted to keep it for myself :)
Quite interesting. Probably good enough for most amateur players and as quick blitzer. I have never considered such openings serious and never seen any studying material for those fishy gambits. And yet still would not fall into any trap set ups like in this Fajarowicz - did not know it has a name btw :) Played few games as white and chose Nd2 and a3 forcing quick exchanges with comfortable play for white. As for d6 reply with Bf4 developing bad bishop, protecting pawn e5 and keep black's position pressured and cramped. I am not a master though still app 2200 player. Still praise for author - it is always profitable to analyse tactical positions even if they are not correct Good luck!
I suck at chess, but love it and your videos! First time I've tried using content from your videos and it was perfect - mated them. White played f3 and I responded with bishop and then queen, knight, etc. and it was perfect. Felt a bit dirty though after just watching your video and getting so lucky with a bad move on white's part.
25:34 we´re not interested in the rook, we´re interested in the king :D mostly i see that players with elo 2100 and less are more interested in pieces rather than win :D
Yeah this was an awesome lesson. Thanks ! I'm going to rewatch it again straight away maybe also another time after that also , so it all sticks in a bit better. I played this ages ago. I have been messing around with the Mokele Mbembe Alekhine, recently which has some similar ideas and one opponent that called it witchcraft as it forces you to remember a lot of defensive and attacking ideas for black. Had a surprising number of wins with it for black. While white can easily get into time trouble in Blitz Great surprise weapon But I had a fair share of cruel loses with it too and time trouble when white knows what to do against it. Gambit style !!
You said the magic word..."fun"... and with these 'smooth moves' I'll REALLY be having some FUN. Love giving away material to set mating traps!!! Thank you, Thank You, THANK YOU!!!😇
Often when I try to play the Budapest and its offshoots White plays a different move 2, so I guess one needs to have a few different openings ready, such as something against 2.Nf3 or 2.Nc3. I know there are several different choices available, but what, in your opinion, would be compatible in spirit with the Budapest?
amazing amazing amazing keep doing exactly these kind of vids with the exact same structure and everything pls and thank you. at the last seconds of the video you said it was double check, and I'm pretty sure it's not. did you misspeak or am i just dumb?
9,16 what about if white instead of Qa6 plays Nd4? If Nc5 or Rb8 Nd4xNc6 and white is up a piece. When white plays 4) Nf3 , b6 trying to trap the Qeen is a blunder
Generally great stuff, but the Queen trap gambit is flawed. Put it in a strong computer with recent Stockfish. You showed "some random move" after Nc6, but if the move is not random and White plays Nd4 his threat of NxNc6 attacking the Black Queen voids the trap and White is more than +- 2.8 ahead regardless of what Black does. Black playing NxNd4 doesn't help either. White just plays QxNe4. Other than this, I love the traps shown here.
this trap only works in one position: 1.d4 Nf6 2. c4 e5 3.dxe5 Ne4 4. Qd5 Bd4+ 5. Nd2 Nc5 6.a3 Bxd2 7. Bxd2 and now b6. an if 8.Qxa8 Bb7 9. Qxa7 Nc6 10.Qxb7 Nxb7 with a little advantage black's
Problem with this move is white doesnt need to move queen to a6 and simply play Kd4 and you may end up taking the queen with the rook, but you have lost a rook, knight and bishop for the queen. losing position.
In the Nf3 Bb4+ line I found that black actually never wins the pawn back because white apparently can play Rd1 and Rd5 defending the pawn. 1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 e5 3. dxe5 Ne4 4. Nf3 Bb4+ 5. Bd2 Nxd2 6. Nbxd2 Nc6 (Qe7 transposes) 7. a3 Bxd2+ 8. Qxd2 Qe7 9. Qc3 O-O 10. Rd1 Re8 11. Rd5! (it's around +1.05) (black can't really win the pawn back because there aren't any pieces left that you can attack the pawn with. The moment you play d6 or f6 (why) white takes the pawn and will simply be a pawn up) A crazy computer line that I found after this is: 11... b6 12. h4! Bb7 13. Rh3!! Na5 14. Rd3 (black can't win the pawn with Bxf3 because at the end of the line white will take the d7 pawn with the rook and be +2.5) At the end of this line the eval hovers around +0.95 and +1.20. This was analysed with Stockfish 15 NNUE
Qc3 would be an illegal move, and then Nc3 would also subsequently be even more illegal because you can't stack 2 pieces on one square! Must try harder if posting criticism (or at least, legal moves) :)
Think the content is more of an awareness for lower rated players and opportunities for higher rated. I believe he gives you possible options to negate said openings.
It was hot and I didn't wear a sweater. Will you watch sweaterless content?
Of course
Wear whatever you like (as long as it's not offensive), we're here to enjoy your (sometimes crazy) chess😁
I believe you were also sweaterless when showing off your magnificent chess dress, so in short. Yes
Yes, but BARELY
Just one step down the road towards a topless video 😅
I'm only 1000 rated but with gambits like this I'll be down to 500 in no time. Love the gambit content
Hahaha
These gambits don't work nowadays unless you are a strong player. Or you have deep prep
I played just with my own tactics then I start watch this type of gambit I was 1110 I m now 900
I've played the Fajarowicz variation for almost 50 years on many ocasions, but I still learned from this video. As it also gives the most important traps and ideas in a nutshell I strongly recommend it for the experienced player as well as for those, who want to add this phantastic line to their reportoire as a new surprise.
Well made, great stuff and what a pleasure to see Jonathan having so much fun when showing the most stunning moves. One of the best chess lectures I've ever seen. Many thanks from Slovakia.
*I love the way you present the games: so light, unpretentious, interesting, funny... Thank you!*
I played the Fajarowicz quite a lot in the past myself and I consider this lecture quite inviting to surprise an oponent again. Great stuff from one of my favourite chess chanells. Thanks a lot, dear Jerry!
The ...Nxf7 trap is a recurring theme in several openings, many of which you have covered. Off the top of my head, it happens in the Scandanavia Defense/Tennison Gambit, Caro-Kann/Breyer Variation, and this opening. I'm sure there are others. Basically, it's something to look out for whenever the d-file is open and the queen's are facing each other.
I enjoy your videos and particularly like your upbeat enthusiasm. Keep up the good work!
The Budapest is in my repertoire, but when blitzing this variation is far more fun to play. Thank you for these interesting and agressive openings videos!
Note that at 8:59, after ...Nc6, White wins with Nd4.
Just been looking at this with the engine. There's no way my tiny chess brain is extricating myself from that situation. Bb4+ then castles then sac again on f2? No, I can't do that, the stress would kill me.
Thanks for the awesome video! Black missed the best move on TWO moves in a row at 20:18 he played Rg8, then as you mentioned at 20:44, he played gxf2. Great teaching though!
Jonathan maybe not a chess master but his lectures are really very well prepared. Thank you!
good job man! in general the b6 line alluring the Queen works if white has not played Nf3 (eg on a3 line). Even though Black traps the queen he has lost a Rook a minor piece and a pawn and thus the game if far from over.
Tried it out in a blitz game and won. It's a great variation and addition to the Budapest. Thank you for the lessons. Subbed a few days back. Carry on 👌🏻
29:02 I didn't see Qe7, that's a high level move that eventually traps the white queen if played perfectly. I did see Qxd2 or bxd2 which simply wins a minor piece. I checked with stockfish and it's -6 Qe7 and -5.2 Qxd2 so both winning moves.
Great video by the way! I want to try this gambit.
Love the outro, nice song/animation! - The video was great too, thanks for the content.
You just keep getting better and better at pulling rabbits put of your hat! Truly loved your exhaustive coverage of the Fajarowicz Gambit. THANK YOU!😇
Absolutely loving your upload frequency atm! Love the vids and hope you’re keeping well. & more t shirt content in future pls
Oh my god this gambit is a gold mine that just keeps giving! 😄 The number of mindblowing traps that originate from here is astonishing!
Love how Jonathan goes over opening traps! Great way to initially learn opening on either side. Once these traps are learned, then the main line “book” will make more sense
nice queen trap! there is a similar queen trap I found when studying my Bc4 lines against the old sicilian : 1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bc4 e6 4.O-O d5 5.Bb5 a6 6.Bxc6+ bxc6 7.b3!? dxe4 8.Ne5 Qd4 9.Nc4 Qxa1?? 10.Bb2 Qxa2 11.Be5! {the queen is so trapped that we can worsen black's pawn structure before winning the queen, but Nc3 is also good} f6 12.Nc3 fxe5 13.Nxa2
Great video!
@31:38 double check, smothered mate; but how 'double' check?
Thanks for informing us about this great, tricky gambit! 😊
great gambit lecture! Really enjoyed it 😊 thanks
Thanks for this Jonathan! At 15:21, instead of Bg3+, why not Bc5+? You'll still win the queen and lose the bishop whatever happens but you give white the opportunity to block the check in the wrong way and lose an EXTRA piece! E.g. if e3 or Be3 to block the check, you just take that piece with the bishop and THEN snaffle the queen. If king instead moves back to e1, you just play Bf2, sac the bishop and win the queen. In fact, this variation is so much better I'm tempted to keep it for myself :)
King goes back to e1 and protect Queen
Quite interesting. Probably good enough for most amateur players and as quick blitzer. I have never considered such openings serious and never seen any studying material for those fishy gambits. And yet still would not fall into any trap set ups like in this Fajarowicz - did not know it has a name btw :) Played few games as white and chose Nd2 and a3 forcing quick exchanges with comfortable play for white. As for d6 reply with Bf4 developing bad bishop, protecting pawn e5 and keep black's position pressured and cramped. I am not a master though still app 2200 player. Still praise for author - it is always profitable to analyse tactical positions even if they are not correct Good luck!
The chicken is at it again! More rare gambits!!!! Yeassss, I'm still trying to get the Nakmanson (+H) on the board, but I'll take this as well
I suck at chess, but love it and your videos! First time I've tried using content from your videos and it was perfect - mated them. White played f3 and I responded with bishop and then queen, knight, etc. and it was perfect. Felt a bit dirty though after just watching your video and getting so lucky with a bad move on white's part.
Nothing dirty about opening prep, just part of the game.
At 20:14, wouldn't ...g2 lead to a forced mate
?
25:34 we´re not interested in the rook, we´re interested in the king :D
mostly i see that players with elo 2100 and less are more interested in pieces rather than win :D
Yeah this was an awesome lesson. Thanks ! I'm going to rewatch it again straight away maybe also another time after that also , so it all sticks in a bit better. I played this ages ago. I have been messing around with the Mokele Mbembe Alekhine, recently which has some similar ideas and one opponent that called it witchcraft as it forces you to remember a lot of defensive and attacking ideas for black. Had a surprising number of wins with it for black. While white can easily get into time trouble in Blitz Great surprise weapon But I had a fair share of cruel loses with it too and time trouble when white knows what to do against it. Gambit style !!
I've been playing fajarowicz for a year against every d4 and I love it.
Devastating🎉
Gambit zolpification at its best.
I have no idea what that means..
You should do a gambit speed run.
You said the magic word..."fun"... and with these 'smooth moves' I'll REALLY be having some FUN. Love giving away material to set mating traps!!! Thank you, Thank You, THANK YOU!!!😇
Another fun one, great content, thanks!
At 21:15 why not ...g2?
Jonathan..... you are so damn good!
Great explanation and engaging style.... Thank you.
👏🏿👏🏿👏🏿👏🏿👏🏿
Often when I try to play the Budapest and its offshoots White plays a different move 2, so I guess one needs to have a few different openings ready, such as something against 2.Nf3 or 2.Nc3. I know there are several different choices available, but what, in your opinion, would be compatible in spirit with the Budapest?
I played the gambit in 2 different games this last hour, and both times I ran into qd4. I’ll keep playing around with it!
Such a good content! Love your work and thx, it helps a lot!
How is it an automatic win when it’s bishop and rook and pawn for a queen in such a position?
Great fun, as always!
Pf3!!! and after b6 Dd5 etc what would you do with white? Pd4! and black is lost.
amazing amazing amazing keep doing exactly these kind of vids with the exact same structure and everything pls and thank you. at the last seconds of the video you said it was double check, and I'm pretty sure it's not. did you misspeak or am i just dumb?
9,16 what about if white instead of Qa6 plays Nd4?
If Nc5 or Rb8 Nd4xNc6 and white is up a piece.
When white plays 4) Nf3 , b6 trying to trap the Qeen is a blunder
Does this gambit works if against Mieses Opening?
Generally great stuff, but the Queen trap gambit is flawed. Put it in a strong computer with recent Stockfish. You showed "some random move" after Nc6, but if the move is not random and White plays Nd4 his threat of NxNc6 attacking the Black Queen voids the trap and White is more than +- 2.8 ahead regardless of what Black does. Black playing NxNd4 doesn't help either. White just plays QxNe4. Other than this, I love the traps shown here.
Instead of Qh6 what about Be3? Blocking the knight from going on the square that traps the Queen.
I love this so unique I can dig it ...wish I found your stuff earlier
What about 4.Nf3 b6 5.Qd5 Bb7 6.Qxb7 Nc6 7.Nd4?
15:23 this one looks like the tennison gambit
Isn't this similair to the wagon gambit?
I have to ask, what's the story behind the name Vampire Chicken?
Great video. I have already won a couple of games when my opponents played f3??
Tq so much 👍👍really great 👍👍👍
This deserves a double thumbs up.
I like the gambits and countergambits
Queen trap doesn't work, all white has to do is Be3 after the black move Nc6 and the trap fail :\
Brutal stuff ... I love it!
9:09 this trap doesn't work on the move 7.Nd4! Beacause if now 7...Nc5 to 8.Nxc6! Why show such nonsense?
this trap only works in one position: 1.d4 Nf6 2. c4 e5 3.dxe5 Ne4 4. Qd5 Bd4+ 5. Nd2 Nc5 6.a3 Bxd2 7. Bxd2 and now b6. an if 8.Qxa8 Bb7 9. Qxa7 Nc6 10.Qxb7 Nxb7 with a little advantage black's
AMAZING CONTENT!
21:59
Miodrag video on this THEN this video seems very instructive
Big fan man
You make great videos!
I'm trying to find the game but I caught Ben Finegold with this queen trap in a similar line. I got crushed because I'm 1000 rated.
Lets go next video about new crazy gambit
Great thumbnail.
beauty lines, thanks!.
This is pretty cool!!!!
Good traps!
I love the Budapest, but the Fajarowicz is my lover... 😎
Great!
Problem with this move is white doesnt need to move queen to a6 and simply play Kd4 and you may end up taking the queen with the rook, but you have lost a rook, knight and bishop for the queen. losing position.
A lot of similarities with Albin(i have no idea about Budapest, i play Albin all the time :)
In the Nf3 Bb4+ line I found that black actually never wins the pawn back because white apparently can play Rd1 and Rd5 defending the pawn.
1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 e5 3. dxe5 Ne4 4. Nf3 Bb4+ 5. Bd2 Nxd2 6. Nbxd2 Nc6 (Qe7 transposes) 7. a3 Bxd2+ 8. Qxd2 Qe7 9. Qc3 O-O 10. Rd1 Re8 11. Rd5! (it's around +1.05) (black can't really win the pawn back because there aren't any pieces left that you can attack the pawn with. The moment you play d6 or f6 (why) white takes the pawn and will simply be a pawn up) A crazy computer line that I found after this is: 11... b6 12. h4! Bb7 13. Rh3!! Na5 14. Rd3 (black can't win the pawn with Bxf3 because at the end of the line white will take the d7 pawn with the rook and be +2.5) At the end of this line the eval hovers around +0.95 and +1.20. This was analysed with Stockfish 15 NNUE
No human is ever gonna play that
Queen trap doesn't work if white knows Nd4 after black plays Nc6...
fun chess thank you
This is interesting, but I tend to gambit my king more than anything else.
Not trying this epic queen trap line, because with my luck, they'll play Nd4 instead of Qa6 and I'll blunder completely.
If you wanna progress in chess, this channel is not for you. If you wanna have fun in chess... you came to the right place😜
W vid
Thx fOr the Video man Look at the third time !
1.d4 Nf6 2. Nf3 puts an end to all 32 minutes of this.
Or just 1. e4
True but why to avoid fishy opening. With logical play white is getting comfortable position and keep intaitive.
@@elmworldacademy5212 I doubt they are very good at chess, so it's much easier to avoid these lines.
@@elmworldacademy5212 Even high rated players have often blundered their way into defeat against fishy openings.
I tried this once. I won the game; I think I’ll quit while I’m ahead.
Anyone here suffers from being at a 2000 then go down to 1400, then go back up to 2000 and only to end up at 1400 again. 😂 or am I the only one.
Fajarowicz is pronounced like "Fayarovitch" ;)
sorry,this line is crap . after Ne4 a3 d6 white has the intermezzo of Qc3 and now when bf5 Nc3 + - .
Qc3 would be an illegal move, and then Nc3 would also subsequently be even more illegal because you can't stack 2 pieces on one square! Must try harder if posting criticism (or at least, legal moves) :)
After Qc2 Bf5 Nc3 it's no fun for Black
Your thumbnails are so not you, Jonathan :D
I play blitz game so I can create havoc on my opponent
It's pronounced Fayaroveech btw
Lol! Totally
People play with engines all the time. That’s not how you can play in real tournaments.
Multi attack
Think the content is more of an awareness for lower rated players and opportunities for higher rated. I believe he gives you possible options to negate said openings.
My game against the Fajarowicz: www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1725686.
Wonderful! But pron. Fahyahrovvich
Wow! Thanks a lot Jonathan! I was searching like this as black against D4! 😊👍♟