The Most Aggressive Gambit You've Never Heard Of | Nakhmanson Gambit
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- Опубліковано 15 чер 2024
- What in the world is the Nakhmanson Gambit? Could it be the most aggressive weapon that's never been played? Shock your opponent and rake in the rating points with this super sharp surprise opening.
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/ vampirechicken
got this in saved now seems fun my friends at the library are gonna love this
What about your friends at the bar ? :)
And as of Nc3 we have a completely new gambit.
Agadmator is proud of you
I cant believe how iconic his lines get😃
@@burrri His channel is deservedly inocic...
oops, sorry about that... I meant "iconic"
The most aggressive gambit is when I surprise sacrifice my king
I do that Everytime. Not fun
Hhhhhhhh
I love king sacs! It is really easy to play after you sac the King. And, the best part, you don't have to formally resign!
*King’s Gambit*
playing with my wifi is already a gambit in its self
I'm just annoyed 5000 other people have seen this.
oops 33k now
@@yooser359 lol
75k now
83k now
Make tht 99K now😭😭😖😂
Basically this is just an Inverted Delayed Jerome.
Except the Nakhmanson is playable (-0.89 vs -3.33 for the Jerome). And when accepted white wins.
How is this inverted?
Why play this if you can do the jerome though
Gabriel Santo exactly. Good comment. Good comment.
Jerome Gambit is only for alpha players.
what is Jerome gambit?
Mr. Diwit Just look it up. Chessbra has a fantastic video on it
oo Thanks.. I'll be sure to check that out
I just played this and the other dude was like "bruhhh"
Ivanchuck would play this king to F6 without hesitation and win the game.
Sometimes Ivanchuk plays like AlphaZero, and sometimes he blunders terribly, but never in between.
@@beybladeguru101 I think it can be said that when Chucky is on a good day, he's the best player that's ever lived. Problem is that those good days have a whole lotta bad in between them, but if everyone is playing their absolute best, I'm taking Ivanchuk.
@@12jswilson The fact that he was so mercurial is what made him one of the most intriguing chess grandmasters to compete at the highest level.
Luckily for me ivanchuk isn't lurking ar 1700 elo on chess.com
I never knew you had a channel of your own, I watched your unbeatable urusov and loved it and I love this even more
Thank you so much! Glad you enjoy it.
I loved the Urusov as well, glad to see there's another gambit when they choose to decline 99.99999% of the time lol. Great work Jonathan!
@@forvalhalla7754 What level do you play on? Like what is your rating. I am 1400 on lichess and they accept it about 40% of the time
@@krutarthshah3302 My rating on anything other than blitz (I think it's rapid) is in the 1600's. But I haven't tried the Urusov yet on lichess, only on Gameknot. They never accept it, but I might try just to see and switch it up to this if they don't just for fun.
This is a great gambit! I managed to draw stockfish level 8 on lichess. The computer played Ke8 instead of Kf6 as it doesn't have time to figure out Kf6 and I got the forced draw. Thanks for great content!
Thanks for sharing both here and on the Twitch stream. It was an awesome game!
Same thing happened to me
impossible. stockfish level 3 just plays with queen and youre screwed. computer will never take on d4. dont post bullshit.
@@KeepHimAtBay yikes dude chill out, computer always takes on d4, all gambits are best refuted by accepting them, and you best believe the computer is going to take and defend like a machine, just check it yourself.
Critical point is its choice between Ke8 and Kf6, it needs like depth >= 20 to find the continuation for Kf6 to be best, so this whole thing is very much possible bro
Wow, it's possible to fool engines (btw, Leela would murder you, AIs are better at beating such nonsense). But humans can play Nxc3 or Nd6 and they don't need to know stuff and are simply better.
This opening seems so fun!! Another fantastic video, thank you Jonathan
I love this. Brilliant work from you as always Jonathan. Thank you
Incredible videos! Really hoping this channel gains some traction, as I would love to see tons more content!
Hey Jonno great analysis. You keep it real nice and clean with a good pace and don't get too deep for us mere mortals. Definitely gonna add this one to the repertoire.
Oh MY GOD! I just discovered your personal channel!!! I AM A HUGE FAN of yours. Watched almost all the chess openings explained lectures and was hoping to see some more of you on youtube!!! I am so excited. Hello from Greece btw!
Great video. Love seeing Schranz back on UA-cam!
I'm an Italian player and this opening has now become one of my favourites !! Thank you
Whoa so glad I have found your channel Jonathan, you inspired me to start playing chess some years ago with your online lessons on st louis club channel. This gambit seems like a lot of fun, definitely going to try this
Loving your excitement and passion.
Hi Jonathan, big fan! Loved all of your videos from St. Louis channel. Keep up the great work! Hoping to see more videos :)
Really fun gambit! This is definitely an inspiration for some opening videos I have in the works. Keep it up!
Love this! Always looking for something fresh. Thabks for sharing.
What a really amazing and crazy gambit line ! I didn't know this gambit and I crushed my opponent in a blitz game (he is a 2000 elo chess club player) in my first game thanks to you. Thanks for all your videos.
Recently I discover your channel, and it's one of the best that I see, you explain so well. Regards from Mexico
Thanks so much! Glad you enjoy the videos.
just beat a 2400 player with the Nakhmanson Gambit :-): 1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bc4 Nf6 4. O-O Nxe4 5. d4 exd4 6. Nc3 dxc3 7. Bxf7+ Kxf7 8. Qd5+ Ke8 9. Re1 Ne7 10. Rxe4 c6 11. Qd6 Qa5 12. Bg5 Qd5 13. Rxe7+ Bxe7 14. Qxe7# 1-0 - it was a bullet game, but nevertheless checkmating a 2400 player in 14 moves is not bad :-) - keep up the great work Jonathan!
thank you very much for the course
Thx 4 showing this amazing opening. I will sure try
Great find...Thanks...
Wow so i was initially excited to see johnathon schrantz, my favorite STL openings guy. The one time i met you, you mentioned to watch your twitch but im not really familiar with twitch. So Then seeing him playing the bishop's opening which i play along with scotch was even more fantastic. I love the urosov gambit but true nobody accepts it so i usually follow that line with Re1, i thought it was the morphy attack or gambit part of the max lange. However when i play this i feel like I'm not getting enough. This video hit all the right notes and ill def look to try it out. Also maybe you could do a video on the italian-koltanowski aka deutz gambit. Thanks a lot, looking forward to more videos
Thank you
I will definitely try it out
I love how you teach every possible move.I suscribed.You are a great teacher
Once again Jonathan a delightful & Fun Instructional Video! Yap, gonna follow you on Twitch now. The only reason I hadn't pursued your offerings earlier is because I saw you most often in lecturing with the St. Lewis C.C., and those lectures necessarily just moved to slow. "that's the nature of course when there." I benefit greatly here on Y.T. from your keeping the ideas presented slow enough for a weaker player to maximize benefit, yet at a tempo speed that holds the ideas together for retaining as well. Always Greatly Love Your Host Demeanor & now after your recent London Defense offering, I'm making it a point to come Aboard Twitch with you as well! Thanks Man, Big Time & As Always, Blessings from Oregon! .. Mike.
Thanks Jonathan.
I have really enjoyed watching the video.
Stay home and stay safe.
First time on one of your videos: great analysis, really enjoyed this! You've even tempted me to stray away from my 1.d4 safe space 😂
Hey Jonathan, great work keep up the good content coming !
@@BeFourCM indeed my friend
Omg! Its diet finegold from stlcc!! Always loved your lectures! Instant sub!
Thanks you so much, Sir, for your knowledge and your flawless demonstration. from the NW of Paris, France.
"Eye-talian" lmao
The juicy piano
@@VivekGawande1 Gucci Piano
So basically it's capitalizing on your opponent's greed. Continuous super-gambit with leaving opponents pieces undeveloped and unprotected. And issuing a sad bill to him for that afterwards
You are exactly the chess channel I've been looking for. I don't have it in me to play tons of games looking for one pawn advantage king end games. Bonus because the bishops opening is also my favorite
Wow! A good gambit MR Schrantz! I am gonna try it out!
You know it’s gonna be a good video when he’s smiling like a mad man
Thanks, very interesting as a Scotch player! I was wondering if you could create some in-depth lichess studies for things like this and the Urusov?
Problem.is nobody EVER plays this at lower levels. Like nobody follows this exact pattern. Makes it impossible
Exactly
I learned that the hard way
I see this all the time. You can get there basically any time someone defends the Italian Game with two knights.
I see it a lot when playing the scotch
Joke's on you Johnathan, I HAVE heard of this gambit! :D Seriously though, I never ended up using it because there wasn't a good video on it, so thank you so much! The bishop's opening is my favorite as well (':
Extremely strong gambit... Great work researching it
I happened to use that queen sac perpetual to draw against stockfish level 8 in 15 second chess. Thanks for sharing!
I played a very similar game to this when I came up with the knight sack too and ended up winning!
Nakhmanson , part Egyptian Gambit God, part serial killer, may you never see him in your chess dreams...
Wow. Absolutely superb 👌🏻👌🏻
I found this and puted in my italian reportiore ! 1 month ago in Paul Morphys games !
awesome gambit good for blitz game thx for sharing cheers!
This kind of stuff is exactly why i play the pirc :D
Sounds like a cool gambit!
as for august 18th 2022 there are over 23k games in the lichess' db that reached the position that arises at move 6 (6. Nc3)
Jonathan is an amazing theoretician and an extraordinary forerunner! :D
over 8k games that reach Kxf7, Qd5+; mindbuggling!
It seems that nowadays the trend is to capture on c3 with knight instead of the pawn :D
I've seen this position in a max Lange attack book. It gives knight takes instead of pawn.
IM Rosen just Subscribed to your Twitch Channel! Good Job!
Saving the move order in the description helps.
Wow Nc3 is actually a ridiculous move at that position! Your creativity is so good for the further development of chess!
I really like going for things like fried liver attack and this seems like a very different way to do a similar attack, that's really cool! I hope I get a few interesting games trying this out!!
Hey johnathan..!! This is a nice one ..!! But one question. What if the black queen moves to f6 after Re1??
Ooh, this could be very fun. I've have a system for this position which I can get through a normal scotch gambit. I am aiming for Max Lange stuff, but Nxe4 (known as the Anti-Max Lange) stops that from happening. I'm not thrilled with the stuff that arises from that, so this might be a fun substitute for now.
I luv gambits! Thnx!!!!!
I've seen this move in a max Lange book. They recommend against it
Fantastic!
Schrantz is so underrated
From when I look on my engine it says the declined lines to the nakhmanson are better of nc3 on move six rather than taking the knight with the pawn. From those lines you are just up a pawn with a slightly passive position and black can make some mistakes it is generally easier but here is what I've found 6Nc6 then white either puts their queen or rook on the E file, in both cases black blocks with his bishop then Nd5 is played by white pressureing the bishop. After this the c4 bishop is taken by the queen or in the rook variation, the bishop on e7 is taken by the knight taken back with a knight then queen takes pawn on d4 is played. This is still playable for white but better for black, in the the r1 line if black doesn't castle after qxd4 then it is mate in 5.
Thanks to you!! Because of you i also beat Stockfish 8!!!
Thanks for this. I normally like to try for a Max Lange attack but so far I have not been impressed with other responses after Nxe4.
Came here because of Eric Rosin, and stayed because this is a great video. Thanks!
I pioneered the Nakhmanson on ICC 15 years ago.Never realized my games were being used to refine opening theory.
Keep dreaming.
Thank u John :)
This is brilliant :)
Will try it as weapon in Bullet. Thx
Great john superb
Voy a incluir esto en mi repertorio
nice one John
Yeah, the most aggressive opening but almost never work because nobody falls in it.
I didn't know vsauce plays chess, impressive
Wheezywaiter
Only science lovers will understand this comment.Hey Vsauce,Michael here.😂😂
Nice video!
There's not much master games (OTB, 2200+ elo) played on this gambit. But if you change the database games on Lichess to the games played online on Lichess you will find 2079 games. It's not a lot indeed, I think it accounts for like 2% or 3% of the games played on that position before 6.Nc3.
Anyway I like the idea. Would you consider playing this gambit OTB?
that was really impressive..!!!!
Is there an analysis of the line 8...Ke8, 9.Re1 Qf6? Seems ok for black and relatively easy to play (for black) with all natural moves. Am I missing something?
Great Video!!!!
Glad you liked it!
5:44 "We're down to 2 games it the database, nobody's done this, nobody knows about this." Now March 2022 (almost 2 years later), Nc3 has been played 16,755 times in the database!
he means master not lichess
5:01 -- *Heresy!*
After 8...Ke8, you should probably address the black defensive manoeuvre Qf6...Be7...Qf7, which is easy to draw against using the standard plan - Rxe4, Bg5, Rae1 and Rf4 - but it is not immediately obvious how to create real winning chances.
Thought so too
Jonathan Schranz (Your Official Opening Wingman)
Thanks it's a common position and I will most def learn it by heart and give it a go!
Edit: I tried it unrated and people don't seem to really fall into it and rather take the c3 knight with their knight to pressure the queen but then taking back the knight with the b2 pawn usually make them take the c3 pawn with their e4 pawn but in the end, it works. But to be honest I never had for the moment the typical structure, they rather go for some sort of weird Philidor pawn structure with a knight on f6 but then again it was unrated so I don't really know who am I facing and judging by the two games I had they weren't really good.
But this structure (pawns on d6-e5 and no Kc6) work as well and once you do the bishop sacrifice and attack with the queen on d5 they usually defend with the bishop on e6 but you can do a little (obvious) trick Ke5+ and if the black take back with the d6 pawn then you got a free queen.
This gambit definitely offers a lot of counterpart, I think I will try it in a rated game just to see how it goes after all I'm a Jerome player and it is rather close to the Jerome in the spirit, Tal would be proud!
This is CRAZY .. but I’ll give it a shot
I have played a couple times. Had problems closing the deal. Opponent gave up as I continued to just take material.
Nice!
It contains all the exuberant, reckless abandon of the Jerome but, unlike the Jerome, it is theoretically sound: nice opening.
This gambit is cool. I was able to draw against stockfish 8. Thanks for something that I can add to my opening repertoire.
Edit: Subscribed
What a game. Sweet gambit bro
Thanks bro!
My opponent smelled a rat and played 6...Nxc3. Just a super fun way to play, though.
Do you have any aggressive suggestions if black takes with knight instead (6...Nxc3)?
Absolutely! As luck would have it I won a game against an International Master who played 6. ... Nxc3 against me and a video is coming soon. Thanks for the suggestion!
@@JonathanSchrantz Awesome, looking forward to it! I gotta hit the bell now. :)
Could you also analyze the black's move N:Nc3 as the 6th move I think?
This is my openning used for tournament
If after your research this is legitimately playable, would you make a chessable course on it? I would happily spend money on it :--)
Thia guy look like retired Captain America
Rainbow x more like retired help desk officer
@@Socrates... True af