Комментарии:
after Bf7! You get pawns in center, a powerful bishop, and you're winning.
ОтветитьI'm so bad at chess that I didn't even notice that the e5 pawn was hanging so I took my opponents knight and evaded the trap.
ОтветитьLost to this gambit just now
ОтветитьI hate people that play dirty lines like this.
Ответитьsomeone played it against me, i evaded the trap by giving up on my rook
ОтветитьPretty nice move against the jerome. Jerome will be sad
Ответитьthis worked great against my friend that always tried to fried liver great video GREAT FUCKING VIDEO
ОтветитьWhat if white knight goes to G4 to defend after the queen comes out?
Ответитьwhat's wrong with going pawn c3 on move 4?
ОтветитьDoesn't going Ng4 save the knight and the g pawn?
Ответитьthank you so much! This trap is brutal
ОтветитьI just got beaten by this, fell into it hook line and sinker 😔
Ответитьcame here after gettin slapped
ОтветитьYou forgot the case where after the knight takes e5 he can also fallback to g4 to be protected by the queen and also blocking the queen from taking g2 pawn. That's what I played the first time I fell into this trap
Ответитьat 4.14 min if we will knite g4 what happend on white
ОтветитьIm so bad at chess I thought this was a white game
ОтветитьWeird name
ОтветитьLuv your videos. Just found this one and I have a different take. Chess is about fun and accepting gambits and refuting them is fun. I always accept this "trap" because after c3, d4 and rook to e1 black is in deep poo poo! White has a strong center, is about to connect rooks and is threatening Queen to e2 doubling up. Black has a misplaced king and its Queen rook might as well go home because it's out of the game! SOMEONE once said it's how many pieces that are in the fight that counts not how many pieces u have! The above and some fun variations have refuted this "gambit" as far as I'm concerned. What a position at the cost of ONE point!
ОтветитьSa 70 percent ko sa chess ok Yan 8 move trap sa akin pero sa 90 or 95 percent ko lakas sa chess Hindi ako matatrap sa 8 move trap sa chess
ОтветитьJust to follow up from three days ago. At 5:oo your analysis is perfect! I showed this to one of my colleagues who said most of the videos that do go one step further in analyzing bishop takes on f7 claim that black queen simply takes the pawn on e4! Allegedly, d4 does NOT kick away the queen and allow b4 and a4, the pawn storm I alluded to. Black queen moves away after rook to e1 and white is now down TWO points!! Amazingly, none of the videos go any further! The VERY NEXT MOVE is queen to e2 threatening mate in one! The black queen to f7 or bishop to e7 CAN NOT stop bishop to g5 check!! I can't believe how many videos simply refuse to analyze further. When white takes at f7 with the bishop this becomes a WHITE TRAP!!
ОтветитьInstead of Bc5, Nxc2+, Kf1, Qh1 checkmate
Ответитьwow nice
Ответитьnice game
ОтветитьI just got hit with this bullshit
ОтветитьIf you are interested in a continuation for white after knight takes e5, read this.
So, basically it is pretty much all alright until you decide to take the king’s pawn on f7 with the knight. The idea of forking the queen and rook is fine, but not here because the queen is out. You should better do two things instead.
1. give a check with the bishop
2. then castle to put your king in safety
You are down a piece after queen takes e5 but don’t worry, you’ve got a lot of compensations.
- 2 pawns
- enemy’s king is in the middle
- quick development
Here you go.
Wp gg 😁 Joking 😂 We shilling 😎 Solo Bolo 😱
ОтветитьIf after I play Nd4, white doesn't take the free bait e5 pawn, instead white takes Nxd4, my trap failed. Am I screwed, or do I still have a good game as black?
Ответитьso funny to see the exact game i just lost online, verbatim. time to pass it on to others
ОтветитьI fell for this trap and lost in 7 moves
ОтветитьHow to lose if you're playing with the white pieces???🙆 😅✅
ОтветитьJust to let you know most people call this the schilling-kostic gambit
Ответитьthis is my favorite gambit because it being uncommon makes it work way more
ОтветитьThis is an old video but after I played knight to d4 as black, I looked up the opening and found this video. As I was watching it my opponent played the exact moves in this video and I checkmated him lol
ОтветитьI'm here because I got smoked by the Schilling Schill. by another -1100 player haha
ОтветитьYOU HAVE TO KNOW THIS🗣️🗣️💯💯💯☝️☝️🆙🆙
ОтветитьI found. this video 13 years after it was published and I was also fallen into a trap, playing for white. However, I managed to checkmate on 11th move due to a wrong defence of black's king on move 10. Here is what I played:
1: e4 - e5. 2: Nf3 - Nc6. 3: Bc4 - Nd4 4: Nxe5 - Qg5 5:Nxf7 - Qxg2. 6: Qh5 - Qxh1+ 7: Bf1 - Qxe4+. 8: Kd1 - Qh1 9: Nd6+ Ke7 10: Qe5+ Kd8. (black's mistake that saved my game as I could immediately checkmate). 11: Nf7# 1-0.
I was under immediate checkmate on a next move by black as soon as they were not under check, so playing that game though I won I could not recommend as it relies on opponent's mistake.
❤
ОтветитьI would love to see some other variations of this. For example instead of the knight capturing the pawn on e5, what are some lines if Nxd4?
ОтветитьMy first time coming across the Blackburn schilling I took on e5 and then he played the queen g4 I really spent two minutes on the move I had no move to save the knight it was a goner. In the fried liver you sac the knight anyway so I just gave it up I played bishop f7 check and castle. Drop back the bishop and play from there I avoided total disaster haha
Ответить1) e4 - e5
2) Kf3 - Kc6
3) Bc4 - Kd4
4) K x e5 - Qg5
5) K x f7 - Q x g2
6) Rf8 - Q x e4+
7) Be2 - Kf3++
Yes it is, I practice with computer, if white take the pawn e5, white will goes to a very disgusting position!
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