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Very Hot Topic (More than 25 Replies) C30-C39: A new look at the King's Gambit (Read 71689 times)
TopNotch
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Re: A new look at the King's Gambit
Reply #95 - 10/28/06 at 19:58:49
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Ohh I don't know, I suspect they are quite a few non professionals that if u play any ole thing against u will get killed.

On another tack, I noticed u mentioned 1.b3 - was your name associated with a book on this opening as well as one on the Two Knights Defence? I seem to recall seeing this some time back while perusing the London Chess Centre website.

Toppy Smiley
  

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Jonathan Tait
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Re: A new look at the King's Gambit
Reply #94 - 10/28/06 at 19:32:25
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TopNotch wrote on 10/28/06 at 19:13:17:
To progress properly in chess some opening complexes are a must to study and the sooner the better, and then they are others Openings where there is not so vital. This advice is not really targetted at you Johnathan or other hardcore Gambiteers, but rather those still undecided newcomers who need a broader picture of the real chess world before being unwittingly seduced to the dark side.


Progress to where though? Most chessplayers are not going (and are not trying) to become professional chess players. Below that level, as long as you know what you're doing, you can get away with absolutely any old rubbish. That's the best thing about not being a professional. You can play whatever you like because, while no one wants to lose, ultimately the result doesn't really matter.

TopNotch wrote on 10/28/06 at 19:13:17:
So rather than being accused again of not understanding what you are really trying to say, please summarise what you think the true status of the Kings Gambit currently is? - that is good for White good for Black, equal or none of these.


I refer the honourable member to the reply I gave some moments ago Smiley

TopNotch wrote on 10/28/06 at 19:17:13:
Do you really not care, or simply given up on trying to find it with the KG?


I don't care Smiley

I don't think the advantage is particularly important in most OTB play. It's much more important to have positions you're happy to play, where you know what you're doing. I've had my best results with openings in which objectively I have no advantage at all (e.g. 1.b3 or 1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 d6 3.Bb5+ Bd7 4.a4).
  

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TopNotch
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Re: A new look at the King's Gambit
Reply #93 - 10/28/06 at 19:17:13
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TopNotch wrote on 10/28/06 at 18:43:37:
If you want to avoid rhetoric then post a line that you think is good for White in the KG and we will look at it.


personally I don't care about the advantage any more Smiley


That would be evident by the choice of Opening.

Do you really not care, or simply given up on trying to find it with the KG?

Toppy Smiley
  

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TopNotch
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Re: A new look at the King's Gambit
Reply #92 - 10/28/06 at 19:13:17
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Nice stats Johnathan, I guess we have differing philosophies on Openings and Opening play. Quoting statistics is nice n all, but using them to justify an openings objective merits requires a much deeper analysis. If raw statistics were the end all, we would all be playing the Blackmar Diemer Gambit. There is nothing wrong with alternative openings provided one has a sound base to begin with, but if all ones openings border on the dodgy then the future is bleak. 

To progress properly in chess some opening complexes are a must to study and the sooner the better, and then they are others Openings where there is not so vital. This advice is not really targetted at you Johnathan or other hardcore Gambiteers, but rather those still undecided newcomers who need a broader picture of the real chess world before being unwittingly seduced to the dark side.   

So rather than being accused again of not understanding what you are really trying to say, please summarise what you think the true status of the Kings Gambit currently is? - that is good for White good for Black, equal or none of these.

Top Smiley
  

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Jonathan Tait
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Re: A new look at the King's Gambit
Reply #91 - 10/28/06 at 18:57:00
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TopNotch wrote on 10/28/06 at 18:43:37:
If you want to avoid rhetoric then post a line that you think is good for White in the KG and we will look at it.


that'd be difficult since pretty much all defences to the King's Gambit are sound

but personally I don't care about the advantage any more Smiley
  

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Jonathan Tait
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Re: A new look at the King's Gambit
Reply #90 - 10/28/06 at 18:46:10
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TopNotch wrote on 10/28/06 at 16:37:41:
After this miniature Fedorov NEVER AGAIN touched the Kings Gambit in a serious game to my knowledge. The honeymoon phase was over and the next time he met Shirov in 2001 he resorted to the Bishop's Opening (2.Bc4)


and the result was 0-1, 30
conclusion: Shirov can beat Fedorov in any opening

but from the games in my databases:
Fedorov still had a 66% score with the King's Gambit (albeit not as good as his 71% with 2.Nf3)
and Gallagher had a 73% score playing it game after game (which is better than his 67% with 2.Nf3)

TopNotch wrote on 10/28/06 at 16:37:41:
Conclusion: The Kings Gambit maybe useful as an occasional weapon, but to ask more from it will ultimately bring you grief and by then it may well be too late for ones brain to absorb proper alternatives.


I pretty much replied to this already in another thread:

the reason GMs don't play the King's Gambit is...

Quote:
not because the King's Gambit is unsound. More that it's not worth the time invested for the professional player. The King's Gambit is very easy to prepare for if Black knows it's coming. And worse, it's very easy to find novelties for Black, which White then has to solve over the board. Not the situation a pragmatic grandmaster (who has bills to pay) wants to face regularly: a difficult draw against a well-prepared 2250 player, a crushing defeat to some 2550 GM, a consequent big loss in prize money.


and I went on:

Quote:
But so what? So a GM scores better with 2 Nf3 or whatever; those are professionals' results, with professional technique to back them up. At lower levels you can get away with absolutely any old rubbish, much worse openings than 2 f4. Games are won and lost on mistakes, not small theoretical advantages. It's much better to play openings you enjoy, openings where you know what you're doing, pet lines with your own ideas, anything you like. (Actually that works at higher levels as well; e.g. in England GMs Hodgson and Hebden making big weapons out of 1 d4 Nf6 2 Bg5 and 2 Nf3 g6 3 Nc3 respectively.)

Incidentally, my own score as White with the KG OTB is 69% (or 73% if I leave out several losses to Hebden Roll Eyes). As Black it's 78%, which is quite a bit better than my 66% against the Ruy (but that's playing the King's Gambit a tempo down; i.e. 3...f5).


i.e. who cares what grandmasters play? Wink

TopNotch wrote on 10/28/06 at 16:37:41:
Wasn't it you Johnathan that said something to the effect that if you study the Kings Gambt too much one would never play it? I believe the opposite should be true with good Opening choices.


that's more or less my opinion about playing provocative openings – the point being that if you go too deep you'll find lines you really don't like and then you won't feel right about playing the opening at all. (For White that generally translates into searching for an advantage that isn't there.) So rather than spending countless hours looking for irrelevant novelties on move 25 or wherever, you do much better just to play the opening and improvise over the board.

TopNotch wrote on 10/28/06 at 16:37:41:
My advice is rather than always having to shop around for alternative Openings why not commit to stuff that will serve you well your entire chess life.


That's sound advice. But I like alternative openings; and the King's Gambit serves me pretty well anyway. Smiley
  

blog inspired by Bronstein's book, but using my own games: http://200opengames.blogspot.co.uk/
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TopNotch
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Re: A new look at the King's Gambit
Reply #89 - 10/28/06 at 18:43:37
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Point taken woofwoof, but it was you who introduced an excerpt from Nigel's article into the equation, as if to somehow justify the legitmacy of the Kings Gambit and provoke feedback. However what I get from the article is that the Kings Gambit is best used infrequently.

Now understand this, anyone who comes to this forum pedalling The Kings Gambit as some kind of magic bullet, I will react, and if that means re-stating my position a million times I will do so.

If you want to avoid rhetoric then post a line that you think is good for White in the KG and we will look at it.    

Topster Smiley
  

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woofwoof
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Re: A new look at the King's Gambit
Reply #88 - 10/28/06 at 18:28:53
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Toppy, its all abt making sweeping statements.

miniature black win by adams in KG- Toppy says KG is brittle, fragile etc

Jon reples with miniature black loss in sicilian - Jon says Sicilian unsound

Toppy wants high level KG analogy, Jon gives miniature white KG win & concludes KG wins

After that you just go on rambling abt your already well known in this forum opinions abt the KG being all things bad & how vastly superior the Lopez is, even to the extent of belittling the KG just because of a miniature white loss in the earlier posts!. It really doesnt make any sense. Thats the whole point of the rhetoric/ironic replies of "Sicilian is unsound" & "KG wins"

Everyone is entitled to their own opinions. Thats true. But its one thing to have an informed opinion & quite another to have sweeping statements and oversimplified generalisations. Spassky himself also said before that the Lopez doesnt give him much.
  

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TopNotch
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Re: A new look at the King's Gambit
Reply #87 - 10/28/06 at 17:49:45
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Enlighten me.

Toppy Smiley
  

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woofwoof
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Re: A new look at the King's Gambit
Reply #86 - 10/28/06 at 17:06:07
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I tend to wonder if Toppy actually realises what Jonathan is trying to say in his posts!
  

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TopNotch
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Re: A new look at the King's Gambit
Reply #85 - 10/28/06 at 16:55:50
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I stand corrected, Fedorov's last Kings Gambit game was in 2004, and his last win with it was in 2002.

Toppers Smiley
  

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TopNotch
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Re: A new look at the King's Gambit
Reply #84 - 10/28/06 at 16:37:41
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fair enough Wink

A.Fedorov-P.H.Nielsen, Stockholm 1997
1.e4 e5 2.f4 exf4 3.Nf3 Be7 4.Bc4 Bh4+ 5.Kf1 d5 6.exd5 Bg4 7.d4 Ne7 8.Nc3 Ng6 9.Qe2+ Be7 10.h4 h5 11.Qe4 Nd7 12.d6 cxd6 13.Ng5 1-0

conclusion: the King's Gambit wins for White


Interesting that you should mention Fedorov  Cheesy

[Event "Rubinstein Mem"]
[Site "Polanica Zdroj POL"]
[Date "2000.??.??"]
[White "Fedorov,Alex"]
[Black "Shirov,A"]
[Round "5"]
[Result "0-1"]
[WhiteElo "2646"]
[BlackElo "2746"]
[ECO "C39"]

1. e4 e5 2. f4 exf4 3. Nf3 g5 4. h4 g4 5. Ne5
d6 6. Nxg4 Nf6 7. Nf2 Rg8 8. d4 Bh6 9. Nc3
Nc6 10. Nd5 Nxd5 11. exd5 Qe7+ 12. Be2 Nb4 13. c4
Bf5 14. Qa4+ Kf8 15. Qxb4 Re8 16. Qd2 Rxg2 17. Kf1
Rg3 18. Qd1 Be4 19. Rh2 f5 20. Nxe4 fxe4 21. Bg4
e3 22. Bf3 Qg7 23. Rh1 Rg2  0-1

After this miniature Fedorov Never Again touched the Kings Gambit in a serious game to my knowledge. The honeymoon phase was over and the next time he met Shirov in 2001 he resorted to the Bishop's Opening (2.Bc4) not to be confused with the Bishop's Gambit which too is just as unreliable. 

I suspect Fedorov now regrets not devoting more time to sturdier stuff like, dare I say it, The Ruy. 
Spassky recognised the Kings Gambit was unsuitable for everyday use, but Fedorov preferred to be hoisted by his own petard before acquiescing to this harsh reality.  Wink 

I think Joe Gallagher now plays the Ruy after a brief flirtation with the Scotch Four Knights, and Fedorov probably now has to make up for years of lost study time before he can employ the Ruy sucessfully against his peers.

Evgeny Sveshnikov in an interview expressed great regret at never seriously studying the Ruy and admits now that at his age it is too late to redress the balance, so despite the fact that there is no theoretical advantage to be had from the Scotch Gambit he is committed to it. My advice is rather than always having to shop around for alternative Openings why not commit to stuff that will serve you well your entire chess life.     

Conclusion: The Kings Gambit maybe useful as an occasional weapon, but to ask more from it will ultimately bring you grief and by then it may well be too late for ones brain to absorb proper alternatives. 

Toppylov Smiley

Postscript: Wasn't it you Johnathan that said something to the effect that if you study the Kings Gambt too much one would never play it? I believe the opposite should be true with good Opening choices.   

 

« Last Edit: 10/28/06 at 18:18:21 by TopNotch »  

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Jonathan Tait
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Re: A new look at the King's Gambit
Reply #83 - 10/28/06 at 15:33:05
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fair enough Wink

A.Fedorov-P.H.Nielsen, Stockholm 1997
1.e4 e5 2.f4 exf4 3.Nf3 Be7 4.Bc4 Bh4+ 5.Kf1 d5 6.exd5 Bg4 7.d4 Ne7 8.Nc3 Ng6 9.Qe2+ Be7 10.h4 h5 11.Qe4 Nd7 12.d6 cxd6 13.Ng5 1-0

conclusion: the King's Gambit wins for White
  

blog inspired by Bronstein's book, but using my own games: http://200opengames.blogspot.co.uk/
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TopNotch
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Re: A new look at the King's Gambit
Reply #82 - 10/28/06 at 14:48:45
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TopNotch wrote on 10/28/06 at 01:11:52:
And this is exactly the point, no one is disputing the Kings Gambit usefulness as a surprise or occasional weapon, but it is far too brittle an opening to be any more than that. For a further illustration of this fragility, see Nigel's feature game of the article Day vs Adams where Adams won in 13moves!!


J.Polgar-J.Lautier, Cannes 2001
1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bb5 g6 4. O-O Bg7 5. c3 Nf6 6. e5 Nd5 7. d4 cxd4 8. cxd4 O-O 9. Bg5 Qb6 10. Bc4 Qxb2 11. Bxd5 Qxa1 12. Qd2 1-0

conclusion: the Sicilian is unsound


It would have been a more effective analogy to quote a high level miniature won by Black as in the Kings Gambit example rather than a Rapid game won by White. Nevertheless a very interesting Rossolimo by Judit.

Topper Smiley
  

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Jonathan Tait
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Re: A new look at the King's Gambit
Reply #81 - 10/28/06 at 10:32:11
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TopNotch wrote on 10/28/06 at 01:11:52:
And this is exactly the point, no one is disputing the Kings Gambit usefulness as a surprise or occasional weapon, but it is far too brittle an opening to be any more than that. For a further illustration of this fragility, see Nigel's feature game of the article Day vs Adams where Adams won in 13moves!!


J.Polgar-J.Lautier, Cannes 2001
1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bb5 g6 4. O-O Bg7 5. c3 Nf6 6. e5 Nd5 7. d4 cxd4 8. cxd4 O-O 9. Bg5 Qb6 10. Bc4 Qxb2 11. Bxd5 Qxa1 12. Qd2 1-0

conclusion: the Sicilian is unsound
  

blog inspired by Bronstein's book, but using my own games: http://200opengames.blogspot.co.uk/
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