Girkassa wrote on 08/09/11 at 20:05:35:
dfan wrote on 08/09/11 at 19:46:08:
Uhohspaghettio wrote on 08/09/11 at 19:20:00:
I think "gambit" has a precise meaning in chess, that means to allow your opponent material where you can't legally take it back on exactly the next move.. eg. the queen's gambit.
I have never heard this definition. Do you not consider the Danish Gambit to be a gambit?
This definition is new to me as well, and I thought most players agreed that the Queen's Gambit is a misleading name. By this logic, there must be many openings that should have been called a gambit. For example, should 3...a6 in the Ruy Lopez be called a gambit because White can play 4.Bxc6 dxc6 5.Nxe5?
My definition of a gambit would probably be to sacrifice material without intending to take it back in the foreseeable future. By this definition, the Queen's Gambit is not a gambit (unless white intends 2...dxc4 3.Nf3 Nf6 4.Nc3).
With all due respect Girkassa, it's kind of irrelevant what you would call a gambit or what "your" definition of a gambit is, it doesn't matter.
This is how a gambit is in chess, I think it's a good way because it's completely objective. Otherwise you get into subjective issues. I mean what the heck is "foreseeable future"? I hope that others don't get ideas like you and openings are new mislabelled in future going against the established and traditional way of labelling them. (...and I hope someone doesn't find an exception already).
Your preconceptions of what a gambit "should be" are a bit arbitrary to be honest and depend on principles of chess that aren't proper for objective naming. You may find the "queen's gambit" misleading, but that's missing the point: Opening names aren't
supposed to tell you anything about an opening's analysis.
Just because many players may agree the Queen's Gambit is "misleading" (and that's only because it's unusual for a gambit to work like that) that doesn't mean they would want it to be called anything else.
Uhohspaghettio, the thing about your definition of a Gambit is that it classifies some openings/moves as gambits, even though nobody would ever call them gambits.
Here is another example, 1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3. Bb5 Nf6 4.d3 Nd7.
Is 4...Nd7 a gambit? according to you definition it is because white has 5.Nxe5, and black can't get the material back on the NEXT move. Of course, after 5...c6 white is loosing material, and 5.Nex5 is not playable. I would never call 4...Nd7 a gambit.