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Very Hot Topic (More than 25 Replies) C25: The Everlasting Fyfe Gambit (Read 240252 times)
Markovich
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Re: C25: Fyfe Gambit (The Everlasting Thread)
Reply #84 - 07/18/12 at 03:36:27
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Markovich wrote on 07/11/12 at 15:21:17:
Markovich wrote on 07/11/12 at 15:12:20:
I was planning 15...Rh6 but I just noticed 16.Rc1 which does look equal. I'll habe to come back.


OK, what's your opinion of 15...Rh6 16.Rac1 (I meant this move) 17...0-0-0 17.Bxa7 b6? I looked at 18.d6 Bxd6 19.Bxb6 Bxf4 20.Rfd1 Bxc1.


Unless Black is very much better, I would never want to play into this position with 11.g4, which just totally goes against my idea of how to handle the Black pieces.  So congrats on finding that.

But Stefan, what is it with these bold claims of White advantage or even sufficient play for White in complicated positions where White seems to have a lot to prove?  If you can boldly say that 11.g4 favors White, I can boldly say that 5...Qd7 and eventually 20...Bxc1 is =+, and I believe actually that my claim is a whole lot less bold than yours.  I will also say that except for tricks, White is indeed playing for two results after 20...Bxc1.  

I am quite prepared to accept that 4...d5 may not be the best answer to 4.f4.  It would, however, seem to be something of an insult to Black's conception that this simple and straightforward move produces at least equality.  Personally I do think it leads to Black's advantage in the indicated line.  Maybe White has some saving tricks, but I don't think that many people will look at that position and want to play into it as White.  But even if I'm wrong about that, what is really the point, since you already admit that White is worse by other means after 4.f4?  What is the point altogether, really?  I never said that 4...d5 refuted this gambit; I said it was a good move, which it is.   Do you think you've proven otherwise?

Finally I would like to point out a difference in conversational style here.  My basic mode in suggesting moves on this board, which I don't actually do that often, is to look at the position and suggest straightforward moves that look pretty strong.  I don't usually spend much time analyzing before I post my chess ideas.  So while I am talking that way, someone else keeps coming back with ingenious analyses based on considerable labor (or machine time), sometimes showing that there was a hole in some idea of mine.  Well, big wup.  I never claimed to have chess truth here in my hand, and don't think I will spend two hours preparing a deep justification before I next suggest what seems to be a decent chess move on this board.

  

The Great Oz has spoken!
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Hadron
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Re: C25: Fyfe Gambit (The Everlasting Thread)
Reply #83 - 07/17/12 at 22:30:45
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Stefan Buecker wrote on 07/17/12 at 22:02:27:
Smyslov_Fan wrote on 07/17/12 at 21:03:25:
Regarding your " 6.fxe5! Qxe5+ 7.Nge2", I'm sorry, but I don't know the moves between 1.e4 e5 2.Nc3 Nc6 3.d4 Nxd4 4.f4 d5 and your move 6. I've mostly been studying 5.ed5 Bc5 6.fe5 Qh4+.

I was refering to 5.exd5 Qe7 6.fxe5 Qxe5 7.Nge2. The alternative 5...Bc5 6.fxe5 Qh4+ was covered in an earlier post, I thought White had nothing to fear - am I wrong? Will check. - Thanks for your many interesting suggestions, this will keep my computer busy for a while.  Smiley 

But how does inserting Qd8-Qh4-Qe7 significantly alter what has been said by Mr. Buecker? Why can't you just play fxe5 a move later??  Huh
Hadron
  

I'm reminded again of something Short wrote recently, approximately "The biggest fallacy in chess is the quasi-religious belief in the primacy of the opening."
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Stefan Buecker
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Re: C25: Fyfe Gambit (The Everlasting Thread)
Reply #82 - 07/17/12 at 22:02:27
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Smyslov_Fan wrote on 07/17/12 at 21:03:25:
Regarding your " 6.fxe5! Qxe5+ 7.Nge2", I'm sorry, but I don't know the moves between 1.e4 e5 2.Nc3 Nc6 3.d4 Nxd4 4.f4 d5 and your move 6. I've mostly been studying 5.ed5 Bc5 6.fe5 Qh4+.

I was refering to 5.exd5 Qe7 6.fxe5 Qxe5 7.Nge2. The alternative 5...Bc5 6.fxe5 Qh4+ was covered in an earlier post, I thought White had nothing to fear - am I wrong? Will check. - Thanks for your many interesting suggestions, this will keep my computer busy for a while.  Smiley 
  
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Smyslov_Fan
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Re: C25: Fyfe Gambit (The Everlasting Thread)
Reply #81 - 07/17/12 at 21:19:17
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Stefan Buecker wrote on 07/13/12 at 07:27:00:
...
Smyslov_Fan wrote on 07/12/12 at 16:48:33:
One of the reasons I liked the Qh4+ g3 Qe7 maneuver against f4 was to deny White the f3 square for his N.

5...Qh4+ 6.g3 Qe7 7.Kf2 Qc5 8.Nf3!. 

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Why should White be worse?


White is worse because he has just walked into a very concrete, forced variation that favors Black:

  
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Smyslov_Fan
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Re: C25: Fyfe Gambit (The Everlasting Thread)
Reply #80 - 07/17/12 at 21:03:25
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Stefan, I agree completely that analysing gambits and offbeat lines really helps my chess. 

Regarding your " 6.fxe5! Qxe5+ 7.Nge2", I'm sorry, but I don't know the moves between 1.e4 e5 2.Nc3 Nc6 3.d4 Nxd4 4.f4 d5 and your move 6. I've mostly been studying 5.ed5 Bc5 6.fe5 Qh4+.

Black also has 5...Bf5, which seems ok to me too.

This is in addition to:

1.e4 e5 2.Nc3 Nc6 3.d4?! Nxd4 (exd4 doesn't necessarily transpose to known lines of other openings either) 4.f4 Bb4


1.e4 e5 2.Nc3 Nc6 3.d4?! Nxd4  4.f4 and the computeresque 4...Bd6!?

All of these lines probably favor Black slightly.
  
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Stefan Buecker
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Re: C25: Fyfe Gambit (The Everlasting Thread)
Reply #79 - 07/17/12 at 19:09:52
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In tournaments I rarely play wild gambits. Once I studied 1.e4 e5 2.Nc3 Nc6 3.g3 b5 for hours, but played a less risky novelty, in move four. However, studying gambits can be good for your chess, to handle dynamic equality. Or you can cure your anxiety before games against superior opponents: analyze the Latvian Gambit for one or two hours. It feels like you have got an extra pawn. - Of course you must play something else! 

Smyslov_Fan wrote on 07/17/12 at 17:30:06:
The Fyfe just isn't critical to know. Black has a number of different paths available, and the question on 4...d5 is what sort of advantage does Black have, or can white equalise?

What do you mean - that after 6.fxe5! Qxe5+ 7.Nge2 White plays for two results only? This is certainly not my impression. - The line which I feared was 4.f4 Bb4 5.Nf3 Bxc3+ 6.bxc3 Nxf3+ 7.Qxf3 Qh4+. Can you give other "comfortable paths" for Black?
  
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Smyslov_Fan
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Re: C25: Fyfe Gambit (The Everlasting Thread)
Reply #78 - 07/17/12 at 17:30:06
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The main problem with the Fyfe is that Black has several ways to play to gain a very comfortable game, and a few interesting gambit lines, such as Markovich's. 

The Fyfe just isn't critical to know. Black has a number of different paths available, and the question on 4...d5 is what sort of advantage does Black have, or can white equalise?

It's interesting to analyse here, but I would never include it in my repertoire.

  
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Stefan Buecker
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Re: C25: Fyfe Gambit (The Everlasting Thread)
Reply #77 - 07/17/12 at 10:46:57
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Severino wrote on 07/14/12 at 10:12:22:
4. This is for people with an ample chess library, but from my limited access, the Fyfe Gambit seems to have essentially disappeared from more recent chess opening manuals. Was this because of a particular paper or analysis, did it just fade away, or is it indeed mentioned in later books (how about early editions of MCO)?

Nothing in earlier editions, but the 7th edition of MCO (1946) says (p. 377): "3.d4 (Fyfe Gambit) Nxd4 4.f4 Bb4 5.Nf3 Bxc3+." Their final assessment translates to "Black has a distinct advantage, but no forced win." Modern sources discussing the Fyfe Gambit are rare. Even Vienna Opening (1976) by Tim Harding ignored it, although Harding is one of the few authors who are working with pre-1900 sources. In his later online columns, there was a short mention of the Fyfe Gambit. 

Edit: I am shocked. Tseitlin/Glazkov: The Complete Vienna (Batsford 1995) is incomplete, ignoring 3.d4.
  
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gewgaw
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Re: C25: Fyfe Gambit (The Everlasting Thread)
Reply #76 - 07/16/12 at 20:47:44
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Stefan Buecker wrote on 07/16/12 at 20:22:52:
gewgaw wrote on 07/16/12 at 20:18:16:
11. ...Bg6 12.Bg2 Nf6

On 11...Bg6, my reply is 12.g5.


I overlooked 12.g5; odd position as usual; but don´t forget to check 8. ...b6 instead of 8. ...Bf5. Wink
  

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Re: C25: Fyfe Gambit (The Everlasting Thread)
Reply #75 - 07/16/12 at 20:22:52
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gewgaw wrote on 07/16/12 at 20:18:16:
11. ...Bg6 12.Bg2 Nf6

On 11...Bg6, my reply is 12.g5.
  
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Re: C25: Fyfe Gambit (The Everlasting Thread)
Reply #74 - 07/16/12 at 20:18:16
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Stefan Buecker wrote on 07/16/12 at 20:15:21:
gewgaw wrote on 07/16/12 at 19:27:56:
(1.e4 e5 2.Nc3 Nc6 3.d4 Nxd4 4.f4 d5 5.exd5 Qe7 6.fxe5 Qxe5+ 7.Nge2 Bc5 8.Na4 Bf5 9.Nxc5 Nxc2+) Hard to believe, that White can survive after 10.Kf2 0-0-0 - the wKing is to exposed.

11.g4! again. Your move, maestro.  Roll Eyes

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@Moderator, could you rename this thread, please? "C25: The Everlasting Fyfe Gambit", per favore.


11. ...Bg6 12.Bg2 Nf6
  

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Stefan Buecker
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Re: C25: Fyfe Gambit (The Everlasting Thread)
Reply #73 - 07/16/12 at 20:15:21
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gewgaw wrote on 07/16/12 at 19:27:56:
(1.e4 e5 2.Nc3 Nc6 3.d4 Nxd4 4.f4 d5 5.exd5 Qe7 6.fxe5 Qxe5+ 7.Nge2 Bc5 8.Na4 Bf5 9.Nxc5 Nxc2+) Hard to believe, that White can survive after 10.Kf2 0-0-0 - the wKing is to exposed.

11.g4! again. Your move, maestro.  Roll Eyes

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@Moderator, could you rename this thread, please? "C25: The Everlasting Fyfe Gambit", per favore.
  
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gewgaw
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Re: C25: Fyfe Gambit (The Everlasting Thread)
Reply #72 - 07/16/12 at 19:27:56
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Stefan Buecker wrote on 07/16/12 at 08:01:29:
Hadron wrote on 07/16/12 at 02:50:20:
1.e4 e5 2.Nc3 Nc6 3.d4 Nxd4 4.f4 d5 5.exd5 Qe7 6.Bd3 exf4+ 7.Be4 Nf5 8.Nge2 Nf6 9.Bxf5 Bxf5 10.Bxf4 where you say 10...0–0–0 seems to do the trick. If I start out playing a gambit then doesn’t 11.Qd4 rather suggest it self ? and how is 11…Bxc2 that bothersome? (Maybe the more sensible amongst us wouldn’t try 11…Bxc2 but with white himself intending  0–0–0, His chances are no worse)

I agree: 11.Qd4 is the way to go, with equal chances. Hadron, thanks for remaining loyal to the cause. 

Embarassing to say, in an unwatched moment my illoyal PC has ruined the variation. In the line suggested by gewgaw, 1.e4 e5 2.Nc3 Nc6 3.d4 Nxd4 4.f4 d5 5.exd5 Qe7 6.Bd3 exf4+ 7.Be4 Qh4+ 8.Kf1 Bc5 9.Na4, a stronger idea is 9...b6! -/+. There is no immediate disaster, but in longer variations White is handicapped by the position of his Kf1. Black brings his knight via f5 to strong squares. It seems that 6.Bd3 is a mistake.

I had already mentioned 5.exd5 Qe7 6.fxe5 Qxe5+ 7.Nge2 as an alternative. After dropping 6.Bd3 it becomes my new main line. Black can continue: 7...Bc5 8.Na4 Bf5 9.Nxc5 Nxc2+ 10.Kf2 Nxa1 11.g4 with complications favourable to White.

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Hard to believe, that White can survive after 10.Kf2 0-0-0 - the wKing is to exposed.
  

The older, the better - over 2200 and still rising.
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Re: C25: Fyfe Gambit (The Everlasting Thread)
Reply #71 - 07/16/12 at 08:01:29
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Hadron wrote on 07/16/12 at 02:50:20:
1.e4 e5 2.Nc3 Nc6 3.d4 Nxd4 4.f4 d5 5.exd5 Qe7 6.Bd3 exf4+ 7.Be4 Nf5 8.Nge2 Nf6 9.Bxf5 Bxf5 10.Bxf4 where you say 10...0–0–0 seems to do the trick. If I start out playing a gambit then doesn’t 11.Qd4 rather suggest it self ? and how is 11…Bxc2 that bothersome? (Maybe the more sensible amongst us wouldn’t try 11…Bxc2 but with white himself intending  0–0–0, His chances are no worse)

I agree: 11.Qd4 is the way to go, with equal chances. Hadron, thanks for remaining loyal to the cause. 

Embarassing to say, in an unwatched moment my illoyal PC has ruined the variation. In the line suggested by gewgaw, 1.e4 e5 2.Nc3 Nc6 3.d4 Nxd4 4.f4 d5 5.exd5 Qe7 6.Bd3 exf4+ 7.Be4 Qh4+ 8.Kf1 Bc5 9.Na4, a stronger idea is 9...b6! -/+. There is no immediate disaster, but in longer variations White is handicapped by the position of his Kf1. Black brings his knight via f5 to strong squares. It seems that 6.Bd3 is a mistake.

I had already mentioned 5.exd5 Qe7 6.fxe5 Qxe5+ 7.Nge2 as an alternative. After dropping 6.Bd3 it becomes my new main line. Black can continue: 7...Bc5 8.Na4 Bf5 9.Nxc5 Nxc2+ 10.Kf2 Nxa1 11.g4 with complications favourable to White.

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Hadron
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Re: C25: Fyfe Gambit (The Everlasting Thread)
Reply #70 - 07/16/12 at 02:50:20
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Markovich wrote on 07/16/12 at 01:35:26:
11.0-0-0 is illegal because White's queen is on d1.

Oppsy doodle, my bad. I had it on d2 of my mini board

Markovich wrote on 07/16/12 at 01:35:26:
White's best chance of equality after 7...Nf5 is 8.Bxf4 Nf6 and now either 9.Bg5 or 9.Qd3, depending upon which bishop he wants to preserve. This is where I expected Stefan to defend White's chances. 8.Nge2 looks worse to me.

1.e4 e5 2.Nc3 Nc6 3.d4 Nxd4 4.f4 d5 5.exd5 Qe7 6.Bd3 exf4+ 7.Be4 Nf5 8.Nge2 Nf6 9.Bxf5 Bxf5 10.Bxf4 where you say 10...0–0–0 seems to do the trick. If I start out playing a gambit then doesn’t 11.Qd4 rather suggest it self ? and how is 11…Bxc2 that bothersome? (Maybe the more sensible amongst us wouldn’t try 11…Bxc2 but with white himself intending  0–0–0, His chances are no worse)
and on 1.e4 e5 2.Nc3 Nc6 3.d4 Nxd4 4.f4 d5 5.exd5 Qe7 6.Bd3 exf4+ 7.Be4 Nf5 8.Bxf4 I think this is no better or worse than Mr. Buecker’s 8.Nge2 after Nf6 9.Qd3 Nd6 10.0-0-0

Markovich wrote on 07/16/12 at 01:35:26:

How much of an advantage Black gets in these lines isn't very important if he gets any advantage at all, since in that case, straightforward, active play deals with White's whole conception.

Maybe, maybe not

Regards
Hadron
  

I'm reminded again of something Short wrote recently, approximately "The biggest fallacy in chess is the quasi-religious belief in the primacy of the opening."
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