• Smith-Morra gambit, strong medicine against the Sicilian

    From Eli Kesef@21:1/5 to All on Thu Jul 22 06:57:41 2021
    Bs"d

    I decided that I really didn't like the Smith-Morra gambit. So I switched to the Grand Prix attack, and I positively LOVE it!

    I used to be really pissed when after my e4 the enemy answered c5, but now I start to smile when I see that. You get really good interesting games with the Grand Prix Attack. And, like the name implies, you really get to attack the enemy. No whining
    closed games, you get a frontal attack on his king side. And that's where the king is.... In the rare case that he sees the trouble coming, and castles (not 'rooks') queen side, he then already messed up his castling position because of that c5, and
    you get also there easy attacks. It works GREAT!

    Here is a freshly played game against an 1889: https://lichess.org/OjVMO4Y82lgQ

    http://tinyurl.com/pin-sword

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  • From William Hyde@21:1/5 to Eli Kesef on Fri Jul 23 15:26:26 2021
    On Thursday, July 22, 2021 at 9:57:42 AM UTC-4, Eli Kesef wrote:
    Bs"d

    I decided that I really didn't like the Smith-Morra gambit. So I switched to the Grand Prix attack, and I positively LOVE it!

    When the Grand Prix attack was new, IM Lawrence Day played it often, beating GMs with
    it.

    I tried it against a 2400 player and got decent attacking chances as he wasn't at all
    an openings expert. But then, he was 2400 for a reason as the rest of the game showed clearly (this was at slow time controls - 40/2.5).


    I used to be really pissed when after my e4 the enemy answered c5, but now I start to smile when I see that. You get really good interesting games with the Grand Prix Attack.

    If you ever get tired of the GP attack there's always the wing gambit. I faced it in my
    second tournament (don't ask me why I played the Sicilian that day, I was a French
    defense type at the time) and didn't last long at all. Of course, he was 500 points
    higher and could probably have won with 1h4.

    And, like the name implies, you really get to attack the enemy. No whining closed games,

    Technically most Sicilians are semi-open games, except for, obviously the Closed Sicilian,
    which very often features king-side attacks by white (e.g. several games in Fischer's book) The Sicilian is an unbalanced game, white tends to get a king-side attack, black gets more subtle benefits. They should equalize but in my experience the white
    side is easier to play.

    But when you meet a Sicilian player who really knows his stuff, watch out. Your Grand Prix
    will turn into a race with broken down go-karts.

    William Hyde

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  • From Eli Kesef@21:1/5 to William Hyde on Sun Jul 25 15:01:51 2021
    On Saturday, July 24, 2021 at 1:26:27 AM UTC+3, William Hyde wrote:
    On Thursday, July 22, 2021 at 9:57:42 AM UTC-4, Eli Kesef wrote:
    Bs"d

    I decided that I really didn't like the Smith-Morra gambit. So I switched to the Grand Prix attack, and I positively LOVE it!
    When the Grand Prix attack was new, IM Lawrence Day played it often, beating GMs with
    it.

    Bs"d

    I read in my Mammoth Book of Chess that when it was first discovered, black players often went mate before move 25. The point is, nowadays, everybody and his mother, are playing the Sicilian. And almost non of 'm knows anything about the Grand Prix
    Attack.
    Me neither, that's why I bought these two books: https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/u9kAAOSwAcFf~FbN/s-l400.jpg
    And this one: https://www.denksportkampioen.be/uploads/4/0/2/7/40273869/s859343698545713665_p472_i1_w327.jpeg
    Just ordered them the other day, might take a while before they arrive here, but now already, without any serious theoretical knowledge, I beat one after the other with it.
    Of course I play mostly against weaker opponents, but if you follow the normal line, you get really boring whining games. The GPA solves the problem, and it's a killer.
    Can't wait to get those books, then it should get even worse for the opponents.

    I tried it against a 2400 player and got decent attacking chances as he wasn't at all
    an openings expert. But then, he was 2400 for a reason as the rest of the game showed clearly (this was at slow time controls - 40/2.5).

    I played one time a grandmaster, and that was the last time. It was a simultaneous game, him against 30 others. He looked at the board for half a second, moved, and walked on to the next board. He did that with all the boards, except for mine. When
    he came at my board, he stopped, planted his hands on the table, and looked. And looked. And kept on looking. For minutes. And then moved. And then all the other boards, look half a second, move, and next one. Not so my board. The first 10-15
    moves, he stopped, made himself comfortable, and looked and looked at my board.
    In the beginning I was very pleased with all that attention I was getting, however, that feeling quickly disappeared when I was the first one of the 30 players to go mate on move 17.

    I learned my lesson. Never played a GM again.

    Never again!

    It took me many years to figure out what happened there. Finally I figured it out.

    I had been betrayed. Ratted out. I used to play in that time on a chess club in the same village where that particular GM (Jeroen Piket) grew up.
    And of course, there on the club, like here, I was preaching the gospel of the opening traps, to everybody who wanted to hear it, and to a lot more who didn’t want to hear it. Like here.
    I remember on that club there, one guy told me: “Those traps of yours; the don’t work in the real world!” I just kept quiet, I knew better.
    Then that guy one time challenged me to a game. He had white, and started with an Italian opening. (guici piano or something) So after his bishop went to c4, I threw my horse forward to d4, setting the Blackburn-Shilling trap. He fell for it, his
    horse took my pawn on e5, and at that point I told him: “You just fell in a trap, and now you are going to lose at least one piece.” I could easily tell him that, because he passed the point of no return, and he was done for.
    He looked at the position, him having a double attack on f7, me only a horse in a useless place in the middle of the board, and he said: “Show me!”
    I moved my queen to g5.
    He looked and said: “It looks to me that YOU are going to lose a piece!” and he planted his horse on f7, thereby forking my queen and castle.
    My queen smacked in on g2, and, as usual, on move 7, out of the blue, I got him with a smothered mate.
    Then I asked him: “Did you say that my traps don’t work in the real world?”

    Boy, he looked so shocked and depressed….

    And of course, that was not the only time that players fell victim to my trappy opening repertoire. It got to the point that if I blundered away a pawn in the opening, they didn’t dare to take it, they were so afraid of my traps.

    And then, after a long time, it dawned upon me, that the only explanation of that weird behavior of the GM, who, if I’m not mistaken, started out on that self same chess club, had been forewarned by somebody of that club, for my opening traps.

    Anyway, like I said; I learned my lesson, GM’s are to be avoided like the plague.

    Only weaker opponents for me.

    I used to be really pissed when after my e4 the enemy answered c5, but now I start to smile when I see that. You get really good interesting games with the Grand Prix Attack.
    If you ever get tired of the GP attack there's always the wing gambit. I faced it in my
    second tournament (don't ask me why I played the Sicilian that day, I was a French
    defense type at the time) and didn't last long at all. Of course, he was 500 points
    higher and could probably have won with 1h4.
    And, like the name implies, you really get to attack the enemy. No whining closed games,
    Technically most Sicilians are semi-open games, except for, obviously the Closed Sicilian,
    which very often features king-side attacks by white (e.g. several games in Fischer's book) The Sicilian is an unbalanced game, white tends to get a king-side attack, black gets more subtle benefits. They should equalize but in my experience the white
    side is easier to play.

    But when you meet a Sicilian player who really knows his stuff, watch out. Your Grand Prix
    will turn into a race with broken down go-karts.

    Magnus Carlsen, in his younger days, used to play the GPA, with a lot of success. Of course there are no guarantees, but it's not a bad opening. And most people don't know much theory anyway.

    It works great! And hopefully, when I get those books, it will work even better. :)

    https://tinyurl.com/calm-win

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  • From Ken Blake@21:1/5 to Eli Kesef on Sun Jul 25 15:16:10 2021
    On 7/25/2021 3:01 PM, Eli Kesef wrote:
    On Saturday, July 24, 2021 at 1:26:27 AM UTC+3, William Hyde wrote:
    On Thursday, July 22, 2021 at 9:57:42 AM UTC-4, Eli Kesef wrote:
    Bs"d

    I decided that I really didn't like the Smith-Morra gambit. So I switched to the Grand Prix attack, and I positively LOVE it!
    When the Grand Prix attack was new, IM Lawrence Day played it often, beating GMs with
    it.

    Bs"d

    I read in my Mammoth Book of Chess that when it was first discovered, black players often went mate before move 25. The point is, nowadays, everybody and his mother, are playing the Sicilian. And almost non of 'm knows anything about the Grand
    Prix Attack.
    Me neither, that's why I bought these two books: https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/u9kAAOSwAcFf~FbN/s-l400.jpg
    And this one: https://www.denksportkampioen.be/uploads/4/0/2/7/40273869/s859343698545713665_p472_i1_w327.jpeg
    Just ordered them the other day, might take a while before they arrive here, but now already, without any serious theoretical knowledge, I beat one after the other with it.
    Of course I play mostly against weaker opponents, but if you follow the normal line, you get really boring whining games. The GPA solves the problem, and it's a killer.
    Can't wait to get those books, then it should get even worse for the opponents.

    I tried it against a 2400 player and got decent attacking chances as he wasn't at all
    an openings expert. But then, he was 2400 for a reason as the rest of the game showed clearly (this was at slow time controls - 40/2.5).

    I played one time a grandmaster, and that was the last time. It was a simultaneous game, him against 30 others. He looked at the board for half a second, moved, and walked on to the next board. He did that with all the boards, except for mine.
    When he came at my board, he stopped, planted his hands on the table, and looked. And looked. And kept on looking. For minutes. And then moved. And then all the other boards, look half a second, move, and next one. Not so my board. The first 10-
    15 moves, he stopped, made himself comfortable, and looked and looked at my board.
    In the beginning I was very pleased with all that attention I was getting, however, that feeling quickly disappeared when I was the first one of the 30 players to go mate on move 17.

    I learned my lesson. Never played a GM again.


    I've played grandmasters several times: two in simultaneouses:
    Reshevevsky (I lost) Euwe (I drew). I also played several other: Fisher, Lombardy, Mednis, Bisguier. I played many times against Fischer and
    usually won (but that was was when he voung, before he was a
    grandmaster). I can't remember for sure, but I think I lost all my other
    games against grandmasters, even when we played before they were
    grandmasters.



    --
    Ken

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  • From William Hyde@21:1/5 to Eli Kesef on Sun Jul 25 15:57:46 2021
    On Sunday, July 25, 2021 at 6:01:52 PM UTC-4, Eli Kesef wrote:
    On Saturday, July 24, 2021 at 1:26:27 AM UTC+3, William Hyde wrote:
    On Thursday, July 22, 2021 at 9:57:42 AM UTC-4, Eli Kesef wrote:
    Bs"d

    I decided that I really didn't like the Smith-Morra gambit. So I switched to the Grand Prix attack, and I positively LOVE it!
    When the Grand Prix attack was new, IM Lawrence Day played it often, beating GMs with
    it.
    Bs"d

    I read in my Mammoth Book of Chess that when it was first discovered, black players often went mate before move 25. The point is, nowadays, everybody and his mother, are playing the Sicilian. And almost non of 'm knows anything about the Grand Prix
    Attack.
    Me neither, that's why I bought these two books: https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/u9kAAOSwAcFf~FbN/s-l400.jpg
    And this one: https://www.denksportkampioen.be/uploads/4/0/2/7/40273869/s859343698545713665_p472_i1_w327.jpeg
    Just ordered them the other day, might take a while before they arrive here, but now already, without any serious theoretical knowledge, I beat one after the other with it.
    Of course I play mostly against weaker opponents, but if you follow the normal line, you get really boring whining games.

    This really confuses me. Against weaker opponents white almost always gets a kingside
    attack in this opening. Back when I was 2100 (speed) I played a series of games against
    a 1900 who specialized in the Sicilian. Few of my games with white lasted 35 moves,
    most ended with kingside attacks, often featuring the Nd5 or somethingxe6 sacs mentioned earlier.

    That's no reason not to play the GPA. Always play what feels right for you. But against
    weaker players the Sozin, Richter-Rauzer and Keres attack are also killers. And they work
    pretty well against strong players too. Even Weaver Adams' 6h3 line works (see Fischer-Bolbochan, I think).



    The GPA solves the problem, and it's a killer.
    Can't wait to get those books, then it should get even worse for the opponents.
    I tried it against a 2400 player and got decent attacking chances as he wasn't at all
    an openings expert. But then, he was 2400 for a reason as the rest of the game showed clearly (this was at slow time controls - 40/2.5).
    I played one time a grandmaster, and that was the last time.

    I kept trying with the above. I lost the first three tournament games, but finally
    won the fourth with a sacrificial attack from the black side of a QGD - not exactly a trappy opening. Learned a lot about chess in the process.

    It was a simultaneous game, him against 30 others. He looked at the board for half a second, moved, and walked on to the next board. He did that with all the boards, except for mine. When he came at my board, he stopped, planted his hands on the table,
    and looked. And looked. And kept on looking. For minutes. And then moved. And then all the other boards, look half a second, move, and next one. Not so my board. The first 10-15 moves, he stopped, made himself comfortable, and looked and looked at my
    board.

    Reputations spread. When I was more active I knew a lot about players I had never
    met. It's embarrassing for a GM to walk into an opening trap, and having heard about
    you I suspect he was going to make sure it didn't happen to him.

    When I was in a reserve tournament someone actually prepared a line against the opening I was playing (bulletins were published so he could see what I was playing)
    But, though we never had met before, I knew he would prepare something, because I knew about him. So I prepared to deviate earlier. And it worked.


    William Hyde

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  • From Eli Kesef@21:1/5 to Ken Blake on Sun Jul 25 22:33:11 2021
    On Monday, July 26, 2021 at 1:16:14 AM UTC+3, Ken Blake wrote:
    On 7/25/2021 3:01 PM, Eli Kesef wrote:
    On Saturday, July 24, 2021 at 1:26:27 AM UTC+3, William Hyde wrote:
    On Thursday, July 22, 2021 at 9:57:42 AM UTC-4, Eli Kesef wrote:
    Bs"d

    I decided that I really didn't like the Smith-Morra gambit. So I switched to the Grand Prix attack, and I positively LOVE it!
    When the Grand Prix attack was new, IM Lawrence Day played it often, beating GMs with
    it.

    Bs"d

    I read in my Mammoth Book of Chess that when it was first discovered, black players often went mate before move 25. The point is, nowadays, everybody and his mother, are playing the Sicilian. And almost non of 'm knows anything about the Grand Prix
    Attack.
    Me neither, that's why I bought these two books: https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/u9kAAOSwAcFf~FbN/s-l400.jpg
    And this one: https://www.denksportkampioen.be/uploads/4/0/2/7/40273869/s859343698545713665_p472_i1_w327.jpeg
    Just ordered them the other day, might take a while before they arrive here, but now already, without any serious theoretical knowledge, I beat one after the other with it.
    Of course I play mostly against weaker opponents, but if you follow the normal line, you get really boring whining games. The GPA solves the problem, and it's a killer.
    Can't wait to get those books, then it should get even worse for the opponents.

    I tried it against a 2400 player and got decent attacking chances as he wasn't at all
    an openings expert. But then, he was 2400 for a reason as the rest of the game showed clearly (this was at slow time controls - 40/2.5).

    I played one time a grandmaster, and that was the last time. It was a simultaneous game, him against 30 others. He looked at the board for half a second, moved, and walked on to the next board. He did that with all the boards, except for mine. When
    he came at my board, he stopped, planted his hands on the table, and looked. And looked. And kept on looking. For minutes. And then moved. And then all the other boards, look half a second, move, and next one. Not so my board. The first 10-15 moves, he
    stopped, made himself comfortable, and looked and looked at my board.
    In the beginning I was very pleased with all that attention I was getting, however, that feeling quickly disappeared when I was the first one of the 30 players to go mate on move 17.

    I learned my lesson. Never played a GM again.
    I've played grandmasters several times: two in simultaneouses:
    Reshevevsky (I lost) Euwe (I drew). I also played several other: Fisher, Lombardy, Mednis, Bisguier. I played many times against Fischer and
    usually won (but that was was when he voung, before he was a
    grandmaster). I can't remember for sure, but I think I lost all my other games against grandmasters, even when we played before they were grandmasters.

    Bs"d

    You beat Euwe and Fisher, the latter even many times? Wow! Even when he was a youngster, it is something to write home about.

    Well done!

    https://tinyurl.com/4k-with-u

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  • From Eli Kesef@21:1/5 to Eli Kesef on Sun Jul 25 23:38:05 2021
    On Monday, July 26, 2021 at 8:33:12 AM UTC+3, Eli Kesef wrote:
    On Monday, July 26, 2021 at 1:16:14 AM UTC+3, Ken Blake wrote:
    On 7/25/2021 3:01 PM, Eli Kesef wrote:
    On Saturday, July 24, 2021 at 1:26:27 AM UTC+3, William Hyde wrote:
    On Thursday, July 22, 2021 at 9:57:42 AM UTC-4, Eli Kesef wrote:
    Bs"d

    I decided that I really didn't like the Smith-Morra gambit. So I switched to the Grand Prix attack, and I positively LOVE it!
    When the Grand Prix attack was new, IM Lawrence Day played it often, beating GMs with
    it.

    Bs"d

    I read in my Mammoth Book of Chess that when it was first discovered, black players often went mate before move 25. The point is, nowadays, everybody and his mother, are playing the Sicilian. And almost non of 'm knows anything about the Grand Prix
    Attack.
    Me neither, that's why I bought these two books: https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/u9kAAOSwAcFf~FbN/s-l400.jpg
    And this one: https://www.denksportkampioen.be/uploads/4/0/2/7/40273869/s859343698545713665_p472_i1_w327.jpeg
    Just ordered them the other day, might take a while before they arrive here, but now already, without any serious theoretical knowledge, I beat one after the other with it.
    Of course I play mostly against weaker opponents, but if you follow the normal line, you get really boring whining games. The GPA solves the problem, and it's a killer.
    Can't wait to get those books, then it should get even worse for the opponents.

    I tried it against a 2400 player and got decent attacking chances as he wasn't at all
    an openings expert. But then, he was 2400 for a reason as the rest of the game showed clearly (this was at slow time controls - 40/2.5).

    I played one time a grandmaster, and that was the last time. It was a simultaneous game, him against 30 others. He looked at the board for half a second, moved, and walked on to the next board. He did that with all the boards, except for mine. When
    he came at my board, he stopped, planted his hands on the table, and looked. And looked. And kept on looking. For minutes. And then moved. And then all the other boards, look half a second, move, and next one. Not so my board. The first 10-15 moves, he
    stopped, made himself comfortable, and looked and looked at my board.
    In the beginning I was very pleased with all that attention I was getting, however, that feeling quickly disappeared when I was the first one of the 30 players to go mate on move 17.

    I learned my lesson. Never played a GM again.
    I've played grandmasters several times: two in simultaneouses:
    Reshevevsky (I lost) Euwe (I drew). I also played several other: Fisher, Lombardy, Mednis, Bisguier. I played many times against Fischer and usually won (but that was was when he voung, before he was a
    grandmaster). I can't remember for sure, but I think I lost all my other games against grandmasters, even when we played before they were grandmasters.
    Bs"d

    You beat Euwe and Fisher, the latter even many times? Wow! Even when he was a youngster, it is something to write home about.

    Well done!

    https://tinyurl.com/4k-with-u

    Bs"d

    And even to have known and played against that legend, that's already quite something.

    I think he was the best ever. The distance between him and nr 2 was bigger than with any other world champion. What he did, like crushing several candidates with 6-0, winning the American championship with 11-0, those stunts have never been repeated,
    and probably never will be.

    He was a class apart.

    Take Kasparov, by some considered the best, he was in no time 5-0 behind against Karpov, and after about a 100 games against Karpov the overal difference between them was one point. Bobby crushed Spassky.
    No comparison.

    https://tinyurl.com/ever-play-BF

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  • From Eli Kesef@21:1/5 to William Hyde on Sun Jul 25 23:29:35 2021
    On Monday, July 26, 2021 at 1:57:48 AM UTC+3, William Hyde wrote:
    On Sunday, July 25, 2021 at 6:01:52 PM UTC-4, Eli Kesef wrote:
    On Saturday, July 24, 2021 at 1:26:27 AM UTC+3, William Hyde wrote:
    On Thursday, July 22, 2021 at 9:57:42 AM UTC-4, Eli Kesef wrote:
    Bs"d

    I decided that I really didn't like the Smith-Morra gambit. So I switched to the Grand Prix attack, and I positively LOVE it!
    When the Grand Prix attack was new, IM Lawrence Day played it often, beating GMs with
    it.
    Bs"d

    I read in my Mammoth Book of Chess that when it was first discovered, black players often went mate before move 25. The point is, nowadays, everybody and his mother, are playing the Sicilian. And almost non of 'm knows anything about the Grand Prix
    Attack.
    Me neither, that's why I bought these two books: https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/u9kAAOSwAcFf~FbN/s-l400.jpg
    And this one: https://www.denksportkampioen.be/uploads/4/0/2/7/40273869/s859343698545713665_p472_i1_w327.jpeg
    Just ordered them the other day, might take a while before they arrive here, but now already, without any serious theoretical knowledge, I beat one after the other with it.
    Of course I play mostly against weaker opponents, but if you follow the normal line, you get really boring whining games.
    This really confuses me. Against weaker opponents white almost always gets a kingside
    attack in this opening. Back when I was 2100 (speed) I played a series of games against
    a 1900 who specialized in the Sicilian. Few of my games with white lasted 35 moves,
    most ended with kingside attacks, often featuring the Nd5 or somethingxe6 sacs
    mentioned earlier.

    Bs"d

    I have this book: https://www.chessset.com/assets/images/7%20Ways%20to%20smash%20the%20sicilian.jpg but never studied it much, because I hated the Sicilian. It's about sacrifices in the Sicilian. But I have bad experiences with sacrificing my pieces,
    so now I try to only sacrifice the pieces of the opponent.
    The Morra-gambit has a nice trap in it, with which I did make a few victims, but the vast majority of time I ended up with positions I hated, with a pawn less. So exit the Morra-gambit.

    That's no reason not to play the GPA. Always play what feels right for you. But against
    weaker players the Sozin, Richter-Rauzer and Keres attack are also killers. And they work
    pretty well against strong players too. Even Weaver Adams' 6h3 line works (see Fischer-Bolbochan, I think).

    I read that black has the best results against white with the Sicilian. I can imagine why, because you get those rotten closed positions, a long time nothing is really happening on the board but shoving your pieces positionally around, and the benefit
    of the first move totally gets lost.

    And I hate those kind of games.

    The GPA solves the problem, and it's a killer.
    Can't wait to get those books, then it should get even worse for the opponents.
    I tried it against a 2400 player and got decent attacking chances as he wasn't at all
    an openings expert. But then, he was 2400 for a reason as the rest of the game showed clearly (this was at slow time controls - 40/2.5).
    I played one time a grandmaster, and that was the last time.
    I kept trying with the above. I lost the first three tournament games, but finally
    won the fourth with a sacrificial attack from the black side of a QGD - not exactly a trappy opening. Learned a lot about chess in the process.
    It was a simultaneous game, him against 30 others. He looked at the board for half a second, moved, and walked on to the next board. He did that with all the boards, except for mine. When he came at my board, he stopped, planted his hands on the table,
    and looked. And looked. And kept on looking. For minutes. And then moved. And then all the other boards, look half a second, move, and next one. Not so my board. The first 10-15 moves, he stopped, made himself comfortable, and looked and looked at my
    board.
    Reputations spread. When I was more active I knew a lot about players I had never
    met. It's embarrassing for a GM to walk into an opening trap, and having heard about
    you I suspect he was going to make sure it didn't happen to him.

    I think it is the only explanation for that weird behavior. Never got any conformation of it, nobody ever told me who warned him for me, but I'm about 99,9% sure that's what must have happened.

    When I was in a reserve tournament someone actually prepared a line against the
    opening I was playing (bulletins were published so he could see what I was playing)
    But, though we never had met before, I knew he would prepare something, because I knew about him. So I prepared to deviate earlier. And it worked.

    A good preparation is half the win. I can't understand why not more people specialize in opening traps. Point one: They are killers, point two: It is so unbelievably much fun when you see somebody stepping in a trap!

    The fun part of the Blackburn-Shilling, one of the most well known opening traps, is that it has a trap after the trap. Meaning, if they know the trap, and don't fall for it, then often times, there is another trap you can play after that one.
    Last Saturday, when I was going over old games played on FICS, I looked for those. I'm in the process of printing out thousands of games I played on FICS, and I have now 5 or 6 binders full of 'm. I still have hundreds of those games in my email,
    waiting to be printed. Mind you, I only print out the winning games. The rest... Well, some things are best forgotten. ASAP.
    Better for my mental health.
    On Saturday's I go over these old games, rate them, and as most are not very remarkable, I forget about them. But once in a while you come upon a jewel, and that's what you are doing it for. So last Saturday I was looking for when the enemy avoided
    the main trap, only to later lose his queen or a castle to a later trap. In one binder I found 6 occurrences of that trap. It is so much fun.... (once I get started on opening traps it's hard to stop) :D

    Anyway, I hate the Sicilian a lot less now I'm getting experienced with the GPA.

    https://tinyurl.com/more-imp

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  • From Ken Blake@21:1/5 to Eli Kesef on Mon Jul 26 07:22:20 2021
    On 7/25/2021 11:38 PM, Eli Kesef wrote:
    On Monday, July 26, 2021 at 8:33:12 AM UTC+3, Eli Kesef wrote:
    On Monday, July 26, 2021 at 1:16:14 AM UTC+3, Ken Blake wrote:
    On 7/25/2021 3:01 PM, Eli Kesef wrote:
    On Saturday, July 24, 2021 at 1:26:27 AM UTC+3, William Hyde wrote:
    On Thursday, July 22, 2021 at 9:57:42 AM UTC-4, Eli Kesef wrote:
    Bs"d

    I decided that I really didn't like the Smith-Morra gambit. So I switched to the Grand Prix attack, and I positively LOVE it!
    When the Grand Prix attack was new, IM Lawrence Day played it often, beating GMs with
    it.

    Bs"d

    I read in my Mammoth Book of Chess that when it was first discovered, black players often went mate before move 25. The point is, nowadays, everybody and his mother, are playing the Sicilian. And almost non of 'm knows anything about the Grand
    Prix Attack.
    Me neither, that's why I bought these two books: https://i.ebayimg.com/images/g/u9kAAOSwAcFf~FbN/s-l400.jpg
    And this one: https://www.denksportkampioen.be/uploads/4/0/2/7/40273869/s859343698545713665_p472_i1_w327.jpeg
    Just ordered them the other day, might take a while before they arrive here, but now already, without any serious theoretical knowledge, I beat one after the other with it.
    Of course I play mostly against weaker opponents, but if you follow the normal line, you get really boring whining games. The GPA solves the problem, and it's a killer.
    Can't wait to get those books, then it should get even worse for the opponents.

    I tried it against a 2400 player and got decent attacking chances as he wasn't at all
    an openings expert. But then, he was 2400 for a reason as the rest of the game showed clearly (this was at slow time controls - 40/2.5).

    I played one time a grandmaster, and that was the last time. It was a simultaneous game, him against 30 others. He looked at the board for half a second, moved, and walked on to the next board. He did that with all the boards, except for mine.
    When he came at my board, he stopped, planted his hands on the table, and looked. And looked. And kept on looking. For minutes. And then moved. And then all the other boards, look half a second, move, and next one. Not so my board. The first 10-15 moves,
    he stopped, made himself comfortable, and looked and looked at my board.
    In the beginning I was very pleased with all that attention I was getting, however, that feeling quickly disappeared when I was the first one of the 30 players to go mate on move 17.

    I learned my lesson. Never played a GM again.

    I've played grandmasters several times: two in simultaneouses:
    Reshevevsky (I lost) Euwe (I drew). I also played several other: Fisher, >> > Lombardy, Mednis, Bisguier. I played many times against Fischer and
    usually won (but that was was when he voung, before he was a
    grandmaster). I can't remember for sure, but I think I lost all my other >> > games against grandmasters, even when we played before they were
    grandmasters.
    Bs"d

    You beat Euwe


    No, never. I only played against him once, in a simultaneous he gave. We
    drew. It was around 1957, so he was well past his prime.



    and Fisher, the latter even many times? Wow! Even when he was a youngster, it is something to write home about.


    Not really. We played many offhand games at the Manhattan Chess Club,
    and I won almost all of them. I was much stronger than he was then; I
    was around 2000 and he was around 1400.

    We only played in tournaments twice. We drew once, and I lost once (the
    US junior championship in 1956). I had the misfortune of thinking I was
    lost and resigning in a pretty even position. He went on to win the
    tournament and I tied for fifth. We were around the same strength then.



    Well done!

    https://tinyurl.com/4k-with-u

    Bs"d

    And even to have known and played against that legend, that's already quite something.


    I was just a few years older than him, so we played against each other a
    lot at the Manhattan Chess Club; I think he joined the club when he was
    11. I knew him fairly well. I was a member of both the Manhattan and
    Marshall Chess Clubs, and I knew, at least slightly, almost all the
    strong players in the US. Some I knew well, like Fisher and Lombardy.

    I don't play at all these days. I've played very few games since 1959.


    I think he was the best ever.


    Maybe. You're not the only one to think that, but there's no way to know something like that for sure. He never played against any of today's
    great grandmasters, and it's nothing more than a guess as to how he
    would do against them.

    The same is true of Morphy. He was head and shoulders better than anyone
    else of his day, but how would he do today, even if he first spent a
    year or two studying all of today's opening theory? Nobody knows, and
    nobody can know.


    The distance between him and nr 2 was bigger than with any other world champion. What he did, like crushing several candidates with 6-0,
    winning the American championship with 11-0, those stunts have never been repeated, and probably never will be.

    He was a class apart.

    Take Kasparov, by some considered the best, he was in no time 5-0 behind against Karpov, and after about a 100 games against Karpov the overal difference between them was one point. Bobby crushed Spassky.
    No comparison.

    https://tinyurl.com/ever-play-BF



    --
    Ken

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  • From William Hyde@21:1/5 to Eli Kesef on Mon Jul 26 16:34:13 2021
    On Monday, July 26, 2021 at 2:29:37 AM UTC-4, Eli Kesef wrote:
    On Monday, July 26, 2021 at 1:57:48 AM UTC+3, William Hyde wrote:
    On Sunday, July 25, 2021 at 6:01:52 PM UTC-4, Eli Kesef wrote:
    On Saturday, July 24, 2021 at 1:26:27 AM UTC+3, William Hyde wrote:
    On Thursday, July 22, 2021 at 9:57:42 AM UTC-4, Eli Kesef wrote:
    Bs"d

    I decided that I really didn't like the Smith-Morra gambit. So I switched to the Grand Prix attack, and I positively LOVE it!

    A good preparation is half the win. I can't understand why not more people specialize in opening traps.

    Careful what you wish for. The more people that specialize in opening traps, the better they will
    be known.


    Point one: They are killers,

    Not against strong players. You prefer to play weaker players, I prefer to play stronger
    ones. I won a couple of OTB events where I was the strongest player. It was pleasant,
    but I got far more fun beating a 2000 player when I was 1555, and drawing with an
    IM (over 2300) the next round.

    I enjoy endgames and "closed" positions (note again, the Sicilian is generally not closed, but
    semi-open, try 1d4 if you want closed positions you will really hate - though 1d4 can also
    lead to attacking games, ask Marshall or Denker).

    My feelings are those of Larsen "An opening trap will only beat someone you would have
    beaten anyway". I admit I occasionally play the Cochrane gambit (1e4 e5 2Nf3 Nf6, 3Nxe5 d6
    4Nxf7, but this is not a trap, it's a recognized if controversial line. I've never really studied
    it, though. White's moves after the sacrifice are pretty natural.


    point two: It is so unbelievably much fun when you see somebody stepping in a trap!

    The whole point of chess is to enjoy ourselves, and you seem to be doing this quite well. It also
    seem to me that if improving one's game is the real objective, it is still best to play what you
    like and learn that.

    William Hyde

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  • From Eli Kesef@21:1/5 to William Hyde on Mon Jul 26 23:31:40 2021
    On Tuesday, July 27, 2021 at 2:34:15 AM UTC+3, William Hyde wrote:
    On Monday, July 26, 2021 at 2:29:37 AM UTC-4, Eli Kesef wrote:
    On Monday, July 26, 2021 at 1:57:48 AM UTC+3, William Hyde wrote:
    On Sunday, July 25, 2021 at 6:01:52 PM UTC-4, Eli Kesef wrote:
    On Saturday, July 24, 2021 at 1:26:27 AM UTC+3, William Hyde wrote:
    On Thursday, July 22, 2021 at 9:57:42 AM UTC-4, Eli Kesef wrote:
    Bs"d

    I decided that I really didn't like the Smith-Morra gambit. So I switched to the Grand Prix attack, and I positively LOVE it!
    A good preparation is half the win. I can't understand why not more people specialize in opening traps.
    Careful what you wish for. The more people that specialize in opening traps, the better they will
    be known.
    Point one: They are killers,
    Not against strong players.

    Bs"d

    Of course not, they know them, and if they don't know them, they just see right trough it. But against people on my level, they work great. Well, not all the time of course, but I bag a lot of victims with 'm.
    I remember on FICS, I was playing Team League, I was part of a group, playing other groups. Then one time I had to play a strong player, and my team mates warned me for him. I checked him out, and his all time high score was higher then mine, so he
    was probably better than I was. In the game, he had white, and he started with d4, so I answered e5, the feared Englund gambit. And then it happened, the first and only time in my Team League time, he fell in the trap, and I mated him on move 8. With
    my team mates and his team mates watching the game.
    Does it get any better than this? LOL!

    He promptly filed a complaint with the referees for computer abuse, he couldn't believe what had happened to him. The referee looked at the game and said: "I can't imaging anybody playing the Englund gambit, and not knowing this trap. Good game!"
    And that was it.

    I did try to catch that GM in the simul in a trap, I went for the Stafford gambit, and of course, I got nowhere, and got routed in 17 moves.

    But now I think about it, in my books there are MANY examples of GM's falling in traps. A good example is GM Reshevsky, 20 years champion of America, who met in the US championship a 14 year old boy, named Bobby Fischer. Bobby loved to read Russian
    chess literature, he learned himself Russian to read it, and Sammy couldn’t and didn’t, and there Bobby picked up a beautiful trap which he released on Sammy. On move 10 Bobby slaughtered him, and Sammy had to give his queen for a bishop and a horse.
    He played on to more than 40 moves, but the game had been decided on move 10. Here is that game: https://lichess.org/video/0qVYC4sa1Pg

    But my trappy books give many examples of GM’s falling for traps, so it is not impossible.

    Some examples: GM Bottvinnik - GM Spielman, Moscow 1935, GM Adorjan - GM Spasski Toluca 1982, GM Kotov - GM Petrosian Moscow 1949.

    So bagging a GM with a good trap is not impossible.

    https://tinyurl.com/Mac-Orlan

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  • From Eli Kesef@21:1/5 to All on Thu Aug 5 04:24:58 2021
    Bs"d

    The Grand Prix Attack did it again. A 1900 went down in flames in only 17 moves: https://lichess.org/Q2xPahJv2Fz3
    I REALLY hate playing a 1900. I think even 1800's are too strong for me, but what can I do? I'm a little over 1900 myself now, and then I'm being paired with those unpleasantly high rated players. The days of being able to set the search settings for
    opponents maximum 200 points below you, are over.
    That's horrible, but that's the way it is.

    Anyway, the enemy overlooked a simple pin, and would have gone mate on move 18, the only thing that spared him that disconcertment was him resigning on move 17.

    https://tinyurl.com/pin-mighty

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  • From William Hyde@21:1/5 to Eli Kesef on Fri Aug 6 15:14:33 2021
    On Thursday, August 5, 2021 at 7:25:00 AM UTC-4, Eli Kesef wrote:
    Bs"d

    The Grand Prix Attack did it again. A 1900 went down in flames in only 17 moves: https://lichess.org/Q2xPahJv2Fz3

    He must have had someone else playing on his account to boost his rating to 1900. Don't hesitate to
    play him again.

    His concept of counterattack seems to be to defend, and his concept of defense is to weaken
    himself and trade off his defending pieces. I played a game like that once, many years ago.
    Didn't win. Didn't draw.


    I REALLY hate playing a 1900. I think even 1800's are too strong for me, but what can I do? I'm a little over 1900 myself now, and then I'm being paired with those unpleasantly high rated players. The days of being able to set the search settings for
    opponents maximum 200 points below you, are over.
    That's horrible, but that's the way it is.

    Anyway, the enemy overlooked a simple pin,

    The blunder shortened the agony. He'd already done all the hard work of losing.

    William Hyde

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  • From Eli Kesef@21:1/5 to All on Sun Aug 22 05:33:45 2021
    Bs"d

    Got my books in the mail about the Grand Prix. Kind of depressing. It is mainly GM games, who play the GPA. Judith Polgar beat Topalev with the GPA. When I play over a game like that, I start to realize how rotten my own play is, and that in
    chess (as in many other aspects in life) I'm like a blind man groping around in the darkness.

    And that doesn't make me happy.

    It does give me better understanding how it is possible that a GM wipes out 30 club players in a simultaneous display. GM's are like aliens, with superpowers.

    It also strengthens me in conviction that GM's should be avoided like the plague.

    But I do get some good things from the books, and I think my GPA is improving, and that's what it's all about.

    https://tinyurl.com/GM-not-normal

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  • From William Hyde@21:1/5 to Eli Kesef on Thu Aug 26 16:12:28 2021
    On Sunday, August 22, 2021 at 8:33:46 AM UTC-4, Eli Kesef wrote:
    Bs"d

    Got my books in the mail about the Grand Prix. Kind of depressing. It is mainly GM games, who play the GPA. Judith Polgar beat Topalev with the GPA. When I play over a game like that, I start to realize how rotten my own play is, and that in chess (as
    in many other aspects in life) I'm like a blind man groping around in the darkness.

    And that doesn't make me happy.

    Everybody in the world of chess is weaker than someone else. Except the champion and main
    challengers. And even they are weaker than many other people for most of their lives.

    I study and admire the play of stronger players - or at least I used to. It doesn't bother me that
    I am weaker than they are - if I was equally obsessed with chess I'd be vastly stronger than I
    am. How much is unknown, so I can imagine some ridiculous amount.

    Then there's good old denial. There was a player who couldn't stand being weaker than I. So he simply declared that he was stronger. This gave him hours of entertainment as every time he lost to me, which was often, he would deeply analyze the game to
    prove that he should have won. Deep analysis, even of this kind, will always improve your game and he became much stronger. Alas, I was getting
    stronger at the time so he never caught up. But he was up to 2000 in real otb chess, so about 2400 in internet ratings.

    I left the country, he quit chess and put all that energy into his career, which went very well. He's still a weaker player than I, but can console himself that he is moderately wealthy.

    William Hyde

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  • From Eli Kesef@21:1/5 to All on Mon Sep 6 02:28:21 2021
    Bs"d

    The GPA did it again; a 1700 player crushed in 23 moves: https://lichess.org/iohRYrgJa1jN

    https://tinyurl.com/crush-with-GPA

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