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e4 Gamets [White] copy
Compiled by Sergio X Garcia
--*--

In the laboratory the gambits all test unfavorably, but the old rule wears well, that all gambits are sound over the board. William Ewart Napier

A knowledge of tactics is the foundation of positional play. This is a rule which has stood its test in chess history and one which we cannot impress forcibly enough upon the young chess player. A beginner should avoid Queen's Gambit and French Defence and play open games instead! While he may not win as many games at first, he will in the long run be amply compensated by acquiring a thorough knowledge of the game Richard Reti

The delight in gambits is a sign of chess youth... In very much the same way as the young man, on reaching his manhood years, lays aside the Indian stories and stories of adventure, and turns to the psychological novel, we with maturing experience leave off gambit playing and become interested in the less vivacious but withal more forceful manoeuvres of the position player. Emanuel Lasker

There is not a single true chess-player in the world whose heart does not beat faster at the mere sound of such long beloved and familiar words as 'gambit games'. David Bronstein

A gambit never becomes sheer routine as long as you fear you may lose the king and pawn ending! Bent Larsen

Q: Where was King David's temple located?
A: Beside his ear.

* CM Traps: Game Collection: Opening Traps Collection

* Du Mont I: Game Collection: 200 Miniature Games of Chess - Du Mont (I)

* Du Mont II: Game Collection: 200 Miniature Games of Chess - Du Mont (II)

* Evans Gambit: Game Collection: Evans Gambit

* Hot! https://www.redhotpawn.com/

* Kasparov Favorites: Game Collection: His absolute favorites: GK's Golden Chess Stock

* King's Gambit: Game Collection: EVERYONE loves the King's Gambit

* MT Facts: https://www.chessjournal.com/facts-...

* Puzzles: Game Collection: Sharpen Your Tactics 1- 350

* SMG Miniatures: Game Collection: Brrilant ideas

* Tactics Archive: Tactics Archive

* Target Practice: https://www.simonandschuster.com/bo...

* Unstoppable: https://education.nationalgeographi...

* Various: Game Collection: Special Gambit Collection

* Bill Wall: Game Collection: Chess Miniatures, Collection XVIII

What's a good target? https://chessfox.com/tactical-targe...

Activate your pieces off the back rank. Aim at an opposing unit (make a threat) and then perhaps capture it. Better yet, aim at two or three targets simultaneously, his or your own soldiers for protection. Or perhaps block an opposing pawn to prevent it from advancing. At other times, the pawn should be allowed to harmlessly advance -- it's wasting time and becomes overextended.

Threaten/give check if there is a good follow up move (an additional target; a double attack for a capture or more checks). Be patient and save a harmless check until the opponent leaves a unit in line with the checking square.

Aim into the center, and at opposing defenders of the center, such as pinning the knight to royalty with your bishop. If your opponent allows it (or pinned knights cannot prevent it), advance your two adjacent pawns two squares ahead, beside each other in the center and support them from behind. Three advanced pawns (c-, d-, e- and/or f- pawns) side-by-side can be even better!

Attack the f2/f7 pawn with your kingside knight, bishop, and/or queen, similar to the Fried Liver Attack against the Two Knights Defense, and the Traxler Counterattack for Black. Initially, the king is the only defender of the f2/f7 square and wants to avoid being struck by a lesser piece.

Attack the c2/c7 pawn with your queenside knight, bishop, and/or queen, similar to the Jobava London System. Initially, the queen is the only defender of the c2/c7 square and wants to avoid being struck by a lesser piece.

If the opponent promptly fianchettoes the kingside bishop, it can be a good strategy to charge your h-pawn supported from behind by your rook to make contact with the opposing g-pawn and pry open the h-file by exchanging. Research "Harry the h-pawn." Simon explains: https://www.chess.com/lessons/name-... and https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HDv...

Attack two opposing units with one move (fork, pin, skewer, discovery, etc.).

Attack More Valuable Pieces like the King, Queen, and Rook. This can result in a gain of time if the opposing unit is forced to take flight to avoid being captured next.

In some openings when the b2-pawn has been moved, consider Ba3 to prevent the black king from castling short by rule (it's illegal for the king to pass through check to castle). The Ba3 strikes the e7 and f8-squares, partially immobilizing the opposing king.

Attack unprotected units. For examples, give a diagonal queen check on the flank that laterally forks an unprotected minor piece along the frontier line. Here's a short game example: 1d4 Nf6 2Bg5 c6 3e3? Qa5+ followed by 4...QxBg5.

Attack something you already attack a second, third, or fourth time until you can capture it for profit. The concept is to add more attackers to the hot spot to outnumber the defenders. Sometimes the crowded defenders interfere with each other's mobility, and one attacker can suddenly switch the attack to another unprotected location. It is similar to a forward moving, looking to the right to get a defensive reaction, and then passing to the left.

Attack immobile targets that cannot escape, such as a rook stuck in the corner. However, do not trade your active knight for his bad bishop stuck behind its own pawns.

Aim at your own unit for its protection. For example, form a pawn chain to protect your advanced pawn from behind. Castle and connect your rooks to protect each other and the back rank. Slide your queen on the same diagonal as the bishop.

Attack the opposing pawn row laterally with your invading rook(s). Hogs on the 2nd/7th rank like to gobble up pawns. Consider sacrificing your bishop for the h-pawn to expose the king castled on the kingside if your other pieces can follow up.

Aim at weak pawns (backward, doubled, isolated, and passed pawn) and weak squares, neither of which can be protected by another friendly pawn. This prepares invasion in front of, beside and behind a weak pawn. This disrupts opposing piece activity as piece(s) must sit still to defend the weak pawn. IM Jeremy Silman explains: https://www.chess.com/article/view/...

The successful farmer is said to have a "green thumb" since everything he touches spring into fruitful bloom. In chess, Najdorf has a similar gift. Combinations blossom in his games like buds in a fertile garden. Hans Kmoch

Not all pawns or potential launch points make good targets. A small, unmovable piece of armor could be the cornerstone and reinforced ten times over. Even the true weak points might be inaccessible to our army. Therefore, the only potential targets you should attack, and the golden rule of finding targets is: pawns or squares that are easy to attack and hard to defend are good targets. It's a combination of how easily you can pressurize that target and how little the enemy can defend that target. These are the points in your opponent's armor that you want to attack. This is what takes down masters. Jonathan Rasberry

Q: What do you call a fish without an eye?
A: Fsh.

'A stitch in time saves nine'

'Don't throw the baby out with the bathwater'

Q: Why did the bicycle fall over?
A: Because it was two tired.

Romans 8:38-39
For I am convinced that neither death nor life, neither angels nor demons, neither the present nor the future, nor any powers, neither height nor depth, nor anything else in all creation, will be able to separate us from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus our Lord.

In my opinion, the King's Gambit is busted. It loses by force. Bobby Fischer

In Fischer's hands, a slight theoretical advantage is as good as being a queen ahead. Isaac Kashdan

Boris Vasilievich was the only top-class player of his generation who played gambits regularly and without fear ... Over a period of 30 years he did not lose a single game with the King's Gambit, and among those defeated were numerous strong players of all generations, from Averbakh, Bronstein and Fischer, to Seirawan. Garry Kasparov

Q: Why shouldn't you use a broken pencil?
A: Because it's pointless.

I write on a computer, but I've run the complete gambit. When I was very young, I wrote with a ballpoint pen in school notebooks. Then I got pretentious and started writing with a dip pen on parchment (I wrote at least a novel-length poem that way). Moved on to a fountain pen. Then a typewriter, then an electric self-correct. Then someone gave me a word processor and I was amazed at being able to fit ten pages on one of those floppy discs. Charles de Lint

A Steinitz Gem Crushes Rock!!
Steinitz vs Rock, 1863 
(000) Chess variants, 18 moves, 1-0

Alapin Gambit
Keres vs Verbac, 1933 
(C00) French Defense, 16 moves, 1-0

Alapin Gambit
Keres vs E Verbak, 1932 
(C00) French Defense, 17 moves, 1-0

Korchnoi Gambit
Korchnoi vs M Udovcic, 1967 
(C05) French, Tarrasch, 31 moves, 1-0

Danish Gambit: Accepted
J Mieses vs Marshall, 1903 
(C21) Center Game, 24 moves, 1-0

Danish Gambit: Accepted. Classical Defense
P Vinogradov vs S Antushev, 1901
(C21) Center Game, 28 moves, 1-0

Panteldakis Countergambit. Greco Variation
NN vs Greco, 1625 
(C30) King's Gambit Declined, 18 moves, 0-1

504 Gateway Time-out
Tartakower vs Schlechter, 1909  
(C30) King's Gambit Declined, 33 moves, 1-0

Falkbeer Countergambit. Charousek Gambit Morphy Defense
J Schulten vs Morphy, 1857 
(C31) King's Gambit Declined, Falkbeer Counter Gambit, 23 moves, 0-1

Bishop's Gambit Bryan Countergambit
Anderssen vs Kieseritzky, 1851  
(C33) King's Gambit Accepted, 23 moves, 1-0

King's Gambit: Accepted. Bishop's Gambit
Janowski vs Steinitz, 1898 
(C33) King's Gambit Accepted, 35 moves, 0-1

KGA. Quade Gambit (C37) 1-0 Foolidor's Legacy!
Bird vs NN, 1888 
(C37) King's Gambit Accepted, 13 moves, 1-0

Philidor Defense, Shirov Gambit
Van Kampen vs S Plukkel, 2010 
(C41) Philidor Defense, 22 moves, 1-0

Philidor Countergambit. Zukertort Variation
Bird vs Morphy, 1858 
(C41) Philidor Defense, 29 moves, 0-1

Philidor Defense: Exchange Variation
Morphy vs Harrwitz, 1858 
(C41) Philidor Defense, 35 moves, 1-0

Russian Game: Urusov Gambit
Tg Zulkifli vs W Lai, 1992 
(C42) Petrov Defense, 8 moves, 1-0

Scotch Game: Scotch Gambit. London Defense (C44) 1-0 Lightening
Cochrane vs W Popert, 1841 
(C44) King's Pawn Game, 26 moves, 1-0

Scotch. Belgrade Gambit
Naroditsky vs Nakamura, 2023
(C47) Four Knights, 34 moves, 1-0

Evans Gambit. Paulsen Variation
Anderssen vs Zukertort, 1869 
(C51) Evans Gambit, 29 moves, 1-0

Evans Gambit. Morphy Attack
Morphy vs C Stanley, 1857 
(C51) Evans Gambit, 41 moves, 1-0

Evans Gambit. Pierce Defense
Anderssen vs Dufresne, 1852 
(C52) Evans Gambit, 20 moves, 1-0

Evans Gambit. Compromised Defense
Anderssen vs Zukertort, 1871 
(C52) Evans Gambit, 44 moves, 1-0

Scotch Gambit. Max Lange Attack
Muller vs Bayer, 1908 
(C55) Two Knights Defense, 18 moves, 1-0

Scotch Gambit. Anderssen Attack
Euwe vs Reti, 1920 
(C56) Two Knights, 20 moves, 0-1

"Sasha nice game" (game of the day Oct-22-2023)
A Belezky vs G Phillips, 2005 
(A00) Uncommon Opening, 23 moves, 1-0

Modern Defense: Averbakh Variation
Ivkov vs S Kagan, 1979 
(A42) Modern Defense, Averbakh System, 19 moves, 1-0

Icelandic-Palme Gambit
J Rudd vs M Simons, 2000 
(B01) Scandinavian, 20 moves, 0-1

Scandinavian Defense: Icelandic-Palme Gambit (B01) 1/2-1/2
J Gooris vs G Brown, 2006
(B01) Scandinavian, 21 moves, 1/2-1/2

So much for the Ungood and the Bad; there remains only the Ugly
S P Finn vs R Heasman, 1993 
(B01) Scandinavian, 15 moves, 0-1

Modern Defense: King Pawn Fianchetto
Steinitz vs A Mongredien, 1862 
(B06) Robatsch, 22 moves, 1-0

Modern Defense: Standard Def (B06) 1-0 Philidor's Legacy
V Vepkhvishvili vs D Magalashvili, 1966 
(B06) Robatsch, 21 moves, 1-0

Caro-Kann Defense: Alekhine Gambit (B15) 1-0 Stockfish
Alekhine vs W Winter, 1936
(B15) Caro-Kann, 31 moves, 1-0

George Koltanowski (1903-2000)
Koltanowski vs A Dunkelblum, 1923 
(B18) Caro-Kann, Classical, 15 moves, 1-0

Smith-Morra Gambit - standard opening traps p.3
D Zardus vs A Steventon, 1986 
(B21) Sicilian, 2.f4 and 2.d4, 7 moves, 1-0

Smith-Morra Gambit - queenside royal fork
B Wall vs K Saint Amant, 1991 
(B21) Sicilian, 2.f4 and 2.d4, 10 moves, 1-0

Smith-Morra Gambit. Accepted Scheveningen Formation
Matulovic vs L Segi, 1953 
(B21) Sicilian, 2.f4 and 2.d4, 35 moves, 1-0

Smith-Morra Gambit. Accepted Paulsen Formation
A Kristjansson vs M Spooner, 2002 
(B21) Sicilian, 2.f4 and 2.d4, 25 moves, 1-0

SMG 16.?
M Esserman vs Van Wely, 2011 
(B21) Sicilian, 2.f4 and 2.d4, 26 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Defense: Marshall Gambit
S Levitsky vs Marshall, 1912 
(B23) Sicilian, Closed, 23 moves, 0-1

Sicilian Defense: Canal Attack. Haag Gambit
E Kalegin vs S Yuferov, 1990 
(B51) Sicilian, Canal-Sokolsky (Rossolimo) Attack, 33 moves, 1-0

24 ... Ne5-g4? threatens Philidor's Legacy with 25 ... Qb4-b6+
Larsen vs D Suboticanec, 1955 
(B52) Sicilian, Canal-Sokolsky (Rossolimo) Attack, 25 moves, 1-0

The historical, very first Olympic chess victory!
Yates vs O Naegeli, 1927 
(B83) Sicilian, 21 moves, 1-0

French Defense: Advance. Milner-Barry Gambit (C02) 1-0
A Nimzowitsch vs Tarrasch, 1912  
(C02) French, Advance, 41 moves, 1-0

French Def. McCutcheon. Wolf Gambit 5.Nge2 (C12) 1-0
G Rogmann vs H Mueller, 1933
(C12) French, McCutcheon, 17 moves, 1-0

Danish gambit (C21) 1-0 Raking bishops
D Fidlow vs J Busic, 1952 
(C21) Center Game, 14 moves, 1-0

Bishop's Opening: Urusov Gambit. Keidansky Gambit (C24) 1-0 Cor
M Zavanelli vs A Pope, 1987 
(C24) Bishop's Opening, 23 moves, 1-0

Bishop's Opening: Berlin Defense (C24) 1-0 Mugging f7
J Emms vs S D Brown, 1982
(C24) Bishop's Opening, 24 moves, 1-0

Bishop's Opening: Urusov Gambit (C24) 1-0 Prague
A Vavruska vs V Vepkhvishvili, 1990
(C24) Bishop's Opening, 25 moves, 1-0

Bishop's Opening: Ponziani Gambit (C24) 1-0 h-file battery 16.?
Y Neishtadt vs Gipslis, 1955 
(C24) Bishop's Opening, 23 moves, 1-0

Bishop's Opening: Urusov Gambit (C24) 1-0 Q with B pair
I A Horowitz vs NN, 1939 
(C24) Bishop's Opening, 14 moves, 1-0

KG Declined, Soller-Zilbermints Gambit (C30) 1-0 Boden's # in 9
Fischer vs J Jones, 1964 
(C30) King's Gambit Declined, 8 moves, 1-0

KGA. Kieseritsky Gambit Rubinstein Var (C39) 1-0 strange play
The King vs Pandix, 1993 
(C39) King's Gambit Accepted, 37 moves, 1-0

Russian Game: Cochrane Gambit (C42) 1/2-1/2 "Draw Fire"
Topalov vs Kramnik, 1999 
(C42) Petrov Defense, 31 moves, 1/2-1/2

Russian Game: Cochrane Gambit. Center Variation (C42) 1-0 Kwalk
L Rodi vs J C de las Heras, 2000 
(C42) Petrov Defense, 48 moves, 1-0

Scotch Game: Scotch Gambit. Advance Var (C45) 1-0Correspondence
Y Estrin vs F Brglez, 1972 
(C45) Scotch Game, 31 moves, 1-0

Scotch Game: Scotch Gambit. Advance Var (C45) 1-0
Y Estrin vs Gurvich, 1972
(C45) Scotch Game, 29 moves, 1-0

Scotch Game: Scotch Gambit. Advance Var (C45) 1-0 39...?
Sax vs Smejkal, 1977 
(C45) Scotch Game, 41 moves, 1-0

Scotch Game: Scotch Gambit. Advance Var (C45) 1-0 Shanghai CHN
J Ye vs Svidler, 2001 
(C45) Scotch Game, 27 moves, 1-0

Scotch Game: Haxo Gambit (C45) 1-0 Central pawn roller
Sveshnikov vs Kupreichik, 1984
(C45) Scotch Game, 44 moves, 1-0

Scotch Game: Scotch Gambit. Advance Var (C45) 1-0Hook # w/a pin
Torre vs H R Bigelow, 1924 
(C45) Scotch Game, 28 moves, 1-0

Scotch Game: Scotch Gambit. Advance Var (C45) 1-0 Correspond
K Messere vs S Nyman, 1965
(C45) Scotch Game, 38 moves, 1-0

Scotch Game: Scotch Gambit. Advance Var (C45) 1-0 18.?
Dzindzichashvili vs Kalandazichvili, 1967 
(C45) Scotch Game, 18 moves, 1-0

Italian Game: Evans Gambit. Stone-Ware (C51) 1-0Stockfish; 25.?
Bledow vs P Bilguer, 1838 
(C51) Evans Gambit, 26 moves, 1-0

Scotch Gambit. Double Gambit Accepted (C56) 1-0 Arabian Mate
E Holt vs T Bingamon, 1947 
(C56) Two Knights, 14 moves, 1-0

Italian Game: Scotch Gambit. Anderssen Attack (C56) 1-0 15.?
A Kapengut vs Antoshin, 1965 
(C56) Two Knights, 18 moves, 1-0

Italian Game: Scotch Gambit. Anderssen Attk (C56) 1-0 Exch Sac
C Hartlaub vs Lasker, 1904 
(C56) Two Knights, 21 moves, 1-0

Italian Game: Scotch Gambit. Anderssen Attk (C56) 1-0 P Legacy
Morphy vs Schrufer, 1859 
(C56) Two Knights, 24 moves, 1-0

Italian Game: Scotch Gambit. Anderssen Attack (C56) 1-0 25.?
Tartakower vs E Steiner, 1921 
(C56) Two Knights, 26 moves, 1-0

Italian Game: Scotch Gambit. Anderssen Attk (C56) 1-0 Q sac ++
M Corden vs NN, 1970 
(C56) Two Knights, 19 moves, 1-0

Italian Game: Scotch Gambit. Anderssen Attack (C56) 1-0 N+s
Y Estrin vs NN, 1963 
(C56) Two Knights, 16 moves, 1-0

Italian Game: Scotch Gambit. Anderssen Attack ML (C56) 1-0 Kiev
I Radulov vs V Shiyanovsky, 1962
(C56) Two Knights, 28 moves, 1-0

Italian Game: Scotch Gambit. Anderssen Attk (C56) 1-0 Havana
Rossolimo vs C Guimard, 1952
(C56) Two Knights, 47 moves, 1-0

Italian Game: Scotch Gambit. Anderssen Attk (C56) 1-0 Hollywood
Rossolimo vs H Steiner, 1954 
(C56) Two Knights, 47 moves, 1-0

Italian Game: Scotch Gambit. Anderssen Attk (C56) 1-0 Graz AUT
C Braga vs J Przewoznik, 1981
(C56) Two Knights, 43 moves, 1-0

Italian Game: Scotch Gambit. Anderssen Attack (C56) 1-0 pin
S Pozin vs Popov, 1993
(C56) Two Knights, 23 moves, 1-0

Italian Game: Scotch Gambit. Anderssen Attk (C56) 1-0 internet
G Jones vs So, 2021 
(C56) Two Knights, 22 moves, 1-0

Italian Game: Scotch Gambit. Anderssen Attack (C56) 1-0 Blitz
B Savchenko vs Karjakin, 2010 
(C56) Two Knights, 32 moves, 1-0

Italian Game: Scotch Gambit. Anderssen Attack (C56) 1-0 26.?
Tartakower vs M Billecard, 1907 
(C56) Two Knights, 27 moves, 1-0

Italian Game: Scotch Gambit. Anderssen Attk (C56) 1-0 trapped N
Rossolimo vs L Prins, 1951 
(C56) Two Knights, 22 moves, 1-0

Scotch Gambit. Anderssen Attack (C56) 1-0 Sacs on the 6th!!
Chigorin vs Alapin, 1885 
(C56) Two Knights, 20 moves, 1-0

The Most Famous "Noah's Ark Trap"
E Steiner vs Capablanca, 1929 
(C71) Ruy Lopez, 32 moves, 0-1

Scotch Gambit. Max Lange Attack Long Var (C55) 1-0 Exchange sac
Marshall vs Capablanca, 1910 
(C55) Two Knights Defense, 38 moves, 1-0

Italian Game: Scotch Gambit. Max Lange Attack (C55) 1-0 Notes
Steinitz vs P Meitner, 1860 
(C55) Two Knights Defense, 26 moves, 1-0

Italian, Scotch Gambit. Max Lange Attk Long Var (C55) 15.Bh6!
Marshall vs Tarrasch, 1910 
(C55) Two Knights Defense, 29 moves, 1-0

Scotch Gambit. Max Lange Attack Long Var (C55) 1-0 Blindfold
Koltanowski vs Trachtenberg, 1931 
(C55) Two Knights Defense, 23 moves, 1-0

Two Knights Def. Scotch Gambit, Perreux Var (C55) 1-0 King hunt
Morphy vs NN, 1858 
(C55) Two Knights Defense, 23 moves, 1-0

Sicilian Defense: Wing Gambit. Deferred Variation (B50) 1-0
S Johannessen vs H Lehmann, 1965
(B50) Sicilian, 36 moves, 1-0

French Defense: Wing Gambit (C00) ยท 1-0
F Steil-Antoni vs Ali Roy, 2017
(C00) French Defense, 36 moves, 1-0

Italian Game: Scotch Gambit. Max Lange Attack exNf6 (C55) 1-0
Euwe vs G Kroone, 1926 
(C55) Two Knights Defense, 17 moves, 1-0

Italian Game: Scotch Gambit. Max Lange Attk 8.Kf8?! (C55) 1-0
B Kazic vs B Vukovic, 1940 
(C55) Two Knights Defense, 18 moves, 1-0

Italian Game: Scotch Gambit. Max Lange Attk (C55) 1-0 SF notes
M Lange vs Ehrich, 1853
(C55) Two Knights Defense, 22 moves, 1-0

Italian Game: Scotch Gambit. Max Lange Attk (C55) 1-0 QxQ#
M Lange vs Ehrich, 1853 
(C55) Two Knights Defense, 16 moves, 1-0

Italian, Scotch Gambit. Max Lange Attack (C55) 1-0 9.Bg5 Qd5
Anderssen vs A de Lelie, 1861 
(C55) Two Knights Defense, 20 moves, 1-0

Scotch Gambit. Max Lange Attack Long Var (C55) 1-0 Hog on 7th
Tartakower vs NN, 1933 
(C55) Two Knights Defense, 19 moves, 1-0

Scotch Gambit. Max Lange Attack Long Var (C55) 1-0 Blindfold!
Koltanowski vs A G Burnett, 1937
(C55) Two Knights Defense, 23 moves, 1-0

Italian Game: Scotch Gambit. Max Lange Attack (C55) 1-0
G Miralles vs R Fontaine, 2004
(C55) Two Knights Defense, 43 moves, 1-0

Scotch Gambit. Max Lange Attack Long Var (C55) 1-0 New York
Marshall vs Capablanca, 1910 
(C55) Two Knights Defense, 53 moves, 1-0

Scotch Gambit. Max Lange Attack Long Var (C55) 1-0 Warsaw
Kostic vs V Winz, 1935 
(C55) Two Knights Defense, 38 moves, 1-0

Italian Game: Scotch Gambit. Max Lange Attack (C55) 1-0 K walk
Paulsen vs Mackenzie, 1861 
(C55) Two Knights Defense, 25 moves, 1-0

Italian, Scotch Gambit. Max Lange Attack (C55) 0-1 8.Re1+ Kf8
Rubinstein vs G Bartoszkiewicz, 1897 
(C55) Two Knights Defense, 17 moves, 1-0

Scotch Gambit. Max Lange Attack Long Var (C55) 1-0 Berlin
Charousek vs M Judd, 1897
(C55) Two Knights Defense, 31 moves, 1-0

Italian Game: Scotch Gambit. Max Lange Attk 8.Re1+ Kf8(C55) 1-0
S Boden vs Mackenzie, 1862 
(C55) Two Knights Defense, 23 moves, 1-0

Italian Game: Evans Gambit. Compromised Def (C52) 1-0 Notes
Fischer vs Fine, 1963 
(C52) Evans Gambit, 17 moves, 1-0

"Dubov's Immortal" (game of the day Dec-29-2020)
Dubov vs Karjakin, 2020 
(C53) Giuoco Piano, 38 moves, 1-0

Scotch Gambit. Max Lange Attack (C55) 1-0 Blindfold simul, NBQ#
Morphy vs P Dominguez, 1864 
(C55) Two Knights Defense, 20 moves, 1-0

Vienna Gambit. Steinitz Gambit Paulsen Def (C25) 1-0
Steinitz vs Paulsen, 1870 
(C25) Vienna, 36 moves, 1-0

Italian Game: Evans Gambit. Lasker Def (C52) 0-1 SF notes
Chigorin vs Lasker, 1895 
(C52) Evans Gambit, 26 moves, 0-1

Bishop's Opening: Vienna Hybrid. Spielmann Attk (C26) 0-1 notes
Marshall vs Tarrasch, 1905 
(C26) Vienna, 47 moves, 0-1

Philidor Defense: Nimzowitsch. Rellstab Variation (C41) 1-0
Chandler vs Gulko, 1991 
(C41) Philidor Defense, 45 moves, 1-0

Russian Game: Cozio (Lasker) Attack (C42) 1-0 SF notes
Lasker vs Marshall, 1914 
(C42) Petrov Defense, 29 moves, 1-0

110 games

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