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| Tags: attack, parham, show, wrong |
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#1
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I have been playing the Parham Attack against 1...e5 about 15 times in Blitz games so far, and I have been succesful with it, winning two thirds of the time. That shouldn't be a surprise, since dubious openings are often successful in Blitz because of the surprise effect.
Today I played the Parham in a standard game for the first time. I won, and although my opponent didn't play perfectly, the game is a good example of the practical advantages of this opening. 1. e4 e5 2. Qh5 Nc6 3. Bc4 g6 4. Qf3 Nf6 5. Ne2 Bg7 6. Nbc3 0-0 7. d3 d6 8. Bg5 h6 9. Bh5 g5 10. Bg3 Nd4 11. Nxd4 exd4 12. Nd5 Nxd5 13. Bxd5 c6 14. Bb3 Qa5+ 15. Kf1 Be5 16. Qh5 Kg7 17. f4 Bxf4 18. Bxf4 f5 19. Bxd6 Rf6 20. Be7 Qe5 21. Bxf6+ Qxf6 22. e5 1-0 If you're going to tell me why the parham attack is unsound, I want to hear a better reason than "it violates all of the rules of chess". The reason why this opening is playable is because once I threaten mate, black can't defend without making a concession. 3... g6 weakens the kingside, and gives white good attacking chances if black is to castle short. 3...Qe7, blocks the bishop, which forces the black queen to move a second time. I also don't want to hear that it's only equal, because I'll take an equal position that my opponent doesn't know over a .20 pawn advantage where my opponent is booked up any day of the week. |
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#2
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En/na lightarrow ha escrit:
(...) Today I played the Parham in a standard game for the first time. I won, and although my opponent didn't play perfectly, the game is a good example of the practical advantages of this opening. (...) If you're going to tell me why the parham attack is unsound, I want to hear a better reason than "it violates all of the rules of chess". The reason why this opening is playable is because once I threaten mate, black can't defend without making a concession. 3... g6 weakens the kingside, and gives white good attacking chances if black is to castle short. 3...Qe7, blocks the bishop, which forces the black queen to move a second time. I also don't want to hear that it's only equal, because I'll take an equal position that my opponent doesn't know over a .20 pawn advantage where my opponent is booked up any day of the week. Hello mr Lightarrow, I suggest (after 1.e4 e5 2.Qh5) 2...Bd6!? Please do not tell me "it violates all of the rules of chess". The reason why this move is playable is that the loss of a tempo (I'm planning to move the Bd6 to c5 later) will be recovered after ...Nf6 and after 3.Bc4 Qe7 the queen "does not block the bishop". Maybe that move (2...Bd6) only lead to an equal position but that does not matter because 2.Qh5 is not a losing mistake Antonio |
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#3
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Actually, I have considered the move 2... Bd6!?, but I don't see how it is better than 2... Nc6 and 3...Qe7. You avoid the bishop getting blocked, but you still have to defend the mate threat with Qe7, which isn't Black's most useful developing move. After you move your bishop again, your queen will still be on e7, when you could have used that tempo to move your queen to a more useful square such as e6 after exchanging light squared bishops and giving white doubled c-pawns.
One of white's problems with the 3...Qe7 variation is that c2 is weak, but white can avoid that problem by delaying the development of his queen's knight until the Queen's bishop is developed to g5. The move that scares me the most is 2... Nf6!?, when black gains three tempi for the pawn. |
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#4
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lightarrow wrote:
I have been playing the Parham Attack against 1...e5 It should be the Gnohmon Counterattack; Gnohmon because I invented [1] it in 1957 when I was 12 years old (of course, I was not the first to invent it, but who's Parham, either?); counterattack because Black plays it. So the name you give it is wrong twice. 1. e4 e5 2. Qh5 Nc6 Did you know that 2...d6 3 Bc4 Nh6 is playable bacause if 4 d4?! Bc8-g4! Even in a stupid beginners' opening like this -- oops, I mean, even in the dreaded Gnohmon Counterattack, there are often amazing depths to chess. [1] I also invented the invisible smiley, the only smiley approved for use in afu. |
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#5
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Parham is an Indiana master/expert with some very interesting, if not
wholly correct, ideas. I believe he uses vector analysis in his chess theories, and thinks 2. Qh5 is the best move as it is the longest move on the board (I apologize if I have misrepresented him). I found his ideas very interesting when starting to compose chess problems as the longest move of a Q,R, or B is often the key or a try as it is aesthetically pleasing to the eye. He promotes this opening even in his schlastic chess coaching; I think the name deservedly goes to him, despite the fact that someone else played it in 1957, to say nothing of 1857 or 1757.... He wrote a book on this that I have not been able to find; it was of course self-published. Sometimes theories like his have limited applicability (one of my colleagues is an expert in vector analysis, and when I discussed what I knew of his theories, he said they sounded like the usual oddball theory(ies) with just enough truth to convince the innovator, but that there were definitely some valid points he was making). |
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#6
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That's what's wrong: 1.e4 e5 2.Qh5 Nf6! 3.Qxe5+ Be7 4.Bb5 0-0! and black's development advantage is huge.
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#7
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" I believe he uses vector analysis in his chess
theories, and thinks 2. Qh5 is the best move as it is the longest move on the board " Actually, 2Ba6 is longer, but loses a piece. |
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#8
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I believe you mean 4. Bc4, but yeah, that gives black a huge lead in
development for the pawn either way. Of course, most games between class players (2000 ELO) are decided by middle game and end game play, especially tactics. So there are plenty of openings like this that a grandmaster would never touch that are perfectly playable for us amateurs. And, in this case, the psychological advantage of making your opponent think you're a total patzer, and that they should be able to refute your opening, might actually be useful. I've seen many people lose by overextending their position while trying to refute a theoretically unsound, yet still playable, opening. I even did it once or twice myself before I realized that the refutations to bad openings often involve long term advantages, not necessarily something that can be immediately attacked. --Richard |
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#9
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#10
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In article ,
Amarande wrote: He is a pawn down, and has only some extra time to show for it as yet. To convert this advantage into a win, he has to find an overwhelming attack based on it. No, he doesn't. He just needs enough of an attack to win back a pawn. That's not "an overwhelming" attack. It's not like black's doomed to lose if he doesn't find a beautiful sacrificial attack in the middlegame. He's got bit development advantage and all he has to do is get a pawn back if he wants equality. Among class players, who hang pawns all the time, it's not that big a deal being a pawn down if you have activity. -Ron |
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