The old Italian-style attacking openings for White have not been played
at the top level of chess for a long while. Was Jonathan Penrose the
last master to venture the Scotch Gambit? Anyhow, even if the masters
have got it all under control, the rest of us can still play in the
Romantic, gambit style. It's also easy to recommend to juniors.
In pursuit of nostalgia, several people have been posting material on
the web about the Scotch Gambit and related openings.































































Johnny of the Bishops Bounty Blog has pulled together several of these
articles and other resources.
http://bishopsbounty.blogspot.com/2008/12/scotch-game-c44-opening-theory...
As usual, Tim Harding's Kibitzer articles are interesting, even
inspiring, without hiding from the best lines for Black.
Also worth a peek:
http://www.chessteacherlessons.com/a-lazy-players-guide-to-the-scotch-ga...
http://web.archive.org/web/20020803201923/www.pawnpusher.co.uk/scotgam.html
http://www.chesscircle.net/forums/showthread.php?944-Scotch-Gambit-Londo...
http://www.chesscafe.com/text/hansen132.pdf
http://www.chessforums.org/chess-openings/8441-exploring-scotch-gambit.html
There are a few videos on YouTube, which I haven't looked at. [Video has
to be the worst way to communicate chess on the web; I can spend seconds
on a web page and decide whether it's worth spending more time with,
while videos take much more time to evaluate and deliver much less
information. We have had play-through game boards for decades, which are
much more efficient!]
http://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=scotch+gambit
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"Flip-Coin Chess: Does not pay attention to all (or sometimes even any!) of the threats generated by the opponent's previous move. Hope Chess: Does pay attention to all the threats generated by the opponent's previous move, but, before making their current move, does not check to make sure that all checks, captures, and threats by the opponent on the next move (in reply to that move) can be safely met. Real Chess: Not only deals with opponent's threats from the previous move but, before making their move, also makes sure that the opponent |
Dan HEISMAN |





























































