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I just blundered

I just blundered

Only Chess

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... Deliberately. I don't know why I did it but I just made a gambit that I myself found a refutation for (against a higher player) with the hope he (or she I suppose) will miss it. Is it complicated? Sure. Will he or she find the refutation without blundering the game away? I doubt it. Was it a smart idea? ... not sure.

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Originally posted by ih8sens
... Deliberately. I don't know why I did it but I just made a gambit that I myself found a refutation for (against a higher player) with the hope he (or she I suppose) will miss it. Is it complicated? Sure. Will he or she find the refutation without blundering the game away? I doubt it. Was it a smart idea? ... not sure.
If you can find a refutation for a move, it's very likely that a higher rated opponent will also find it. Even against a weaker player, I always try to make the best move that I can find, and I try to never assume that my opponent will miss a good move.

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Originally posted by Mad Rook
If you can find a refutation for a move, it's very likely that a higher rated opponent will also find it. Even against a weaker player, I always try to make the best move that I can find, and I try to never assume that my opponent will miss a good move.
That's the smart way to play 🙂.

Either way I have a better position from the move I made though, I'm just down a pawn that's all.

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Originally posted by Mad Rook
If you can find a refutation for a move, it's very likely that a higher rated opponent will also find it. Even against a weaker player, I always try to make the best move that I can find, and I try to never assume that my opponent will miss a good move.
I have lost many a game where I played that "winning" move that had a single refutation and a dozen ways to lose in the hope my opponent would find one of the dozen ways. Somehow he never does and weaker players always find a refutation.

When there is only 1 defense the likelihood of ot being found is very high.

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Originally posted by Dragon Fire
I have lost many a game where I played that "winning" move that had a single refutation and a dozen ways to lose in the hope my opponent would find one of the dozen ways. Somehow he never does and weaker players always find a refutation.

When there is only 1 defense the likelihood of ot being found is very high.
Lol we'll have to see when the game ends. Tal wouldn't have thought twice about the move 😛. Perhaps I can consolidate my loss of material (should there be one) with another sacrifice, tal style 🙂.

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actually.. perhaps we should scrap this thread. A second look @ the position just told me something.

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Originally posted by ih8sens
... Deliberately. I don't know why I did it but I just made a gambit that I myself found a refutation for.
hope chess. the surest way to lose a game.

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Originally posted by wormwood
hope chess. the surest way to lose a game.
But it can be sooo tempting...

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why dont you post the game?

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Originally posted by clandarkfire
why dont you post the game?
it's a game in progress.

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It works pretty well in blitz and even in over the board chess but, most of the time, if the refutation is not too hard to find then the opponant will play it.

Having said that, I have seen some really suspect sacrifices go unpunished sometimes so it is not always a bad idea to muddy the waters a little - just make sure there is plenty more material left on the board to lend fear to the attack.

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Originally posted by Tyrannosauruschex
It works pretty well in blitz and even in over the board chess but, most of the time, if the refutation is not too hard to find then the opponant will play it.

Having said that, I have seen some really suspect sacrifices go unpunished sometimes so it is not always a bad idea to muddy the waters a little - just make sure there is plenty more material left on the board to lend fear to the attack.
Turns out it's perfectly sound. I missed a winning move if he played my 'refutation'. And I object a little about hopechess. If you lay a series of nicely disguised traps, the odds are your opponent will blunder somewhere. Everyone 'hopes' their opponent will blunder.

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Originally posted by ih8sens
... And I object a little about hopechess. If you lay a series of nicely disguised traps, the odds are your opponent will blunder somewhere. Everyone 'hopes' their opponent will blunder.
if you know there is a refutation, you're simply playing a bad move. whether your opponent sees it or not is irrelevant.

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Originally posted by wormwood
if you know there is a refutation, you're simply playing a bad move. whether your opponent sees it or not is irrelevant.
Tal knew his moves had refutations. Fritz found many of them in seconds. It was the complexity of his play that saved him. Chess may be a science but a good chunk of it is psychology. Confuse your opponent and you have a won game.

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Originally posted by ih8sens
Tal knew his moves had refutations. Fritz found many of them in seconds. It was the complexity of his play that saved him. Chess may be a science but a good chunk of it is psychology. Confuse you're opponent and you have a won game.
no he didn't, he might have suspected at the time he played a move that there could be a refutation, but after being unable to find it himself he trusted the problem to be too hard for the opponent as well. which is a completely different thing.

he most certainly would not have played a move to which he found the refutation as well. no good player would.

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