Hello there,
Welcome back to Hivechess lecture with @samostically, where I will be sharing my knowledge about an opening response I enjoy playing. Here is a heads up to you all: today is the Friday Hivechess tournament, hosted by @stayoutoftherz.
For more details on the tournament taking place today, check out this link:
Reminder: Round 3 of the Hivechess Tournament S21, Friday 19h GMT
One opening I enjoy playing against Black's Sicilian Defense is the Smith-Morra. It is a very tactical gambit. You give out the d4 and c3 pawns quickly at the opening stage of the game. Due to my aggressive playing style, I enjoy the Smith Morra instead of going for long and sometimes boring positional plays with the likes of the closed Sicilian.
Let us look at a spectacular game I played using the Smith Morra opening.
1. e4 c5 2. d4
The move d4 is the first step in playing the Smith Morra. You give up the white pawn as your first. Although you can capture back with your queen once black plays cxd4, instead you go with c3 as your next move.
3. c3
The reason for this move is to gain more tempo as you defend more of your pieces. First, black has given up a tempo to develop a piece when they captured the first pawn, then gave up another tempo when they took the second pawn. So they are behind in development by two moves.
dxc3 4. Nxc3 d6 5. Nf3 Nc6 6. Bc4 a6 7. O-O
For more details on being behind in development, the position above is a typical example of what I am referring to. In the position above, I have developed most of my minor pieces, two knights, a bishop, a pawn in the center, opened the diagonal for my dark-squared bishop, and I have castled my king to safety. Now I can move forward by looking for an attacking option while black tries to capture in development.
10. f4
This was the first counterattack move I made. I am not really a fan of running back with my pieces unless that is the only option I am left with. So when black attacked my knight on g5, I responded with f4. A knight for a knight. You can my knight on g5, and I grab your knight on e5.
13. Rxf6!
This is the brilliant move I made in the game that led to a win. I would like you to take a minute or two to think a little bit further to see why I made this sac.
Alright.
It is because of 14. Ba4+, the next move I played after black captured back with their g-file pawn.
At this point, it is all game over because the only way black can block the check from my white bishop check. If black goes Bd7 to obstruct the check, checkmate comes next with Qxd7.
Let's even take it back to the sac. If black had gone for the other option of capturing back with their queen, it would still have played the same way. I check with my white bishop after moving it to a4, if black still blocks with a pawn push to b5. Nxb5 and then Bxa4+ still play out the same scenario.
The only option:
This is how powerful it can get when you play the Smith Morra and get ahead in development. It is a strong weapon.
Here is the game link
Game Link
And here is the game PGN
[Event "Rated Blitz Game"]
[Site "https://lichess.org/VGXcdasq"]
[Date "2025.10.09"]
[Round "?"]
[White "ZGM_Samostically"]
[Black "jo222"]
[Result "1-0"]
[WhiteElo "2210"]
[BlackElo "2211"]
[WhiteRatingDiff "+6"]
[BlackRatingDiff "-6"]
[Variant "Standard"]
[TimeControl "180+0"]
[ECO "B21"]
[Opening "Sicilian Defense: Smith-Morra Gambit Accepted, Classical Formation"]
[Termination "Normal"]
1. e4 c5 2. d4 cxd4 3. c3 dxc3 4. Nxc3 d6 5. Nf3 Nc6 6. Bc4 a6 7. O-O Nf6
8. Ng5 Ne5 9. Bb3 h6 10. f4 hxg5 11. fxe5 Qb6+ 12. Kh1 dxe5 13. Rxf6 gxf6
14. Ba4+ Qc6 15. Bxc6+ bxc6 16. Be3 Be6 17. Na4 Bh6 18. Nc5 g4 19. Nxe6 fxe6
20. Bxh6 Rxh6 21. Qxg4 Kf7 22. Rc1 Rah8 23. h3 Rg8 24. Qf3 Rhg6 25. Rxc6 1-0
This game was so admirable to me that I had to share it on snaps. Something I have not done before.
Here is the snap link:
https://peakd.com/@samostically/snap-1759990288601
I am @samostically, a chess player and writer. I love to share the experience I have gained from different battles over the 64 squares and the knowledgeable insights from books I have read. But most importantly, I am a Midnight Owl and I founded the community Midnight Letters.
♟♟♟♟♟♟♟♟♟
Posted Using INLEO
Cheers.
I downloaded a chess app and tried out my first "beginner" plays following the tutorials. It's been really fun.
I've won once and had 2 stalemates.
The stalemates happened when only the opponent's King was the survivor. Why wasn't that a win?
Because you couldn't win and the opponent has no way to go. Think about it, you didn't ake the final kill and the opponent is dead. You can't take credit for the kill but the opponent can't take the loss either. So it's a draw.
Oops. That's not cool.
And the last move cannot be undone.
Try lichess
Android app?
https://peakd.com/hive-157286/@samostically/introduction-to-the-lichess-platform-and-how-to-use-it
Will check this out