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Fred's Defence (1. e4-f5) variation


nullve

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I play the following (nameless?) variation of Fred's Defence

 

1. e4-f5

2. exf5-g6

3. fxg6-hxg6

 

a lot as Black (in blitz at a modest ~1400 level), and it would be fun to hear from fellow forumers how you would go about refuting it. Moves and reasoning, please!

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You should post this in the Water Cooler as it is not bridge-related.

Sorry about that.

 

The main line is 2. d4 so I would suggest starting from there.

That's the Staunton Gambit, by tranposition, but I thought main line Fred was either 2. exf5-Nf6 or 2. exf5-Kf7.

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Stockfish 7 is out, free and open source, you can also get it on Android. If you're interested in the objective evaluation, it is absolutely losing. If you're interested in what a bunch of random bridge forum contributors can come up with when they're not busy arguing about cheating scandals and alerting regulations, I don't know what the point of that would be. If you like random weird gambits maybe check out the Portuguese Gambit, with a very cool book on it recently out (Smerdon's Sicilian).
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Stockfish 7 is out, free and open source, you can also get it on Android.

 

If you like random weird gambits maybe check out the Portuguese Gambit, with a very cool book on it recently out (Smerdon's Sicilian).

Thanks for the tips.

 

If you're interested in the objective evaluation, it is absolutely losing.

I know.

 

If you're interested in what a bunch of random bridge forum contributors can come up with when they're not busy arguing about cheating scandals and alerting regulations, I don't know what the point of that would be.

 

I thought it might be fun to hear bridge players/bidding theorists reason about the chess equivalent of a (dubious) bidding convention/system. After all, bidding theory and chess opening theory are strikingly similar fields, but bridge players might have a different perspective on chess opening theory than chess players who don't play bridge. I consider my own views on chess opening theory to be absolutely worthless, though, so I think must have been in a slightly silly mood when I started this topic.

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That opening is bogus :P Why are you giving yourself a losing position on move 3?

Because of the slapstick factor, perhaps, with White's confident king hunt, e.g.

 

1. e4-f5

2. exf5-g6

3. fxg6-hxg6

4. Qg4-Kf7

5. Bd3-Rh6

6. Nf3 etc.,

 

sometimes followed by Black chasing the white queen while developing all his pieces and establishing a strong centre. Which only proves that at intermediate level blitz, anything goes as far as opening theory is concerned. (Chances are that pieces will be blundered away a few moves down the road, anyway, and no opening can compensate for that.)

 

I also like to play serious openings, btw.

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