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Gameknot Blitz: Pub Chess Bluffer beats the King's Indian and the Jack Cade Defence

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hirohurl148.089 days agoHive.Blog3 min read

For the first time this year, I played three blitz games on Gameknot's Live Chess portal. I left the colour setting on random although I was hoping to get the black pieces so I could practice the "Sniper" as advocated by one of my chess pals, Charlie Storey. I read his book on the Sniper a few years ago, but did not properly absorb the lessons. I picked it up again this year and am going through it more thoroughly.

However, I was randomly given White all three times. I blundered badly in the first game and lost, but did much better in the next two games. The video below gives my commentary on both games, and I’ve added a few key screenshots further down.

Game 1: Black Plays a King’s Indian... and Trades Off His Own Defender

In the first game, Black went for a King’s Indian setup - not the Sniper, but it does feature a similar Bishop fianchetto on g7. Now, if you’ve looked at Charlie Storey’s Sniper material, you’ll know he sometimes recommends exchanging that bishop for the knight on c3 - but only when it makes sense so to do, if it damages White’s pawn structure, for example

Here, Black went ahead and played ...Bxc3, but in my view, this was a mistake.

https://images.hive.blog/DQmW6bdFjgC5xpeu5vCpA5z3P6TwV9oXrZsSAfyCgHHVhre/GameknotBlitzChessJune2025.jpg

Yes, it briefly doubled my pawns, but in return Black gave up the main defender of his kingside, the dark-squared bishop. That trade left his king more vulnerable, and the problem was exacerbated a few moves later when his queen grabbed the a2 pawn.

When Black moved his Knight to b6?, there was no longer anything preventing my Queen from occupying the diagonal:

https://images.hive.blog/DQmWx1sRrevaeCCgkNeEw72gFnuKTegpwp861xET2f3Jx61/blitz-2-june2025.jpg

And this led to this:

White to Move, Checkmate in 3...

https://images.hive.blog/DQmTedCkQAuNHQEQQzMjFiGbjTmZ3Duex2Fxt2JYuehS3pB/checkmatein3.png

Game 2: The Jack Cade Defence

In the second game, my opponent went for what I call the "Jack Cade" defence, namely a series of pawn moves that left the quality at home. (Jack Cade led a peasants' revolt against Henry VI in 1450).

The game ended when my central pawns were threatening to break through after my Knight forked his King and Rook.

https://images.hive.blog/DQmNjVXWJvZFBcm8yt1cTk8dXZN5sbUk95AQEMv9wxNHbjs/Screenshot%202025-06-08%2011.00.27%20AM.png

I think it would have been prettier to have promoted my pawn to a Knight, but the Queen did the trick and my opponent resigned.

https://images.hive.blog/DQmVS4VpRKZpVqKXSTB3MXDxZ9p89rf7uAZX9phKNki9H2B/Screenshot%202025-06-08%2011.06.32%20AM.png

Cheers!

David Hurley
#PubChessBluffer

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