The Kibitzer by Tim Harding The Vampire Gambit: Can We Bury It Now? THERE are quite a few astonishing gambits around which don't feature much in traditional opening books. For example, there is 4 g4 against the Gruenfeld Defence, 1 d4 Nf6 2 c4 g6 3 Nc3 d5 4 g4 (the Gibbins-Weidenhagen Gambit), the Shabalov Gambit against the Semi-Slav (which also involves an early g2-g4 which can be met by Nxg4), and of course the Winckelmann-Reimer Gambit about which I've written in my newest book Four Gambits To Beat the French (Chess Digest) and elsewhere. Perhaps even more astonishing is the topic of this month's article, the so-called Hal sz Gambit where the deviation from recognised paths comes as early as move three1 e4 e5 2 d4 exd4 and now 3 f4!? (see diagram) instead of the well-known 3 c3 (Danish Gambit) and Centre Game (3 Qxd4, revived in recent years by some OTB masters) and the rarer 3 Nf3. (See Diagram) This article was far advanced when Hanon Russell pointed out that Glenn Budzinski also wrote about the gambit a few months back at The Chess Caf‚. [Glenn's article is available in The Chess Caf‚ Archives.] Sorry, Glenn, I'd overlooked that or I might have chosen a different topic, but anyway I have a lot to add. The gist of this article was originally to have been a section in my book Winning At Correspondence Chess which the publishers cut out because of length considerations. Strictly speaking, the name Hal sz Gambit is not right since why give the name of a modern Hungarian postal player to a gambit that has been around since the 1840s, if not earlier? However, no name seems previously to have stuck to this bizarre idea 3 f4, and Hal sz has played numerous games with it over the past few decades, and has even experimented with an analogous idea against the Sicilian Defence1 e4 c5 2 d4 exd4 3 f4!?. Maybe it should instead be called the Vampire Gambit because it is dead yet refuses to stay buried. Can a reader finally produce the conclusive refutation to put a stake through its heart? You will not find 3 f4 in the Center Game mentioned in "Nunn's Chess Openings", "BC02", "Modern Chess Openings" (12th edition), "Open Gambits" (Botterill), "Unorthodox Openings (Benjamin & Schiller), or "The Complete Book Of Gambits" (Keene). Either the authors and editors did not know of the move (probable) or they just dismissed it as obviously bad. Even the second edition of ECO did not have it, and as for the latest (third) edition I am mystified because Budzinski's article refers to a supposed ECO recommendation which I cannot find in my copy! If it exists, it should be under opening code C21, note 2 (pages 174-175) but the only moves I see mentioned there are 3 Nf3 and 3 Bc4 with 3 c3 as the main line and 3 Qxd4 in C22. So I guess Budzinski was looking at the first edition, dating from the 1970s, where C21 was edited by Keres, but I passed on my copy of that edition years ago. Anyway, Paul Keres did mention the move in his "Dreispringerspiel bis K”nigsgambit", published by Sportverlag of East Berlin in 1971; he did not think much of it and that, I believe, would be the instant opinion of any grandmaster. However, the gambit has won some games, as we shall see in a moment. Budzinski seems to know little or nothing about Hal sz and some European articles about the gambit as he only refers to one American source, the "Chess Horizons" magazine. Dr. Gyorgy Hal sz of Budapest rediscovered 3 f4 some years ago but he didn't invent it. In fact, it dates from the uninhibited romantic days of the last century - as the English chess magazine, "Kingpin" (issues 19 and 20) revealed, following up a 1990 survey in "Fernschach" by German correspondence chess veteran Herman Heemsoth. More recently in "Fernschach" (1996), Jerzy Konikowski wrote another article on it. Most recently, both my own magazine "Chess Mail" and the German "Kaissiber" have published a recent win by Hal sz against a Swiss correspondence chess international master, Dr Xaver Steiner. Hal sz himself doesn't hold the master title but with a current ICCF rating of 2312 based on over 300 games, he is evidently a dangerous attacking player who wins a high proportion of his games with White. Here is that recent game Hal sz-Steiner EU/M/1203, corr 1998 1 e4 e5 2 d4 exd4 3 f4!? Bc5 Keres wrote that "3...Bb4+, 3...Nc6 or 3...d5 are also good." 4 Nf3 Nc6 5 Bd3 Hal sz follows the main line from the book by Keres. Frank Marshall was the source of this line, but it is not clearly Black's best plan; perhaps Keres (lacking games to quote) found it easier to cite this authority than looking for the very best defence as he would surely have done had anybody played 3 f4 against him. Actually I was surprised to see Hal sz adopt the 5 Bd3 and 6 Nbd2 move order, because in earlier years he tended to play the move a2- a3 at move five or six, threatening to expand on the queenside with gain of time. This is really a revival of an old idea seen in F.Schwenkenberg-W. Vitzthum, Dusseldorf 1861, which went 1 e4 e5 2 d4 exd4 3 f4!? Nc6 4 Nf3 Bc5 5 Bd3 Nge7 6 a3 0-0 7 b4 Bb6 8 Bb2 a6 9 Nbd2 d5 10 e5 f6 11 0-0, White winning in 20 moves. Of course Black's 8...a6 looks very passive; ...a5 is the normal reaction to a3. In the present game, Hal sz plays a2-a3 slightly later. 5...Nf6 6 Nbd2 d6 About this position, Keres wrote "And White has insufficient compensation for the pawn". Frank Marshall was in fact the source of this line. See what Hal sz does to this book recommendation now! However, 6...d5 seems more energetic and maybe Black should play that move earlier. 7 a3 a5 8 0 0 0 0 9 e5 Ng4 10 Ne4 Bb6 11 Nfg5 h6 12 h3 f5 13 exf6 Nxf6 14 Nxf6+ Rxf6 15 Qh5 Ne7 (See Diagram) 16 g4 Hal sz: "A typical intuitive sacrifice of which the consequences are incalculable." 16...hxg5 17 Qh7+ Kf8 18 Bd2 Be6 19 fxg5 Rxf1+ 20 Rxf1+ Ke8 21 Qxg7 Kd7 22 g6 d5 If 22...Qg8 Hal sz indicates the continuation 23 Qh7 Rf8 24 Bh6 Rxf1+ 25 Kxf1 d5 26 Bf5 Kd6 27 Bf4+ Kd7 28 Bg5 Bc5 29 Bxe7. 23 Bg5 Bc5 24 Bf6 Kc6 25 Re1 Qd6 26 Be5 Qd7 27 b4 axb4 28 axb4 Bxb4 29 Rb1 Ra4 30 Qf6 b5 31 Bf5 Nxf5 32 gxf5 Qe7 33 Qxe6+ Qxe6 34 fxe6 1 0. Whether 3 f4!? is actually a good move must surely be doubtful, since - unlike most gambits - it gives White no lead in development for his pawn, but only a slight gain in space on the kingside. Nevertheless, as a surprise weapon it is certainly more dangerous than Keres thought, if carefully and ingeniously followed up. One of Black's (psychological) problems is that 3 f4 looks so obviously unsound that it is hard to decide which "refutation" to adopt. Psychologically, opponents often don't play in a stable and rational way when they believe their game is won from a very early stage and they tend to underestimate their opponents. In the earliest games I have seen, Black tried to exploit the fact that White had not made the normal Danish gambit move, 3 c3, and tried to hold the gambit pawn by 3...Bb4+. Budzinski says that this check "might be the toughest nut for White to crack." (See Diagram) For example a) 4 c3? dxc3 5 bxc3 (5 Nxc3 Nf6) 5...Bc5 and Black's bishop is strongly posted (Marshall); b) 4 Bd2 and now b1) 4...Nc6 5 a3 or 5 Bxb4; b2) 4...Qe7! tended to be successful5 Bd3 d5 6 e5 Nh6 7 Nf3 Bxd2+ 8 Qxd2 c5 9 0-0 Nc6 10 Na3 a6 0-1, 27 E.Pindar- J.S.Kipping, Manchester 1861, but better is 8 Nbxd2 as Budzinski says. However, there is another 19th century example: 5...Nf6 6 e5 Nd5 7 Nf3 Nxf4 8 0-0 Nxd3 9 cxd3 Bxd2 10 Nbxd2 c5 (0-1, 30) A.Epiphanoff-J.Wallenrath, St Petersburg 1852. The modern treatment of 3...Bb4+ is c) 4 Nd2 when Budzinski comments "Despite White's encouraging results... Black's play has often left much to be desired in the few available examples." After 4 Nd2 play can go 4...Nf6 (instead of 4...Nc6 or 4...Qe7? as played by Hal sz's own opponents in games cited by Budzinski.) 5 Bd3 d5 6 e5 Ng4 7 a3! (instead of 7 Ngf3 c5 8 Ng5 c4 as in A.Bartsch- H.Edighoffer, IECG email, 1998) 7... Ne3 8 Qe2 Bg4 9 Ngf3 Ba5 10 b4 Bb6 11 Nb3 0-0 12 Bb2 f6 13 Bxd4 Bxd4 14 Nbxd4 fxe5 15 fxe5 Nf5 16 Ne6 winning the exchange and soon the game (Edinburgh Chess Club-Newcastle, intercity corr ). In the postal game De Laat-Luuring (cited in the German periodical Gambit Revue, 1990) Black tried instead to simplify by 6...Ne4 7 Ngf3 c5 8 0-0 Nxd2 9 Bxd2 Bxd2 10 Qxd2 Qb6 but after 11 b3 Qh6 12 Rae1 Nc6 13 Ng5 Bd7 14 e6 White retained an initiative thanks to his lead in development. Black gave up the exchange by 14...fxe6 15 Rf3 0-0-0 16 Nf7 Qf6 17 Nxd8 Kxd8 and the game was eventually drawn. Na‹ve defenders might suppose they could just defend the extra pawn by 3...c5!? although this is liable to leave holes at d5 and d6 unless Black can rapidly follow up with ...d7-d5. The May 1899 American Chess Magazine attributed the gambit to James Jellett of St Paul citing this 3...c5 line, not knowing of games played with 3 f4 in the 1860s or earlier. (See Diagram) In ''Marshall's Chess Openings'' (1904), the American grandmaster said 4 Bc4 was best e.g. 4...d6 5 c3 Nc6 6 Nf3 Bg4 7 0-0 Nh6 8 f5 ''and White should win''. Modern exponents of the Hal sz/Vampire gambit seem to have overlooked this recommendation as they all play 4 Nf3 instead. After 4 Nf3 the 100-year-old article suggested 4...Nc6 5 Bd3 Nf6 6 0-0 Be7 7 Nbd2 0-0 8 Ng5 with interesting possibilities (Jellett), but modern players prefer 4...d6 or 4...d5. For example a) 4...d5 allows White to establish a kingside pawn majority by 5 e5; this position also often arises via 3...d5 4 e5 c5 5 Nf3 and I deal with this line later in the article. b) Surprisingly perhaps, the more flexible 4...d6 seems better although it doesn't challenge d5 at once. Blank-A.Aasum, corr,1975, continued 5 Bd3 Bg4 6 0-0 Nc6 7 a3 Be7 8 h3 Bxf3 9 Qxf3 Qc7 10 Bd2 Nf6 11 g4 0-0-0 12 e5 Nd7 13 exd6 Bxd6 14 b4 g6 15 c3 a6 16 Ra2 Rhe8 17 b5 axb5 18 Bxb5 dxc3 19 Nxc3 Nd4 20 Qd3 c4 21 Bxc4 Bc5 22 Kh2 Nb6 23 Bb5 Nb3 24 Nd5 Nxd2 25 Nxc7 Rxd3 0-1. Thirteen years later, Dr Hal sz improved on this in a postal game against the same Norwegian opponent with 10 Nd2 Nf6 11 Nc4 and won a messy game 11...0-0-0? 12 Bd2 d5 13 exd5 Rxd5 14 g4 Rdd8 15 b4 cxb4 16 axb4 Bxb4 17 Bxb4 Nxb4 18 Rxa7 Qc6 (18...Nc6 19 Ra8+ Kd7 20 Bf5+ Ke8 21 Re1+ Kf8 22 Qa3+ Kg8 23 g5 Nd5 24 Re8+ Rxe8 25 Rxe8#) 19 Bf5+?! Kc7 (19...Kb8 20 Qa3!) 20 Qb3 Qc5 21 Ra5 Qe7 (21...b5 22 Bd3 Ra8 23 Rfa1 with the initiative) 22 Re5 Qf8 23 Rb1 Nfd5 24 Be4 Qc5 (24...d3 25 c3 b6 26 cxb4 Nxf4 27 Qa3 with advantage) 25 Rxd5! Rxd5 26 Qxb4 1-0 (Hal sz-Aasum). However, Black can improve at various points and Konikowski has suggested that 9...Nf6!? 10 Nd2 0-0 gives Black the edge. So Marshall's idea may indeed be critical. The gambit appears to have re-surfaced in the 1920s. I found the following Australian correspondence game in a history booklet about CC in that country, "The First Fifty Years" (compiled by H.W.M. Lunney, 1980). This was actually the first game to finish in the competitions organised by the Australian correspondence chess organisation. G.W. Robertson - James McCrakett Australia, corr 1929 1 e4 e5 2 d4 exd4 3 f4 Bc5 4 Nf3 Nc6 Black keeps coming back to this plan developing and defending the extra pawn. 5 Bd3 Nf6 6 Nbd2 d6 According to Frank Crowl in Australasian Chess Review, April 1930, "6...d5 seems more energetic, and if 7 e5 Ne4 whereby the black N would occupy a commanding post." However, that isn't clear as Hal sz has won a game or two from that position. Crowl said that this was "a favourite opening of Alexander McDonnell; though not strictly sound it is hard to meet". Unfortunately there are none of McDonnell games with the gambit in the Oxford Encyclopaedia of Chess Games. Can any be traced? 7 a3 a5? 8 Qe2 0 0 9 0 0 Bd7 10 e5 Re8 11 Ng5! h6? Immediately fatal (wrote Crowl). Some prospects of defence lay in 11...Bg4 and if 12 Bxh7+ Kf8, but by 12 Ndf3 White would retain the better game. 12 Nde4 Nxe4 (See Diagram) 13 Nxf7!! Kxf7 14 Qxe4 Rg8 15 Bc4+ 1-0 Another example of what can happen to Black if he plays passively is B.Blank-K.Wothe, 14th German CC Ch1 e4 e5 2 d4 exd4 3 f4 Bc5 4 Nf3 Nc6 5 a3 a5 6 Bd3 Nf6 7 0-0 d6 8 Qe1 0-0 9 h3 Bd7 10 e5 Re8 11 Qg3 Nh5 12 Qh2 g6 13 g4 Ng7 14 Nbd2 f5 15 exf6 Qxf6 16 Ne4 Qf8 17 Qg3 Re7 18 Qh4 Ne8 19 f5 gxf5 20 Bh6! Rg7 (If 20...Ng7 21 Nf6+ Kh8 22 Nh5.) 21 Bc4+ Kh8 22 Nfg5 Ne5 23 Be6 Bxe6 24 Nxe6 Qg8 25 Bxg7+ Nxg7 26 Nf6 1-0. Hal sz-Vitomskis, 28th European CC Championship 1984, saw the gambit come unstuck but far from deterring Dr. Hal sz from repeating the experiment, he often played it on later occasions 3...Bc5 4 Nf3 Nf6 5 a3 a5 6 Bd3 Nf6 7 0-0 d5! 8 e5 Ne4 9 Nbd2 f5 10 exf6 Nxf6 11 Qe1+ Qe7 12 Qh4 0-0 13 Re1 Qd6 14 Ne5 Re8 15 Ndf3 Bd7 16 Ng5 [16 Bd2!? Konikowski, FS 1998/4] 16...h6 17 Bg6? [17 Ngf7 Qf8 18 Bd2 Re7 19 Nxc6 Bxc6 20 Ne5ö Konikowski] 17...Rxe5! 18 fxe5 Nxe5! 19 Bd3 hxg5 20 Qxg5 Nf7 21 Qh4 Ne4-+ 22 Bf4 Qb6 23 Rf1 Re8 24 Qh5 Nf6 25 Qh4 Bd6 26 Bg5 Nxg5! 27 Qxg5 Re5 28 Qd2 Ng4 29 h3 Ne3 0-1. Heemsoth gave this game as a good example of how to meet the dangerous gambit. But in Hal sz-Dr W. Wittmann, White varied with 11 Re1+ Be7 (11...Ne7 may be better.) 12 h3 0-0 13 g4!? Nxg4!? (13...h5 14 g5 Ne8 15 Nh4 with the initiative - Konikowski) 14 hxg4 Bxg4 15 Nf1 Bh4 16 N1h2 Bxf3 17 Nxf3 Bxe1 18 Qxe1 Qf6 19 f5! Rae8 20 Qg3 Re3?! (20...h6 21 Bf4 Ne7 and Konikowski's 20...Ne7 are the critical tests here.) 21 Bxe3 dxe3 22 Qxc7 Nd4 23 Nxd4 Qxd4 24 Kg2 Qxb2 25 Rh1 h6 26 Qg3 e2 27 Qe3 Qxa3 28 Qe6+ Kh8 29 Qxe2 Qb4 30 Re1 a4 31 Qe7 Qg4+ 32 Kf2 Qf4+ 33 Ke2 1-0 (33...Qg4+ 34 Kd2 Qf4+ 35 Kd1). The article in "Kingpin" recommends 3...d5 (avoiding Marshall's 4 Bc4!) 4 e5 c5 5 Nf3 Nc6, aiming for a blockade on the light squares, maintaining the extra pawn. However, in the two examples I have seen Black failed to carry the plan through correctly. A.J. Chavez-T. Casamayor, in the Von Massow Memorial (Cuban CC 1991) continued 6 b3 Bf5 7 Bd3 Nge7?! (Simpler 7...Qd7 followed by 0-0-0) 8 0-0 Qd7 9 Ba3 Ng6? (9...Bxd3 10 Qxd3 Nf5 would put the onus on White to justify his gambit. Now White develops threats.) 10 Ng5 Be7 11 e6! fxe6 12 Bxf5 exf5 13 Re1 h6? (Sacrificing the exchange by 13...0-0-0 looks the sensible thing to do.) 14 Ne6! Kf7 15 Qh5 Nd8 16 Qxf5+ 1-0. In Hal sz- Sinovatsni (1990) Black met 6 b3 inventively by 6...Nh6 7 Bd3 Bf5 but after 8 0-0 instead of just developing his pieces, Hal sz's opponent unwisely acted the hero by 8...c4?! 9 bxc4 10 Bxc4 d3 leading to complications after 11 Bxd3 Bc5+ 12 Kh1 Bxd3 13 cxd3 Bd4 14 Nxd4 Qxd4 15 Qb3! and Black came off worst. Black can also follow up 3...d5 with the bishop check. After 1 e4 e5 2 d4 exd4 3 f4 d5 4 e5 Bb4+ was seen in Gimeno-Felez, 1993 Ibercaja Open , with a position that Budzinski compares to a Falkbeer Counter-Gambit. The game went on 5 Nd2 Ne7 6 Nf3 Nf5 7 Bd3 c5 8 a3 Ne3 9 Qe2 and now Budzinski suggests the improvement 9...Qa5. The only other game in my database with 4...Bb4+ is somewhat bizarre, but isn't the whole gambit bizarre? Liban Van Damme - Gambini [C21] corr, 1972 1 e4 e5 2 d4 exd4 3 f4 d5 4 e5 Bb4+ 5 Nd2 c5 6 a3 Ba5 7 b4 cxb4 8 a4!? (White's moves 7-8 are an ingenious solution that devalues Black's pawns.) 8...Nc6 9 Nb3 Bb6 10 Nf3 Bg4 11 Bb2 Bxf3 12 Qxf3 f6 13 Bd3 h6 14 e6 Qd6 15 Qh5+ Kd8 16 0-0 Rc8 17 a5 Bc5 18 Rfe1 b6 19 axb6 Bxb6 20 Kh1 g5?! (Asking for trouble.) 21 fxg5 fxg5 22 Qf7 Rc7 23 Qf2 Qf4 24 Qxf4 gxf4 25 Bc1 f3 26 gxf3 (Black is still one pawn up but it is almost worthless as White's connected passed pawns are more significant.) 26...Rg7 27 f4 Nge7 28 f5 Ng8 29 Bb2 Rg4 30 Rad1 Kc7 31 Bb5 Nge7 32 f6 Nf5 33 e7 Re4 34 Rxe4 dxe4 35 Bxd4 1-0 So how can Black put a stake through the Vampire gambit's heart? One of many lines that ought to be good for Black in my opinion is (1 e4 e5 2 d4 exd4 3 f4) 3...Nc6 4 Nf3 d5. This plan scores 4/5 for Black in the games in my database and Black played some really stupid moves in the one game he lost. (See Diagram) Here in F.Schortgen-D.Mascarenhas, SEMI email 1997, White played 5 Nxd4 which doesn't look right, After 5...dxe4 6 Bb5 a6 7 Bxc6+ bxc6 8 Be3 c5 9 Nb3 Qxd1+ 10 Kxd1 Nf6 11 Bxc5 Bxc5 12 Nxc5 0-0 13 Nc3 e3 White had his pawn back but where can his uncastleable king go? Black eventually won. So Blank, and all the other players who have faced this line, pushed the e-pawn, which is the normal response in this gambit. 5 e5 Bc5 6 a3 Bb6 Black has also won a game with 6...Nge7 where White replied 7 b4?!. After 6...Bb6 I have two examples involving master correspondence players a) Manfred Bauer- Jon Kristinsson, Scottish Magazine-10 yrs. A 1990, continued 7 b4 a6 8 Bd3 Nh6 9 0-0 Nf5 10 Qe1 h5 11 Kh1 Be6 12 Nbd2 Ne3 13 Rg1 Qd7 14 Nb3 Bg4 15 Nc5 Bxc5 16 bxc5 Nf5 17 Rb1 0-0-0 18 Rf1 h4 19 c3 h3 20 g3 dxc3 21 Qxc3 Nce7 22 Rf2 Qc6 23 Qe1 Qxc5 24 Ng5 Rhf8 25 Rfb2 b5 26 Qf1 f6 27 exf6 gxf6 28 Ne6 Nxg3+ 29 hxg3 Bxe6 30 a4 Nf5 31 Kh2 Rg8 32 axb5 Nxg3 33 Qe1 Rde8 34 bxa6 Bf5 35 Rb8+ Kd7 36 Rxe8 Rxe8 37 Bxf5+ Nxf5 38 Qd2 Rg8 39 Ba3 Qc4 40 Rg1 Re8 0-1 b) B. Blank-E.Hintikka, EU/M corr, circa 19906 a3 Bb6 7 Bd3 Nh6 8 0-0 Nf5 9 Qe2 h5 10 Kh1 Be6 11 b4 a6 12 Ng5 Nce7 13 Nd2 Qd7 14 Nb3 g6 15 Bd2 Kf8 16 Rab1 Re8 17 Nc5 Qc8 18 Ncxe6+ fxe6 19 a4 c6 20 b5 axb5 21 axb5 c5 22 c4 dxc3 23 Bxc3 c4 24 Bxf5 Nxf5 25 Rfd1 h4 26 Be1 Kg7 27 Bf2 Ng3+ 0-1. Here is an alternative approach for Black. Anyone thinking of playing the Hal sz Gambit needs an improvement on the following game; I wonder what Hal sz himself thinks about this. Vittorio Colo (ITA) - H. Ewald corr 1991 1 e4 e5 2 d4 exd4 3 f4 Nf6 There has been very little experience with this Alekhine's Defence style counter-attack against the white e-pawn; it is not mentioned by Budzinski. 4 Bd3 If 4 e5 d5 5 Qxd4 Qh4+ 6 g3 Nxg3 7 Nf3 Nf5 or 7 Qf2 Nf5 so does White have anything better than 4 Qxd4 Nc6 when Black is surely OK? I also found a strange game Delmar-Rosen, Trenton Falls 1908, in which White played 4 Bc4?! which was met by 4...b5 5 Bxb5 Nxe4 and Black eventually won. Presumably Black avoided 4...Nxe4 because of 5 Bxf7+ Kxf7 6 Qh5+ but there doesn't seem anything to fear in that line. 4...Bb4+! This seems the right timing for the check. In other games in my database, Black played 4...d5. 5 Bd2 If 5 Nbd2, then 5...d5! 5...Bxd2+ 6 Nxd2 d5 7 e5 Bg4 8 Ne2 Nh5 9 Qc1 Bxe2 10 Bxe2 Nxf4 11 Nf3 Nxe2 12 Kxe2 c5 13 Qf4 0-0 14 Rae1 Nc6 15 a3 Qc7 16 Kd1 f6 17 Qf5 fxe5 18 Qe6+ Qf7 19 Ng5 Qxe6 20 Nxe6 Rf2 21 Re2 Rxe2 22 Kxe2 b6 23 Nc7 Rd8 24 Rf1 Rd7 0-1. There's a third possible refutation. Stefan Bcker, editor of the entertaining and informative German theory and history magazine "Kaissiber", has long advocated his Nordwalde Defence to the King's Gambit, 1 e4 e5 2 f4 Qf6. (Nordwalde is the town where he lives, near the city of Muenster in north-west Germany). then after 3 d4 (3 Nc3 Qxf4 is probably more critical.) 3...exd4 we have a position that can also arise in the Hal sz/Vampire Gambit, by 1 e4 e5 2 d4 exd4 3 f4 Qf6!? (See Diagram) Stefan argues that this is the best answer to the Hal sz Gambit. I haven't seen any games where Black actually employed this move order and I don't have any opinion about this variation, but I have included a few games with the Nordwalde in my downloadable file. And this is not all. Hal sz also plays an analogous gambit against the Sicilian Defence1 e4 c5 2 d4 cxd4 3 f4!?. This "interpretation" of the Smith-Morra Gambit (f4 instead of c3) seems utterly bizarre at first sight, and even less likely to work than the main Hal sz Gambit since Black has not weakened his kingside. Yet this form of the gambit can be effective too. M.Frerichs-Gerwert Germany corr, 1995 1 e4 c5 2 d4 cxd4 3 f4!? Nc6 4 Nf3 Qb6 5 Bd3 Nf6 6 e5 Nd5 7 Na3 e6 8 Nc4 Qc7 9 0-0 Bc5? Hermann Heemsoth says Black should have played 9...b5! 10 Nd6+ Bxd6 11 exd6 Qxd6 12 Bxb5 Qc5! with advantage. 10 Ng5 g6? 10...b5 was the last chance. 11 Ne4 Ndb4 12 Ncd6+ Bxd6 13 Nxd6+ Kf8 14 f5 exf5 15 Rxf5! 1-0 (for if 15...gxf5 16 Qh5!). As in the last two months, I posted on my website a collection of games in the opening discussed in the current Kibitzer. These games will be available for a few weeks, in PGN and in both new and old ChessBase formats, at http//www.chessmail.com/freegames.html.