Wayward Queen Attack
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The Danvers Opening,''Edward Winter''

at chesshistory.com
also known as the Kentucky Opening,Kentucky Opening
Dubuque Chess Journal, May 1875, page 250 scanned at Hathitrust (original from New York Public Library)
Queen's Attack, Queen's Excursion, Wayward Queen Attack, Patzer Opening
Lev Alburt Lev Osipovich Alburt (born August 21, 1945) is a chess Grandmaster, writer and coach. He was born in Orenburg, Russia, and became three-time Ukrainian Champion. After defecting to the United States in 1979, he became three-time U.S. Champion. ...
& Al Lawrenc
''Chess for Everyone''
Rowman & Littlefield, 2010
or Parham AttackThe Chess Drum
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_is_an_unorthodox_chess_opening_characterized_by_the_moves: :1._b:Chess_Opening_Theory/1._e4">e4_ ''The_Talking_Drum_featuring_Bernard_Parham
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''_6_July_2003_is_an_unorthodox_chess_opening_characterized_by_the_moves: :1._b:Chess_Opening_Theory/1._e4">e4_b:Chess_Opening_Theory/1._e4/1...e5">e5 :2._b:Chess_Opening_Theory/1._e4/1...e5/2._Qh5.html" ;"title="b:Chess_Opening_Theory/1._e4/1...e5.html" ;"title="b:Chess_Opening_Theory/1._e4.html" ;"title="Bernard_Parham
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'' 6 July 2003 is an unorthodox chess opening characterized by the moves: :1. b:Chess Opening Theory/1. e4">e4 b:Chess Opening Theory/1. e4/1...e5">e5 :2. b:Chess Opening Theory/1. e4/1...e5/2. Qh5">Qh5


History and nomenclature

1.e4 e5 2.Qh5 has acquired several names over the years, none of which are universally used. The earliest known appearance in print was in the Dubuque Chess Journal in May 1875, where it was dubbed the Kentucky Opening, perhaps in reference to a game played in Danville, Kentucky, which was published in the August issue of the same magazine. (This name was also applied by J. H. Blackburne to the unsound Jerome Gambit.) In the ''American Chess Bulletin'' in 1905, the opening was referred to as the Danvers Opening, so named by E. E. Southard, a well-known psychiatrist and a strong amateur chess player, after the hospital where he worked. Bernard Parham of Indianapolis is one of the few master level players to advocate this line. Parham is known for his eccentric theories on the game of chess, which he has developed into what he calls the "Matrix System". Parham's Matrix System advocates early development of the queen in several positions, as in his favored line as White against the Sicilian Defence, 1.e4 c5 2.Qh5?! Parham argues that just as
Richard Réti Richard Selig Réti (28 May 1889 – 6 June 1929) was an Austro-Hungarian, later Czechoslovakian, chess player, chess author, and composer of endgame studies. He was one of the principal proponents of hypermodernism in chess. With the exc ...
and
Aron Nimzowitsch Aron Nimzowitsch ( lv, Ārons Nimcovičs, russian: Аро́н Иса́евич Нимцо́вич, ''Aron Isayevich Nimtsovich''; 7 November 1886 – 16 March 1935) was a Latvian-born Danish chess player and writer. In the late 1920s, Nimz ...
pioneered the hypermodern style of chess, his own ideas which are considered strange today may well be considered viable in the future. Several internet-based sources refer to 1.e4 e5 2.Qh5 as the Parham Attack or Parham Opening. The most notable use of 1.e4 e5 2.Qh5 by a grandmaster occurred in 2005, when U.S. Champion
Hikaru Nakamura Christopher Hikaru NakamuraNakamura-Sasikiran, 13th Sigeman & Co 2005
ChessGames.com. Retrieved on 2006-02-09.
Nakamura got a reasonable position out of the opening but lost the game due to a mistake made in the Chess middlegame, middlegame. He later wrote on the Internet, "I do believe that 2.Qh5 is a playable move, in fact I had a very good position in the game, and was close to winning if I had in fact played 23.e5." The previous month, Nakamura had played 2.Qh5 against GM Nikola Mitkov at the April 2005 HB Global Chess Challenge in Minneapolis. The game ended in a draw (chess), draw after 55 moves.Nakamura-Mitkov, HB Global Chess Challenge 2005
ChessGames.com. Retrieved on 2006-02-09.
More often the opening is adopted by chess novices, as when actor Woody Harrelson played it against Garry Kasparov in a 1999 exhibition game in Prague.Harrelson-Kasparov, Consultation game 1999
ChessGames.com. Retrieved on 2006-02-09.
Harrelson achieved a draw (chess), draw after being assisted by several grandmasters who were in Prague attending the match between Alexei Shirov and Judit Polgár.Hans Ree
Jake, Joe and Garry
ChessCafe.com. Retrieved on 2009-02-06.
The next year Kasparov again faced the opening as Black when tennis star Boris Becker played it against him in an exhibition game in New York.Becker-Kasparov, New York exhibition 2000
ChessGames.com. Retrieved on 2006-02-09.
This time Kasparov won in 17 moves.


Assessment

The Danvers Opening violates a conventional opening principle by developing the queen (chess), queen too early, subjecting it to attack and loss of . Nonetheless, the opening causes Black some problems. Left to his own devices, Black can develop naturally with moves like ...Nf6, ...Bc5, and ...Nc6. The Danvers Opening hinders this by forcing Black (unless he wants to sacrifice a pawn) to first defend the e-pawn (usually with 2...Nc6), then 3.Bc4 forces Black to make some compromise to defend against the mate threat; 3...g6 commits Black to fianchettoing the king (chess), king bishop (chess), bishop, 3...Qe7 blocks the bishop, and 3...Qf6 occupies knight's best square. In 2005, the Netherlands, Dutch grandmaster Hans Ree called 2.Qh5 "a provocative but quite sensible move", and suspected it would have been effective because of its shock value. As with the Napoleon Opening (2.Qf3?!), 2.Qh5 is frequently played with the hope of delivering the Scholar's Mate, e.g. 2.Qh5 Nc6 3.Bc4 Nf6?? 4.Qxf7#. However, Black can easily avoid this, and unlike 2.Qh5, 2.Qf3 poses no impediments to Black's development.


Possible continuations

Black's worst possible response to 2.Qh5 is 2...Ke7?? 3.Qxe5#. (This line ties with a few others for the fastest possible checkmate by White.) 2...g6?? is also losing after 3.Qxe5+, winning a rook and pawn. The most frequently played move is 2...Nc6; 2...Nf6!?, 2...d6 and 2...Qe7 are also occasionally seen.


2...Nc6

Black defends the e-pawn and prepares to meet 3.Bc4 with 3...Qe7 or 3...g6. The latter move is more common and after 4.Qf3 Nf6 5.Ne2 the main position is reached (see diagram). White is not worse, but also has no advantage. Black can adopt different plans, one of the most popular being 5...Bg7, where 6.0-0 is White's best try for dynamic play, as 6.d3 d5 will lead to an even position with few attacking chances, and 6.Nbc3 Nb4 is interesting but promises little for White. Grandmasters Krishnan Sasikiran and Nikola Mitkov played this move against
Hikaru Nakamura Christopher Hikaru Nakamura


2...Nf6!?

This is a speculative gambit sometimes called the Kiddie Countergambit. It is unnecessary to sacrifice a pawn for development, since the White queen will have to lose a eventually; however, FIDE Master Dennis Monokroussos advocates the move as the "psychologically correct" response.Dennis Monokroussos
Nakamura-Sasikiran and Junk Openings
thechessmind.net, 23 April 2005


2...d6

Black defends the center pawn and simultaneously opens a diagonal for the queen's bishop, but blocks the king's bishop.


2...Qe7

Black defends the center pawn and simultaneously guards the f7-pawn, but blocks the king's bishop.


See also

* List of chess openings


References


External links


Jake, Joe and Garry
(column by Hans Ree)
Nakamura-Sasikiran, Sigeman 2005
{{Chess Chess openings