[Event "Fantasy"]
[Site "?"]
[Date "????.??.??"]
[Round "?"]
[White "NN"]
[Black "Kholmov??, Ratmir"]
[Result "*"]
[ECO "B00"]
[PlyCount "18"]
[EventDate "2019.08.28"]
{[%evp 0,18,19,31,45,-16,26,27,121,121,128,131,123,130,87,79,90,89,60,60,38]}
1. e4 Nc6 2. f4 {Not a very good move.} b6 ({After} 2... d5 {Black has a good
version of the Scandinavian opening.}) 3. Nf3 e5 {Of course Black's set-up
cannot really be recommended, as in the King's Gambit, the move b6 seems
rather clumsy.} 4. fxe5 {The obvious try to refute Black's play. After 4. fxe5
we have the position in which, according to legend, Kholmov's drunken head
sank in despair. But not all would be lost.} ({A simple move like} 4. Nc3 {
transposing to a favorable variation of the King's Gambit, is probably
stronger. White must be better here, though Black is far from lost. But who
knows? Having seen people playing an early knight fianchetto with Ng8-f6-h5-g7
in the Modern defence with 1... g6, I tried to make a similar maneuver with
Nc6-a5-b7 work here, but not surprisingly I did not succeed.}) 4... Nxe5 {
The only move. There is no good way to make a gambit of it.} 5. Nxe5 {Again
the obvious move, but not a good one.} ({Again} 5. Nc3 {seems best, but it is
not a fatal blow. With help from Stockfish, I found the interesting variation}
Nxf3+ 6. Qxf3 Qh4+ 7. g3 Qf6 8. Qxf6 Nxf6 9. Nb5 Bb7 10. Nxc7+ Kd8 11. Nxa8
Bxe4 {Here White is probably somewhat better, but not much.}) 5... Qh4+ 6. g3
Qxe4+ 7. Qe2 Qxh1 ({In my database there is a game from 2000 where Black
submitted to his doom with} 7... Bb7 {but of course this is not relevant.}) 8.
Ng6+ Be7 9. Nxh8 Bb7 {This is the end of the main line. White is a piece up,
but his Nh8 is trapped and he is behind in development. My Stockfish gives a
small advantage to Black. So what's the verdict on the Drunken Mirrored
Gruenfeld opening? If White is not overly ambitious, he can reach a favorable
King's Gambit, but a try for an outright refutation will backfire. In a blitz
game, the Drunken Grunfeld seems playable.} *