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I'm not sure whether this qualifies as a trap, but I sometimes do this tactic. My opponent pins my knight on f3 against my queen, but by sacrificing my bishop to f7, I can move the knight with check then use the queen to take the bishop.

For instance:

[FEN ""]  
1. e4 e5 2. Bc4 Nc6 3. f4 exf4 { C33 King's Gambit Accepted: Bishop's Gambit, Maurian Defense } 4. Nf3 Bc5 5. d4 Bb6 6. O-O d6 7. Bxf4 Bg4 8. Bxf7+ Kxf7 9.Ng5+ Ke8 10.Qxg4

Is there a name for this?

(Side note: Stockfish rates this move as a blunder, decreasing evaluation from 1.7 to 0.3, even though I gain a pawn, prevent black castling, and leave their position more exposed. I'm curious why.).

Steve Bennett
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    *Stockfish rates this move as a blunder* 10. Qxg4 Bxd4+ 11. Kh1 Bxb2 and Black wins the a1-rook. Looking at the lines with Stockfish it's more complicated than that (because Black's king is quite exposed), but the theme is the same, White does not keep the material. – Allure May 12 '22 at 01:53
  • Yeah, thanks for that explanation. – Steve Bennett May 12 '22 at 02:00
  • @SteveBennett: Additionally, in 50% of all cases of this motif Black has the resource Qxg5 instead of K... (just hang the queen, White's hangs too), making it unplayable too. – Hauke Reddmann May 12 '22 at 07:26
  • Related: https://chess.stackexchange.com/questions/27293/how-do-you-get-to-this-trap-position/27295 – D M May 12 '22 at 21:52
  • Oh wow, that really is a very similar question (with the slight difference that they can win a piece, not just a pawn) – Steve Bennett May 17 '22 at 02:50

1 Answers1

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Bxf7+ is an attraction of the king to the f7 square, after which Ng5+ is a discovered attack of the undefended bishop on g4. Technically, one could call Ng5+ a double attack/fork as well since you're simultaneously attacking the king and the bishop.

The official name would be an attraction followed by a discovered attack.

As always, loose pieces drop off! Gotta calculate all checks, captures, and threats!

NoseKnowsAll
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    Cool, but there's no particular name for this specific combo of these pieces on these squares? – Steve Bennett May 13 '22 at 04:48
  • None that I know of, no. This isn't like a greek gift in how common it is. That being said, Bxf7+ is a common idea in many e4 e5 games, so maybe someone should create a name! – NoseKnowsAll May 14 '22 at 02:24