Forums

Why is there no German opening?

Sort:
TheNameofNames

the zimbabwe opening

putshort
To be clear, the Benko Gambit is an American Defense. Pal Benko was an American chess player from 1962 onwards. He played and popularized the Benko Gambit from the mid sixties onwards.
ddave2150
magipi wrote:

It's long overdue that some moderator should do the right thing and ban A_Proud_Zionist. Should have been banned weeks ago.

Learn to take joke lil bro

FreestylinGOAT
putshort wrote:
To be clear, the Benko Gambit is an American Defense. Pal Benko was an American chess player from 1962 onwards. He played and popularized the Benko Gambit from the mid sixties onwards.

So, USA buys people from out of their country and they all of a sudden become theirs like hamburgers and french fries right?

USA, the founders of sushi, the kebab, and Peking Duck!! Come to America!!! Where we steal your cuisines and call it our own.

putshort
USA is the land of immigrants so, yeah.

And Tarrasch was German so his discoveries should count as German ones.
swdefrtg

happy

sawdof

https://www.chess.com/forum/view/game-showcase/openings-and-games-with-german-city-names

Zercs69

Berlin defense as a city, but apart from that no German opening

1-MG
Zercs69 wrote:

Berlin defense as a city, but apart from that no German opening

Does this count? Polish Opening: German Defense

SeanTheSheep021
Axorcist wrote:

Many openings are named after European countries or regions

To list a few:

Spanish, French, Sicilian, Italian, Dutch, Catalan, English, Scottish, Russian, Slav, Scandinavian.

But no German defense.

Why not?

The GErmans had some pretty strong players in the early days of chess.

You would expect that some main opening would be named after that country.

why no South Korean opening?

why no Japan opening?

why no China opening?

and so on.

OutOfCheese

"The Germans had some pretty strong players in the early days of chess"

The Germans had exactly zero players in the early days of chess as it was invented thousands of kilometers away and took centuries to reach the region that at some point even later than that became known as Germany.

So many chess terms already are German words I don't think we also need an opening named after us.

The_GeckoWZ

What would the Australian opening look like?

The_GeckoWZ

*makes the first move on a headstand*

OutOfCheese

Australian opening is just Black moves first.