Smash the Englund Gambit with 4.Qd5 For White by NM Ruben Mashal

Turn Your Opponent’s Main Idea… Into the Seed of Their Own Destruction That is the spirit behind the repertoires of…

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Last Updated : January 4, 2026

Turn Your Opponent’s Main Idea…
Into the Seed of Their Own Destruction

That is the spirit behind the repertoires of National Master Ruben Mashal, from Argentina

His first course, Smash the King’s Indian with 6.h3, offered a repertoire designed to make Black’s main reaction in the KID actively bad—the f7–f5 break.

In his second course, Mashal offers a simple and crystal-clear solution against one of the replies to 1.d4 that causes the most damage at club level:

Accept The Englund Gambit.
Secure The Extra Pawn
And Ask: “Now what?”

That too, is the philosophy behind Smash the Englund Gambit with 4.Qd5.

The Englund Gambit (1.d4 e5!?) is so popular below 2000 FIDE because it allows Black to unleash countless tricks aimed at winning the game right out of the opening.

Personalities like GothamChess and Eric Rosen have taught it to millions of viewers, making it more popular than ever.

And while it has a reputation for being unsound and theoretically refuted, you should never underestimate it. Even Magnus Carlsen has fallen victim to one of its well-known traps.
(And young Magnus Carlsen was not exactly famous for falling into traps lightly.)

The reason is simple.

You face the Englund maybe once every twenty games and try to “figure it out” over the board. Your opponent, on the other hand, knows every trap by heart and feels perfectly at home in the sharp positions that arise—where a single inaccuracy can be fatal.

That problem ends here. With fewer than 50 total lines and just 4 theory chapters, this course gives you:

A Simple Solution,
Backed By Practical Results,
That Keeps The Fight On Your Terms.

With 4.Qd5, you immediately neutralize Black’s intentions of attacking b2 (after the typical bishop development from c1), assert stronger central control, and force Black to abandon any realistic hope of recovering the pawn.


e5 is defended.
Our pieces go to natural squares, while Black’s can’t.
We keep a clear advantage from move 4.

Black may try to chase your queen—but doing so comes at a clear cost: delayed development and an awkward king.

Meanwhile, your pieces develop naturally to their best squares., your material advantage is reinforced by positional superiority, and Black’s position becomes simply bad.

This repertoire is not limited to the main line with 3…Qe7. It also covers the Classical development without 3…Qe7; the Hartlaub–Charlick Gambit (2…d6); and secondary lines such as 2…Bc5 and 2…f6.

All guided by the same principles:

✅ Safe structures that minimize Black’s counterplay
✅ Strategic plans aimed at securing a stable, lasting advantage
✅ Clear methods to neutralize Black’s aggression and return the initiative to White
✅ Model games that illustrate the key ideas in practice

This course teaches you how to face the Englund Gambit with confidence—without memorizing endless variations—keeping full control of the game, frustrating Black’s tactical ambitions, and steering the position toward structures where your extra pawn actually matters.

Curriculum

  • 1 Section
  • 7 Lessons
  • Lifetime
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