|
[quote author=Uberdeker link=1157021935/0#12 date=1159117397][quote author=Markovich link=1157021935/0#9 date=1158929934] As you will know, after 1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 e6 3. Nc3, 4. f3 is the stock answer to 3...b6. [/quote] The most effective punishment is simply 4. e4. Now 4. ...Bb7 ; 5. Bd3 Bb4 ; 6. Qe2 leaves the options of f4 and/or Ktf3 open, preceded or not with Bg5 and/or e5. White has an overwhelming advantage. I must say I find your taste for playing f3 in these positions where the immediate e4 is possible rather puzzling. Perhaps you were thinking of the slightly less dubious "Accelerated Queen's Indian" 1. d4 Ktf6 ; 2. c4 b6?! ; 3. Ktc3 Bb7. Here, 4. f3 is indeed one of the best answers and good for a nice advantage. The other method of preparing e4 is 4. Qc2 (chosen in a game Sämisch-Nimzowitsch which continued 4. ...Ktc6?! ; 5. d5?! if I remember correctly) and is also good for White. Once again if we compare to the English Defence 1. d4 e6 ; 2. c4 b6 ; 3. e4 Bb7 ; 4. Qc2 Qh4 and 4. Ktc3 Bb4 ; 5. Qc2 Qh4, we can see the advantages of not having played ...Ktf6. Instead of cramping Black's game, White's centre is merely a fragile target. The possibilty of playing ...Qh4, ...f5, and even ...Kte7 completely changes the assessment of these lines. Here are the critical lines of the English Defence that Black avoids with the move-order 1. d4 e6 ; 2. c4 Bb4+ ; 3. Ktc3 b6 : - 1. d4 e6 ; 2. c4 b6 ; 3. e4 Bb7 ; 4. Bd3 - 1. c4 b6 ; 2. Ktc3 Bb7 ; 3. e4 e6 ; 4. Ktf3 - 1. d4 e6 ; 2. c4 b6 ; 3. a3/ 1. c4 b6 ; 2. d4 Bb7 ; 3. a3 I don't think any of the lines left at White's disposal are liable to offer the slightest edge. [/quote] I'm not particularly enthusiastic for f2-f3. Still, while I must bow again to your theoretical knowledge, I probably will put my pawn on f3 next time the square is vacant, I have c4, d4 and Nc3, and someone plays ...b6. I admit I may indeed play e4 first if given the chance. But the thread is about 1...e6 2. c4 Bb4+, and I do maintain my view that White is still White after 1. d4 e6 2. c4 Bb4+ 3. Nc3. I have no particularly theoretical knowledge of the positions that arise from 3...b3 or 3...f5, but I very much doubt that either one is a better move than 3...Nf6, where White does (in my view) retain the advantage of the first move. I am no great believer in statistics, but I find 69 games in my data base with 3. Nc3 f5 4. e3, and White scored 65%. In the 41 games that went 4...Nf6 5. Bd3 Bxc3+, which I believe to be the critical path, White scored 54%. White also has 4. Nf3. Call me unsophisticated, but pawns on c4, d4, knights on c3, f3 looks like pretty good chess to me. Indeed, White scored 56% in 200 games that began 3. Nc3 f5 4. Nf3 Nf6 5. Qb3. I don't know what objectively is the best method of meeting 2...e6 3. c4 Bb4+, and I'm sure that 4. Bd2 is a good move, but it's very hard for me to believe that a straightforward move like 4. Nc3 leads to easy equality for Black, not matter what his next move is.
|