Gilmour wrote on 05/20/09 at 16:59:14:Oh man,
where to start ... and where to end. So in "short"
1. I canīt see that the scandinavian is "hammered" in grandmaster play. Especially with regard to black players often being weaker than their opponents, their results are really acceptable.
Tiviakov lost a few games in the Ne5-variation, but overall his results are more than o.k. And greek GM Kontronias lately also more and more becomes an scandinavian specialist with good results.
His results of late are not "more than ok" (Ni, Svidler, Gashimov all beat him recently, he hasn't beaten a GM with it since before getting beat those three consecutive times). The novelty value that 3...Qd6 originally had has mostly worn off.
Using the fact black tends to be lower rated is an excuse. Higher rateds aren't using it, wait for it...because it's not as good as you think.
Just like the best of the best aren't using the French with any regularity, because 1...e5 and the Sicilian are just plain better.
Quote:And by the way - may be you recognized that the french - especially in the upper class over 2650 is regularely smashed. Even specialists like Gurevich; Bareev seldom got a chance in this area and
Morozewich also "forgot" his french.
If you see the results of Anand, Svidler and Adams against the french it is easy to see that the french demands much of itīs followers.
Apparently you haven't seen Adams' score against Morozevich in the 3...Be7 Tarrasch, have you? +1 =2 -2 is not
smashing. Yeah, he smashes everyone else, but he doesn't do well in that variation. Adams, being the Tarrasch specialist that he is, struggling against something shows the French is fine against him.
Svidler's record against 2500+ is not impressive. +9 -8 and a ton of draws. That is not
smashing.
Anand does own the French, I'll give you that one. Anand is also a world champion, he owns a lot of things. +18 -4 and some draws is awesome.
Quote:2. In the Tarrasch with Qxd5 the queen moves to d6 after Bc4 and later often goes to c7.
Now letīs look at the Qd6 scandinavian. There are several ways of handling this position. One of those possibilities is the formation e6; a6/b5 and Bb7 (if white allows this of course); the queen takes the journey Dxd5- d6 followed by c7. If you compare the structure of these two variations there are striking similarities:
pawn on e6; queen on c7; light squared bishop is developed on the queenside.
Notice the words
if white allows this. White has no choice in the Qxd5 Tarrasch, he has a very broad choice, however, against the Scandinavian.
Quote:3. Fort knox and Caro-Kann
One of the strategies in the caro-Kann is to give up the bishop pair and then to build up light squared control with pawns and knights. No matter if you take the caro kann classical Capablanca, the two-knights or some panow variations black often parts with the bishop pair . So I canīt agree that in the caro-kann black keeps the bishop pair.
Parting with the bishop pair is only one aspect of it. It's the combination of having surrendered them,
and the pawn structure.
The structure is similar, the play, however, is markedly different. Nobody is going to argue the Fort Knox is better than the Caro-Kann.