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Very Hot Topic (More than 25 Replies) QG 3.Nc3 Bb4!? (Read 24538 times)
Markovich
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Re: QG 3.Nc3 Bb4!?
Reply #19 - 02/01/07 at 14:21:58
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kylemeister wrote on 01/31/07 at 20:47:29:
I think that that "early ...d5 is bad" view was the consensus a few decades ago but isn't really held to be true any more.  Though it seems that Black is generally advised to recapture on d5 with a piece (in at least some cases with the queen) ...

Kasparov did play the "delayed Saemisch" for a while in the '80s.  Raymond Keene recommended it in a d4 repertoire book back then; someone mentioned here recently that IM Shereshevsky did the same in his "The Soviet Chess Conveyor."


In marginal support of what you say here, there is this line:  1. d4 Nf6  2. c4 e6  3. Nc3 Bb4  4. a3 (I like this dynamic move, in defiance of vogue) 4...Bxc3+  5. bxc3 c5  6. e3 Nc6  7. Bd3 0-0  8. Ne2 e5  9. 0-0 e4  10. Bb1 (the sterotypical rejoinder to all Black systems with early ...e4, with the plan of letting Black eat the c4-pawn and just proceeding with f3 and so forth) 10...d5!?.  This was played in another of my ongoing CC games.  Black's idea is quite radical; I could find only one game in my data base -- some Englishman on the Black side, I forget who.  Black invites 11. cxd5 Qxd5 (as was played in my database) and bets that with all his activity, he'll be able to stymie White's attempts to build a dominating pawn center.  I decided not to let Black's queen into the center so readily, and played (instead of 11. cxd5) 11. Ng3.  I'm not sure this was correct; we'll see how it turns out.  No help, please.

But in any case, I have little confidence in Black's idea.
  

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Re: QG 3.Nc3 Bb4!?
Reply #18 - 02/01/07 at 13:57:51
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Willempie wrote on 02/01/07 at 13:34:41:
Ptero wrote on 02/01/07 at 11:33:24:
Willempie wrote on 02/01/07 at 10:50:47:
I quite disagree. It is true many blacks mishandle the lines after Bxc3, however I dont see anything positive about white's position after 5..Be7. You play a QGD with the bishop locked in on c1 and the not so useful tempo a3.


5...Be7 is of course a viable option. But white can try (among other choices) 6.Nf3 0-0 7.b4!?, making good use of 5.a3 - as Botvinnik and Petrosian have played. I think white can hope for a slight edge.

Of course that is an option, but I don like the looks of 7..a5 and then 8.b5 c5 for white.


I would much rather be White after 4. e3 Nf6  5. a3 Be7, but I agree that since ...d5 is in, the withdrawal of the bishop is better than the exchange on c3.  I wonder if White can avoid this by playing 4. a3 immediately.
  

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Re: QG 3.Nc3 Bb4!?
Reply #17 - 02/01/07 at 13:55:58
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interesting stuff. 
on a related note, how should White react to 1. d4 d5 2. c4 e6 3. Nf3 Bb4+?

i suppose one could play 4. Nc3 expecting a Ragozin after 4... Nf6, but is there any way to punish this move order?
  
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Re: QG 3.Nc3 Bb4!?
Reply #16 - 02/01/07 at 13:50:34
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kylemeister wrote on 01/31/07 at 20:47:29:
I think that that "early ...d5 is bad" view was the consensus a few decades ago but isn't really held to be true any more.  Though it seems that Black is generally advised to recapture on d5 with a piece (in at least some cases with the queen) ...

Kasparov did play the "delayed Saemisch" for a while in the '80s.  Raymond Keene recommended it in a d4 repertoire book back then; someone mentioned here recently that IM Shereshevsky did the same in his "The Soviet Chess Conveyor."


I'm not sure we're talking about the same thing.  If the exchange on c3 has occurred and White has e3 in, ...d5 is a bad move, more or less.  Black generally has no good option to recapture on d5 with a piece.  For example 1. d4 Nf6  2. c4 e6  3. Nc3 Bb4  4. a3 Bxc3+  5. bxc3 c5  6. e3 d5?!  7. cxd5, or 6...Nc6  7. Bd3 d5?!  8. cxd5 or, as in an ongoing CC game of mine, 6...b6  7. Ne2! Bb7  8. Ng3 0-0  9. Bd3 (I would have welcomed 9...Bxg7) 9...d5?! 10. cxd5.  It continued 10...exd5  11. 0-0 Nc6  12. f3 Re8  13. Ra2 Rc8  14. Re2 g6!?  15. Bb2 and Black simply could not prevent e3-e4.  There are indeed many ways for Black to get ...d5 in against White's early e3, and essentially all of them are bad.  One initially has the impression that Black is doing well with his central pawn, e-file, and better development.  But often in fact, he is being crushed.

Now it is true that if White plays f3 before e3, most notably as in 4. f3 d5  5. a3 Bxc3  6. bxc3 c5, Black can play ...d5 and may (indeed must, if he wants to avoid the pawn-roller variation) recapture on d5 with a piece.  But that is nothing new; it was well known in the 1950s.  f3 is a very time-consuming move, and often after 4. a3 if White plays a careless f3, Black just blockades him to death.
  

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Re: QG 3.Nc3 Bb4!?
Reply #15 - 02/01/07 at 13:34:41
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Ptero wrote on 02/01/07 at 11:33:24:
Willempie wrote on 02/01/07 at 10:50:47:
I quite disagree. It is true many blacks mishandle the lines after Bxc3, however I dont see anything positive about white's position after 5..Be7. You play a QGD with the bishop locked in on c1 and the not so useful tempo a3.


5...Be7 is of course a viable option. But white can try (among other choices) 6.Nf3 0-0 7.b4!?, making good use of 5.a3 - as Botvinnik and Petrosian have played. I think white can hope for a slight edge.

Of course that is an option, but I don like the looks of 7..a5 and then 8.b5 c5 for white.
  

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Re: QG 3.Nc3 Bb4!?
Reply #14 - 02/01/07 at 13:21:44
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Ptero wrote on 01/31/07 at 18:29:18:
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How to proceed against the unusual 3-,Bb4!?


Well, after 1.d4 d5 2.c4 e6 3.Nc3 Bb4 4.e3!? Nf6 5.a3 white gets a rather nice version of the Nimzo, recall Botvinnik-Capablanca 1938. Shouldn't be all that troublesome to handle, no? 
 

If after 5.a3 Bxc3 6. bxc3 Nc6 7. cxd5 exd5 How does 6.c4 look?
  
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Re: QG 3.Nc3 Bb4!?
Reply #13 - 02/01/07 at 11:33:24
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Willempie wrote on 02/01/07 at 10:50:47:
I quite disagree. It is true many blacks mishandle the lines after Bxc3, however I dont see anything positive about white's position after 5..Be7. You play a QGD with the bishop locked in on c1 and the not so useful tempo a3.


5...Be7 is of course a viable option. But white can try (among other choices) 6.Nf3 0-0 7.b4!?, making good use of 5.a3 - as Botvinnik and Petrosian have played. I think white can hope for a slight edge.
  
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Re: QG 3.Nc3 Bb4!?
Reply #12 - 02/01/07 at 10:50:47
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Ptero wrote on 01/31/07 at 18:29:18:
Quote:
 
How to proceed against the unusual 3-,Bb4!?


Well, after 1.d4 d5 2.c4 e6 3.Nc3 Bb4 4.e3!? Nf6 5.a3 white gets a rather nice version of the Nimzo, recall Botvinnik-Capablanca 1938. Shouldn't be all that troublesome to handle, no? 
 

I quite disagree. It is true many blacks mishandle the lines after Bxc3, however I dont see anything positive about white's position after 5..Be7. You play a QGD with the bishop locked in on c1 and the not so useful tempo a3. Here's a recent example, where white gainst nothing from the opening and even loses:
[Event "SWE-ch"]
[Site "Gothenburg"]
[Date "2006.07.01"]
[Round "4"]
[White "Eriksson,Johan"]
[Black "Berg,Emanuel"]
[Result "0-1"]
[Eco "E51"]
1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 e6 3.Nc3 Bb4 4.e3 d5 5.a3 Be7 6.Nf3 0-0 7.Bd3 dxc4 8.Bxc4 c5 
9.0-0 a6 10.dxc5 Qxd1 11.Rxd1 Bxc5 12.b4 Be7 13.e4 b5 14.Bd3 Bb7 15.Bg5 h6 16.Bh4 Nbd7 17.Be2 Rac8 18.Rac1 g5 19.Bg3 Nb6 20.e5 Nfd5 21.Nxd5 Bxd5 22.Nd4 Rfd8 23.Rxc8 Rxc8 24.f4 Rc3 25.f5 Rxa3 26.fxe6 fxe6 27.Bg4 Bxb4 28.Nxe6 Bb3 29.Rd8+ Kf7 30.Nc7 Ra1+ 31.Kf2 Bc5+ 32.Ke2 Bc4+ 33.Kd2 Ra2+ 34.Kc1 Ba3+ 35.Kb1 Rb2+ 36.Ka1 Ra2+ 37.Kb1 Rb2+ 38.Ka1 Kg6 9.Bf3 Ra2+ 40.Kb1 Rb2+ 41.Ka1 Na4 42.Be4+ Kh5 43.Be1 Nc5 44.Bf3+ g4 45.Bd1 Ra2+ 46.Kb1 Rb2+ 47.Ka1 Rxg2 48.h3 Bb2+ 49.Kb1 Bxe5 50.hxg4+ Kg6 51.Bc2+ Kf7 0-1
  

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Re: QG 3.Nc3 Bb4!?
Reply #11 - 02/01/07 at 10:45:43
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Quote:
However, he does not address the point of what Black should do after 4...d5 5.a3.


Aagaard does not offer one. 4...d5 is never even mentioned in many sources. Possibly due to that there is no antidote to 5.a3. (I don't know these lines myself.)
  

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Re: QG 3.Nc3 Bb4!?
Reply #10 - 02/01/07 at 10:29:32
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Quote:
After 5...Bxc3+ 6.bxc3, White has a favourable Samisch variation, where he can dissolve his doubled pawns by a subsequent cxd5. If Black is to play the 4...d5 move-order, he needs an antidote to 5.a3, and as far as I can see, Aagaard does not offer one.


Interesting. Hmm...
Wonder if that means there are no known antidote or that Aagard simply doesnt give it to you... Undecided
  
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Re: QG 3.Nc3 Bb4!?
Reply #9 - 02/01/07 at 09:19:28
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I saw in a review of "The Nimzoindian Defence, The Easy Way" (http://www.chessbase.com/newsdetail.asp?newsid=3364 ) that Aagaard recommends 1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 e6 3.Nc3 Bb4 4.e3 d5 for black.

Quote:
Against 4.e3, Aagaard goes out of his way to recommend the move-order 4...d5, rather than 4...0-0. His idea is to avoid the line 4...0-0 5.Nge2, the point being that after 4...d5 5.Nge2 is ineffective because of 5...dxc4. However, he does not address the point of what Black should do after 4...d5 5.a3. This is the move which has had 4...d5 under a cloud, ever since the famous Botvinnik-Capablanca game, from AVRO 1938. After 5...Bxc3+ 6.bxc3, White has a favourable Samisch variation, where he can dissolve his doubled pawns by a subsequent cxd5. If Black is to play the 4...d5 move-order, he needs an antidote to 5.a3, and as far as I can see, Aagaard does not offer one.
  

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Re: QG 3.Nc3 Bb4!?
Reply #8 - 02/01/07 at 08:30:37
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Mnb,

I think a disadvantage with your suggested move order is that it allows black to avoid the powerful bishop at d3.
Black plays 6..c6 and Bf5 (or first an eventual Ne7 if needed)
  
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Re: QG 3.Nc3 Bb4!?
Reply #7 - 01/31/07 at 22:39:29
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If this is true - which I don't know - then in this particular case 1.d4 d5 2.c4 e6 3.Nc3 Bb4 4.cxd5 is most precise and only after exd5 5.a3 Bxc3 6.bxc3 then 7.e3.
  

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Re: QG 3.Nc3 Bb4!?
Reply #6 - 01/31/07 at 20:47:29
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I think that that "early ...d5 is bad" view was the consensus a few decades ago but isn't really held to be true any more.  Though it seems that Black is generally advised to recapture on d5 with a piece (in at least some cases with the queen) ...

Kasparov did play the "delayed Saemisch" for a while in the '80s.  Raymond Keene recommended it in a d4 repertoire book back then; someone mentioned here recently that IM Shereshevsky did the same in his "The Soviet Chess Conveyor."
  
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Re: QG 3.Nc3 Bb4!?
Reply #5 - 01/31/07 at 19:45:53
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Markovich,

Thanks for your explanations.
If I am not mistaken, Kasparov played something like that for a period - through a Rubinstein moveorder.
Your suggested plan also is related to the QG exchange - which suits me fine Smiley
  
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