The amount of conceitness packed in your answer is just too much for me.
As I see, you seem to be the greatest world leading specialist in the Shabalov variation. Therefore, I just apologized! I was mistakenly driven because of your first emails asking for advice, As it is, your asked advice was for the world elite...Far, very far and out of my league.
Your only interest in on bragging about your own "drumms".
But you throw unsubstantiated propositions such as the preposteous: "By the way, Dreev did not repeat this line in the last two years, probably not without reason"
Refuting your lousy comment, Dreev DID play again the variation, but his opponent was the first one to change (yes, indeed, "huge databases" are useless if one does not research them properly...)
[Event "Aeroflot Open"]
[Site "Moscow RUS"]
[Date "2006.02.12"]
[Round "5"]
[White "Shariyazdanov, A."]
[Black "Dreev, A."]
[Result "0-1"]
[ECO "D45"]
[WhiteElo "2583"]
[BlackElo "2697"]
[PlyCount "40"]
[EventDate "2006.02.08"]
[EventType "swiss"]
[EventRounds "9"]
[EventCountry "RUS"]
[Source "Mark Crowther"]
[SourceDate "2006.02.13"]
1. d4 d5 2. c4 c6 3. Nc3 Nf6 4. e3 e6 5. Nf3 Nbd7 6. Qc2 Bd6 7. g4 dxc4 8. Bxc4
e5 9. g5 Nd5 10. Bd2 ( instead of Sasikiran's 10.Ne4) O-O 11. O-O-O exd4 12. Nxd4 Nb4 13. Qb1 Ne5 14. Be2 c5 15.
Nf5 c4 16. Nxd6 Ned3+ 17. Bxd3 Nxd3+ 18. Kc2 Qxd6 19. Be1 Bg4 20. Rd2 Bf3 0-1
Not only Mr.Dreev (according to your OPINION and ANALYSIS) is dumb enough to play the "risky" and perhaps "inferior" dxc4 line, his opponent (the low ranked Shariyazdanov...
) is an idiot enough to avoid the advantageous line that you proposed as an improvement in Sasokiran-Dreev...Perhaps they both have to read what you have to say about it...
To end this comedy, in 2007, Dreev -who (being such an ass) must have arrived to his level just by chance, DID also play the line that -again-according to your ALLKNOWING WISDOM, is almost ridiculous, and this againt one of the experts in the Shabalov:
[Event "Chess Classic GM"]
[Site "Gausdal NOR"]
[Date "2007.04.20"]
[Round "3"]
[White "Krasenkow, M."]
[Black "Dreev, A."]
[Result "1/2-1/2"]
[ECO "D45"]
[WhiteElo "2661"]
[BlackElo "2633"]
[PlyCount "65"]
[EventDate "2007.04.18"]
[EventRounds "9"]
[EventCountry "NOR"]
[EventCategory "12"]
[Source "Mark Crowther"]
[SourceDate "2007.04.23"]
1. Nf3 d5 2. d4 Nf6 3. c4 c6 4. Nc3 e6 5. e3 Nbd7 6. Qc2 Bd6 7. g4 Nxg4 (the move you condemn so much...) 8. Rg1
Qf6 9. Rxg4 Qxf3 10. Rxg7 Nf6 11. Rg5 Ne4 12. Nxe4 Qxe4 13. Qxe4 dxe4 14. Rh5
f6 15. Bg2 f5 16. f3 exf3 17. Bxf3 Bd7 18. Bd2 O-O-O 19. Bc3 Be8 20. Rh3 Rg8
21. Kf2 Bg6 22. Rg1 f4 23. exf4 Rgf8 24. Ke2 Rxf4 25. Bg4 Rdf8 26. Bxe6+ Kd8
27. Rg2 Re8 28. Re3 c5 29. dxc5 Bxc5 30. Re5 Bd6 31. Re3 Bc5 32. Re5 Bd6 33.
Re3 1/2-1/2
Now, I don't want to finish without pointing out that your "improvement" 18.Rxd4 (a "wonderful postional shot" that poor devil Sasikiran -another patzer-
did also miss) does not, of course, lead to a better game for White that the one got in the game, because Black is not obliged to play your passive 18...Nb6, but the far more active 18...Nc5!
And, going back to another of your ill-founded affirmations, when you said before, trying to confront my:
"it is absolutely NORMAL for White to retain a small advantage in most openings" and your pedantic answer:
"I must completely disagree with that statement. Most opening variations lead to complete equality"
This is so unlikely that it os already on the verge of the hilarious, just see the statistics of every GREAT PLAYER (not you and me, please) of all times...If your statement could be true, the score for Black MUST be equal or so as the White score...Which OBVIOUSLY is not the case.
I must finished now and for good. It is a sad thing to try to get some "ego busting" from abusing your fellow-"forumites". I do not have to tolerate more abuse from you.
If you consider my articles SO DAMN LOUSY, all you have to do is to stay away from the. Anyway, it is obvious that I cannot offer you nothing of use, why bother to answer to a patzer like me, anyway?
Have a good time.