|
I'm still searching for the right opening against 1.c4. My current repertoire is the semislav against d4 and the taimanov against e4. So of course I am thinking now of playing 1.c4 c6, to transpose into the semislav, but there is one move that frightenend me a bit, 2. e4 ... most gm's respond d5 as black, but I don't like this panov attack, it is almost a forced draw, I can not imagine myself to play this against a much lower rated player, and I also want to play dynamic, it is just my nature, so I also do not want to play this against a stronger player ... so I am thinking of 1.c4 c6 2. e4 e5!?, can you recommend this to me? Is it really sound? I think I lately saw a game from Alekseev or Jakovenko playing something of this g6 d6 c6 Bg7 stuff (although I think it was against d4, but I do not think it really matters if you play this also against c4). I think I could like it, I also like to play tiger's modern (g6 Bg7 d6 a6) in blitz, although you can expand better on queenside there ... Currently I try to play the symmetrical english, I kind of like if I get into an eagle position in the symmetrical English, but this is not always possible, at least not according to Hansen, The Symmetrical English, for example 1.c4 c5 Nc3 Nc6 g3 g6 it always ends up in a 'pure symmetrical', without queenside fianchetto, there is a lot of struggle and also good winning chances, but this opening does not seem exactly to my taste, I find it quite hard to find a plan in these very closed positions, although in my fritz powerbook I found a queenside fianchetto move nevertheless, 1.c4 c5 2.Nc3 Nc6 3. g3 g6 4.Bg2 Bg7 5.Nf3 b6!? followed by the moves Bxc3!? Bb7 d6 Qc7 0-0-0!? ... but I am not so sure ... also tried out c4 e5, but in these positions I only sympathize with the Keres-Variation, but white can prevent the keres variation it seems to, 1.c4 e5 2. Nc3 Nf6 3. Nf3 and black cannot play c6, and the e4-variation seems dubious to me ... 3. ... e4 4. Ng4 b5 ... I don't like it ... and the e5-rest ... white is just too solid with the king's fianchetto, and the center pawns do not brake through, but white has a bit of play on the queenside and put pressure on you, and you can only defend on queenside, it is very hard to play for advantage ... so is c4 c6 e4 e5 really sound? Otherwise I will stay with the symmetrical. Or what do you play against 1. c4?
|