woofwoof wrote on 10/08/07 at 18:41:10:
Willempie wrote on 10/08/07 at 17:47:30:
Tal's play against the Caro should deserve a mention in any case...
Err....didnt Tal have a miserable time against it?? It was due to his inability to play against the CK which ultimately killed him in 61??
What a striking idea, the embittered Tal cursing the Caro from his death bed. Where did you get this?
On this thread in general, an awful lot of this stuff is small potatoes. Some system in the main line Caro? Come on.
Where you have a revolutionary reappraisal of how to play an opening, or how in general to play the chess openings, that is what could possibly qualify for the honor proposed here. That's why I think the Boleslavsky Sicilian is quite important. Something somewhat big within the past couple of decades was Nf3 and soon Rb1 versus the Gruenfeld. I remember when the textbooks all said that Nf3 was an outright error.
But looking back, you would have to say Evans' Gambit was the Big One of the early 19th Century; the Tarrasch Defense of the latter 19th; the Indian Systems and Alekhine's Defense of the early 20th. These last really have to be the hydrogen bombs; there was a complete reappraisal of how to play the chess openings.
Minor but interesting:
The refutation of the Moeller Attack, which I believe is due to Lajos Portisch.
9. Qe2 and Rd1 used to be considered quite strong against the Open until Kortchnoi showed how Black could equalize. That judgement has been unchallenged for at least 20 years.
Ponomariov's demonstration that Black handily survives Zaitsev's piece sac vs. the Open.