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Very Hot Topic (More than 25 Replies) C00-C19: Anti-chess (Read 46693 times)
IsaVulpes
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Re: Anti-chess
Reply #43 - 12/09/07 at 19:57:43
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kalle99 wrote on 12/09/07 at 12:58:22:

"-It is as dynamic as the French advance structures."  WRONG! First of all !! The advance variation is whites choice !! Not blacks! I am talking about a passive black way to play the french. 

Even in the advance variation the game can become VERY sharp with wild attacking games.
And once black is out of the "box" and the light squared bishop comes to life the position can become VERY dynamic. You are not close to that in the 3...dxe4 variation.  And you talk about tactical. If you look at it that way it will be difficult to find ANY position in chess that does NOT contain tactics. Of course some endgame can become fairly tactical but in other position they are MORE or MUCH MORE tactics.


Let me get that straight:
a) You dislike 1.e4 e6 2.d4 d5 3.Nc3 de4: because of the arising positional play
b) You like the Advance Variation (1.e4 e6 2.d4 d5 3.e5) because of the arising tactical play

Why don't you just play the Advance Variation then?
You avoid the variation you dislike the most and get, what you call, "interesting play". 

And well, don't go all crazy about "bad positional games", you have to accept that there are people who like other parts of chess than you do.
Not everyone is in wild sacrificing, other people like to win seemingly drawish positions since this shows superiority as well.

What would you say to someone who calls you an "immature frenzied boy", because you dont understand the beauties of positional play and just want tactical games? Maybe he even says "1.e4 is not real chess,   sac, sac, mate has nothing to do with chess, where you have to be very cool and thoughtful" or something like that. If you answer "thats complete BS" then consider what you said in this thread...
  
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Bibs
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Re: Anti-chess
Reply #42 - 12/09/07 at 13:10:04
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No use in getting into "my opening is better than yours" any more than "My dad is bigger than yours" ever helped resolve any playground disputes.

Less blathering, more study.

Checking my files, article in CBM magazine 107 may also help you. 

Shall we all focus on chess theory...?

  
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kalle99
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Re: Anti-chess
Reply #41 - 12/09/07 at 12:58:22
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Willempie wrote on 12/09/07 at 11:43:21:
kalle99 wrote on 12/09/07 at 09:30:23:
Come on guys!! 

What I wrote was :

First of all..Have you really played someone who knows how to play against this system ?

Second I didnt see anything in your reply telling me where the universlism is in this french 3..dxe4 opening. 

* In this opening you dont get too many different kind of endgames. Very many are the same.

* The game doesnt get very tactical.

* Its not dynamic.

* Its rather passive. When white get a space advantage wich he can hold for a long time if he so wishes. Black is passive and doesnt have much more counterplay than the -c5 push. A push that white is just sitting and waiting for.

*Compare this to other french setups. Where black is very active once he has got out of whites grip. You can get offensive king side attacks as well as a nice attack on the queenside. In those french set ups you will be able to play more different endgames (wich will make you a better player as a whole).

By chosing a different french set up you will be a better player. Not only that you will have much more fun when playing chess also !!

Can it be better ?


Come on and say where I am wrong (statement above).

-Your first point is wrong. See below
-Depends on how you define tactical. The endgames can get very tactical as the light pieces usually stay on the board. Also black often sacs the b6-pawn (after dxc5). Also after the thematic c5 you usually get an open centre, where the initiative or nullifying it is of the utmost importance.
-It is as dynamic as the French advance structures. After all there is no pawn chain dictating the plans.
-Yes it is a bit passive, but there is also e5 to contemplate.
-If you want to execute kingside attacks dont play the French. You dont get them. And no, from my own experience you will get very similar endgames from most variations. This variation being one that is different (with most you get hanging pawns in the centre or a closed endgame in which knights are invaluable).

Your last remark I really dont get. How is deliberately avoiding variations helping your chess? I never play this line, but I cant say I am a better player for it Wink
Also many GM's use this line (and its close cousin a move later) and there are quite some interesting games with it. Anand and Van Wely play this on occasion, while a boring guy like Shirov plays the Burn with quite some dynamism (there is a win of his against Polgar which is well worth analysing as there are many pawns flying around).

Lastly a general remark. Your comments resemble much the comments of the knights in the middle ages (to further the chess=war analogy), where digging in was considered unnoble. Yet in the hunbdred years war or when facing the peasant armies in Holland they consistently got their behind kicked when they went for "manly solutions Wink



"-It is as dynamic as the French advance structures."  WRONG! First of all !! The advance variation is whites choice !! Not blacks! I am talking about a passive black way to play the french. 

Even in the advance variation the game can become VERY sharp with wild attacking games.
And once black is out of the "box" and the light squared bishop comes to life the position can become VERY dynamic. You are not close to that in the 3...dxe4 variation.  And you talk about tactical. If you look at it that way it will be difficult to find ANY position in chess that does NOT contain tactics. Of course some endgame can become fairly tactical but in other position they are MORE or MUCH MORE tactics.

And you mentioned that GM use this line. Well they are in a different position. A half point could mean 100 000 $ on a specific occasion for them. 

So I see it that they just use it to play with  highest safety. The absolut top does NOT use Rubinstein french regulary . Not one singel player !!

I dont count Burn variation to  3...dxe4. In the burn variation you have gxf6 systems which is rather dynamic and unclear positions often arise.

Your last remark I really dont get. How is deliberately avoiding variations helping your chess?


Well You have a choice to take up another opening (or branch of the french) that develops your game BETTER than the dry  3...dxe4. 


Please compare The dry french 3..dxe4 with the Pirc (with my last post in context).


And in my last post I compared this boring opening with for (example ) the Pirc defense. I didnt get a reaction of that. 

In pirc you are "trained" in your games to :

Handle 

* Ruy Lopez positions

* Sicilian positions

* Kings Indian positions

* And EVEN french positions !!! 

* You have many different endgames to play also.


Try to write a similair list from the dry 3...dxe4 french.

And in my last post I compared this boring opening with for (example ) the Pirc defense. I didnt get a reaction of that. 


Silence = You dont have any argument ?

What do you say about it ?


p.s (Its good to hear that you say that the dry  3..dxe4 "is a bit passive". Thanks! )

  

"I Often see in chess forums people asking : " What is the current status of that line ?"&&&&Its a good reasonable question,but who can claim that he knows the answer ?!&&&&Semko Semkov Januari 2008
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Re: Anti-chess
Reply #40 - 12/09/07 at 12:51:10
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Prince Nez's stance is entirely correct. Kalle is just talking junk and trying to attract attention, and your offended reactions are exactly what he was trying to provoke. Now you are all looking as silly as he is. 
I am sorry HGMan, but "old woman" is a term that evokes a strong visual image and in a more appropriate context it would be perfectly justified to use it (for example, when referring to a slow-swinging batsman in cricket or baseball). Nothing offensive about that. 
In fact what is offensive is this syrupy, uneducated, middle-American, totalitarian, politically correct bullshit whereby any reference to the intrinsic differences between genders and age-groups and the cultural or social differences between races is considered to be a mark of bigotry.
I refer you to Noam Chomsky's works for a more informed and better expressed view of this subject.
  
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Re: Anti-chess
Reply #39 - 12/09/07 at 12:42:42
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Apart from Willempie's comments I would like to add:

White often attacks and sacrifices material, which of course involves tactical play. Some examples:
Timman-Hubner 1-0, 2006 (White sacs bishop for decisive attack)
Motylev-Roiz 1-0, 2005 (White sacs bishop for strong attack)
Kotronias-Franchini 1-0, 2005 (300 rating points difference here, but shows that the Fort Knox not is a guaranteed draw)

On the other hand, this also leads to possibilities for Black to win games by defending well.

Do you mean you are upset because your opponents play an opening where they don't develop as chess players? That's unusual, I have never thought that way.

Btw, my latest game as White against 3.-,dxe4 started as follows:
1.e4 e6 2.d4 d5 3.Nc3 dxe4 4.Nxe4 Nf6 5.Nxf6+ Qxf6 6.Nf3 h6 7.Bb5+ Bd7 8.Qe2 a6 9.Bc4 (9.Bxd7+ is probably better) 9.-,Nc6 10.d5!? (Black has no problems after 10.c3 Bd6 followed by e5) 10.-,Bb4+! 11.c3 Bxc3+ 12.bxc3 Qxc3+ 13.Qd2 and I have at least succeded in creating a complicated position against a draw-lusting lower rated opponent! Now 13.-,Qxc4 is best, with unclear play, instead 13.-,Qxa1 followed.
  
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Willempie
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Re: Anti-chess
Reply #38 - 12/09/07 at 11:43:21
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kalle99 wrote on 12/09/07 at 09:30:23:
Come on guys!! 

What I wrote was :

First of all..Have you really played someone who knows how to play against this system ?

Second I didnt see anything in your reply telling me where the universlism is in this french 3..dxe4 opening. 

* In this opening you dont get too many different kind of endgames. Very many are the same.

* The game doesnt get very tactical.

* Its not dynamic.

* Its rather passive. When white get a space advantage wich he can hold for a long time if he so wishes. Black is passive and doesnt have much more counterplay than the -c5 push. A push that white is just sitting and waiting for.

*Compare this to other french setups. Where black is very active once he has got out of whites grip. You can get offensive king side attacks as well as a nice attack on the queenside. In those french set ups you will be able to play more different endgames (wich will make you a better player as a whole).

By chosing a different french set up you will be a better player. Not only that you will have much more fun when playing chess also !!

Can it be better ?


Come on and say where I am wrong (statement above).

-Your first point is wrong. See below
-Depends on how you define tactical. The endgames can get very tactical as the light pieces usually stay on the board. Also black often sacs the b6-pawn (after dxc5). Also after the thematic c5 you usually get an open centre, where the initiative or nullifying it is of the utmost importance.
-It is as dynamic as the French advance structures. After all there is no pawn chain dictating the plans.
-Yes it is a bit passive, but there is also e5 to contemplate.
-If you want to execute kingside attacks dont play the French. You dont get them. And no, from my own experience you will get very similar endgames from most variations. This variation being one that is different (with most you get hanging pawns in the centre or a closed endgame in which knights are invaluable).

Your last remark I really dont get. How is deliberately avoiding variations helping your chess? I never play this line, but I cant say I am a better player for it Wink
Also many GM's use this line (and its close cousin a move later) and there are quite some interesting games with it. Anand and Van Wely play this on occasion, while a boring guy like Shirov plays the Burn with quite some dynamism (there is a win of his against Polgar which is well worth analysing as there are many pawns flying around).

Lastly a general remark. Your comments resemble much the comments of the knights in the middle ages (to further the chess=war analogy), where digging in was considered unnoble. Yet in the hunbdred years war or when facing the peasant armies in Holland they consistently got their behind kicked when they went for "manly solutions Wink
  

If nothing else works, a total pig-headed unwillingness to look facts in the face will see us through.
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kalle99
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Re: Anti-chess
Reply #37 - 12/09/07 at 09:30:23
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Come on guys!! 

What I wrote was :

First of all..Have you really played someone who knows how to play against this system ?

Second I didnt see anything in your reply telling me where the universlism is in this french 3..dxe4 opening. 

* In this opening you dont get too many different kind of endgames. Very many are the same.

* The game doesnt get very tactical.

* Its not dynamic.

* Its rather passive. When white get a space advantage wich he can hold for a long time if he so wishes. Black is passive and doesnt have much more counterplay than the -c5 push. A push that white is just sitting and waiting for.

*Compare this to other french setups. Where black is very active once he has got out of whites grip. You can get offensive king side attacks as well as a nice attack on the queenside. In those french set ups you will be able to play more different endgames (wich will make you a better player as a whole).

By chosing a different french set up you will be a better player. Not only that you will have much more fun when playing chess also !!

Can it be better ?


Come on and say where I am wrong (statement above).

The point is that I am right when saying that this opening is NOT a "universal opening" .

It means it leads to passive games. Not dynamic. Very defensive game. Just sitting and waiting for a mistake (with this opening you cant hardly count on pushing or pressing for the win).

A game you can play with very limited fantasy. Your main goal in this opening is to exchange exchange exchange exchange . Destroy destroy destroy everything white can do.  And play -c5.  

An opening which do not develop your game as a whole compared to many other black openings. Compare it to Pirc for instance. When playing Pirc you will learn to handle Ruy Lopez type of positions,Sicilian type of position,Kings Indian type of positons, and EVEN french type of positions!!! (1.e4 d6 2. d4 Nf6 3. f3 d5 4. e5 Ng8).
In the Pirc you also get less space BUT you have a lot more dynamic counterplay AND you get some "universal training" at the same time. You will play different type of endgames. Perhaps french 3..dxe4 loses less then the Pirc...or have better statistics. But it does NOT mean that the opening is better in developing your chess skill.

In a must win game I am sure most people would play something else than the french with 3...dxe4.

This is my arguments. If someone (HGman) just answer  me "Albatross" then I suspect that I am not proven wrong.

And I will also stop to use a "macho language". That makes this debate far too easy for you. You can focus on HOW I say things not WHAT I say.
  

"I Often see in chess forums people asking : " What is the current status of that line ?"&&&&Its a good reasonable question,but who can claim that he knows the answer ?!&&&&Semko Semkov Januari 2008
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Re: Anti-chess
Reply #36 - 12/09/07 at 07:50:26
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Count me in with HgMan.   

The terms certainly seemed to be used with the intent to be somehwat offensive, or at least mildly abrasive.  And while I personally took no offense, I felt they were somewhat out of line. Perhaps in a not-too-serious fashion, but definitely opened a window showing only a stilted and skewed perspective, and a desire to get under people's skin.


In a word:  Immature.
  

I know I've made some very poor decisions recently, but I can give you my complete assurance that my work will be back to normal. I've still got the greatest enthusiasm and confidence in the mission.
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Re: Anti-chess
Reply #35 - 12/09/07 at 07:06:04
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*sigh*  Sad

I can't quite remember specific examples but I feel very confident in saying that I have read and heard openings like the dxe4 French or the Colle or the Caro-Kann called openings for "old men."   Is that offensive too?  And if not, why not?   Those were meant to be rhetorical quesions so no answers are really necessary.  

And the thing he wrote about a sexual fetish said or implied nothing about homosexuals or homosexuality.   He was making a joke or an attempt at one.  Not funny, I agree.   But hardly insulting or offensive.   

I guess we have some significantly different understandings in this thread of what is offensive.   Disagreement among chess players, go figure.  Grin
  

We work in the dark - we do what we can - we give what we have. Our doubt is our passion and our passion is our task. The rest is the madness of art. &&~ Henry James
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Re: Anti-chess
Reply #34 - 12/09/07 at 06:38:03
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Anyway I gave up the 3... dxe4 french because 4. Nxe4 Nd7 5. Bd3! (or 5. Nf3 Ngf6 6. Nxf6 Nxf6 7. Bd3!) is so strong last time I checked years ago. 
White just takes on c5, plays Bd2/Qe2/0-0-0 and gets (too much) of an interesting game. Any thoughts? Undecided
  
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Re: Anti-chess
Reply #33 - 12/09/07 at 06:24:22
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Kalle: I hope your children won't turn out gay. 

(if you ever grow up and have children that is)

Same goes to Prince-Nez. Then you will understand the need for political correctness to women, senior citizens, and other minorities.  Roll Eyes

I'm with HgMan here, because I think the initial reference to old women was derogatory in that they somehow didn't/couldn't measure up to real men by playing "weeny" chess. 3...dxe4 is "sickening" chess and a "sexual perversion"?! give me a break. 

There *are* differences between men and women, but the way Kalle expressed it was plainly intended to be derogatory. 

Anyway all you guys post interesting stuff. Lets keep the forum going without all these nasty comments Smiley
  
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Re: Anti-chess
Reply #32 - 12/09/07 at 04:51:00
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HgMan wrote on 12/09/07 at 04:23:10:
Prince-Nez wrote on 12/09/07 at 03:10:59:
HgMan wrote on 12/08/07 at 21:03:07:

1. A rather inappropriate use of gendered language that I find rather offensive.  It has no business on this forum.  You may not like the opening, but your opponent's decision has nothing to do with his/her virility, sexual orientation, or anything else of that nature.  Grow up!



What is offensive (imho) is this sort of politically correct fanaticism (or near fanaticism).    I don't see what was so terrible about "old woman," "weeny" and making a mild joke/comment about the possible sexual fetish of certain kinds of French players.


No, I suppose you wouldn't.  It's a cozy little insular world you live in, isn't it?  

This has nothing to do with chess, but I think the basic principles of an open forum dictate that an unspoken decorum should be adopted in order to keep the discourse open and inclusive, else we relegate any good theoretical discussions on chess to a bunch of schoolyard gibberish and taunting.

I used some big words there, Nose, so let me know if I need to translate anything.  Sorry for being the thought-police, but if you want to crawl out of your hole from time to time, it's best not to rub other folks the wrong way.  Can we please stick to chess?

MNb was right: this is the biggest waste of a thread.  Maybe Castlerock can delete the whole thing if we're just going to rant about sexual content.  I don't see how it advances any chessic discussion...



Oh, you big meanie.   You big brute.  Oh, wait.  Should I even use a word like brute?  Maybe it is too gender specific. 

I am tempted to try and have a rational discussion on this but it may well be pointless. 

Oh, what the heck.   

I agree with you completely on the need for forum decorum.  If the original poster had used words like "b*tch" or "p*ssy" I'd be right there with you and think it was inappropriate.   If he had made a truly vulgar sexual reference or inuendo, I would agree it was wrong.  

But getting to the bottom line, the problem with people like you (the logic of your position) is that you won't accept that there is even such a thing as gender differences (except the most obvious ones like body parts).    So, naturally, words like "old woman" bother you because ultimately they imply that there is something different between men and woman and that there are such things as manly virtues.   You may not like it, but there still are such things.   There are differences between men and woman (many similarities too) and I think we should all be glad for that. 

I agree that this has nothing to do with chess so I'll drop it.  I'll continue to read your thoughts and opinions on chess which I normally enjoy or find interesting.  
  

We work in the dark - we do what we can - we give what we have. Our doubt is our passion and our passion is our task. The rest is the madness of art. &&~ Henry James
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Re: Anti-chess
Reply #31 - 12/09/07 at 04:23:10
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Prince-Nez wrote on 12/09/07 at 03:10:59:
HgMan wrote on 12/08/07 at 21:03:07:

1. A rather inappropriate use of gendered language that I find rather offensive.  It has no business on this forum.  You may not like the opening, but your opponent's decision has nothing to do with his/her virility, sexual orientation, or anything else of that nature.  Grow up!



What is offensive (imho) is this sort of politically correct fanaticism (or near fanaticism).    I don't see what was so terrible about "old woman," "weeny" and making a mild joke/comment about the possible sexual fetish of certain kinds of French players.


No, I suppose you wouldn't.  It's a cozy little insular world you live in, isn't it?   

This has nothing to do with chess, but I think the basic principles of an open forum dictate that an unspoken decorum should be adopted in order to keep the discourse open and inclusive, else we relegate any good theoretical discussions on chess to a bunch of schoolyard gibberish and taunting.

I used some big words there, Nose, so let me know if I need to translate anything.  Sorry for being the thought-police, but if you want to crawl out of your hole from time to time, it's best not to rub other folks the wrong way.  Can we please stick to chess?

MNb was right: this is the biggest waste of a thread.  Maybe Castlerock can delete the whole thing if we're just going to rant about sexual content.  I don't see how it advances any chessic discussion...
  

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Re: Anti-chess
Reply #30 - 12/09/07 at 03:32:25
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Perhaps there could be a kiddies corner for Kalle and co? Where inexperienced young uns could talk about trying to be manly at the chessboard, being tough, studying for exams, first shave n stuff. 

To get this back on track and to suggest something positive:

Kalle - look at the sources I earlier cited. Analyse. Play. Then anything troublesome, post with queries.   

Otherwise, if you feel you have to write about sex n chess, set up a blog for you, your counsellor and your mum to read while discussing other deeper-rooted anxieties. 



  
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Re: Anti-chess
Reply #29 - 12/09/07 at 03:12:58
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kalle:  I've played just about everything under the sun, son. Even Methuseluh thinks I'm old.  You ain't got nothin new to spew, gnu.


Here is your word of the day:  Tact.


Good luck in your impending adulthood, whenever it arrives.  Do you have the tracking number?

TTFN.



  

I know I've made some very poor decisions recently, but I can give you my complete assurance that my work will be back to normal. I've still got the greatest enthusiasm and confidence in the mission.
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