thibdb13 wrote on 09/02/08 at 11:00:51:
John Cox says in his book that many Alekhine players are addicted to this defense and to some particular -pet- lines.
I must say I find this opening quite fascinating but I am just starting with it.
Are they here some Alekhine players? If you are one: did you get addicted to it and why? And what would you recommend to someone wanting to start playing it?
I've been playing this defense for just a few years. I'm not "addicted" to it; I just decided to take it up so as to learn more about chess. My systems have always been rather classical, so I wanted to expand my horizons. What attracted me is that this is a tough, fighting defense that confronts White from the very first move.
This is not a defense to take up lightly. Black gives up a lot of space. I think my results might have been a little better if I had just stuck with 1...e5, but I think that has less to do with the objective deficiencies of the Alekhine than with my taking on positions about which I have less understanding.
I have prepared an extensive set of notes on Alekhine's and I am still expanding and ramifying them. My very latest project is a fairly deep study of a critial line of the Four Pawns Attack, 1.e4 Nf6 2.e5 Nd5 3.d4 d6 4.c4 Nb6 5.f4 dxe5 6.fxe5 Nc6 7.Be3 Bf5 8.Nc3 e6 9.Nf3 Be7 10.Be2 0-0 11.0-0 f6 12.exf6 Bxf6. Personally I don't think that Black has equalized yet, but the play from here is very interesting. Ultimately I think that Black is probably O.K., but others may disagree. In any case this position is very critical for Alekhine's, since 6...Nc6 followed 9...Be7 is the only well-reputed answer to the Four Pawns.
If you want to study this defense very deeply, Cox's excellent introductory book is not really adequate (it wasn't intended to be a catalog of variations). There are two books by Burgess that you should get ahold of,
The Complete Alekhine and
New Ideas in the Alekhine. The former is easily the most comprehensive treatement of this defense in the English language, though it is out of date. There is also
Alekine's Defense by Nigel Davies. I also have
Alekhine's Defence, With Additional Material on Owen's Defence and the Nimzovich Defence by Hort and Keene (Hort wrote the part on the Alekhine, which is most of the book. Further I have a 1989 edition of
Zashchita Alekhina (in Russian) by Vladimir Bagirov, which is good if you can read a little chess Russian. All these works are out of print but most can be obtained on the internet. NIC Yearbook 87 contains an article by Czech GM Tibor Karolyi in which he advocates 4...Nb6 in reply to 4.Nf3. There will be a second part in Yearbook 88, which is not yet in print.
John Watson's updates here are very good on this defense. Also if you search down this part of the forum, you'll see that various people have contributed some ideas.
Theoretically the Alekhine's is under pressure both in the Four Pawns Attack and in the Modern (4.Nf3). You will discover, however, that the latter is played nine times out of ten.
Among the games to study are those of Bagirov and Baburin. Since Bagirov died in 2001 (of a heart attack in the middle of a tournament game), Baburin has been the only GM that consistently relies upon this defense.