I am a 1600 player and lost 12 games(!) in a row at the last World Open including blitz games. So your task should be easy.
sloughter wrote on 02/08/09 at 18:07:30:
Clever reparte, no substance. Please be more specific. What analysis are you contesting? Just one or two examples would suffice. I published an entire summary of my theories and the contributions of the other post members, yet you do not cite a single example of faulty analysis. Keep flapping your arms; you may start flying, too.
It's ironic that you should say that, because the point of my post was to try to get
you to realise that your "When you don't have the facts on your side, argue the law" waffle was "clever" repartee with no substance.
You want me to cite an example of your faulty analysis. The problem is that analysis is subjective. (Just for example) if you say "1. a4 is good" and I say "No, it's bad because I can play 1... a5 and that's good for Black", you can still disagree with my evaluation of the position. The
only worthwhile evaluation of analysis is the test of time: go away and play it in games, get it noticed by other people, and hope that eventually it will be played enough for the statistics to give you at least a rough idea of how good it is.
Because it's inevitable that analysis produced by one person is biased by their own preferences. At
every move you have decisions to make, and if you're analysing, you have to make decisions for both sides. Even if the Two Knights is unsound, proving it is too big a task for one person. In order for your analysis to be convincing, you'd have to find the best moves for Black at every juncture, and
prove they were best -- which means considering alternatives in equal depth. And the problem is that -- often subconsciously -- you reject better moves because they look or feel worse to you. This isn't a criticism of you; it's true of all players. (Indeed, the Two Knights provides my own favourite example. After 4. Ng5 d5 5. exd5 b5 the best move 6. Bf1 is almost impossible to "see" unless you know about it beforehand, which is why 5... b5 was a favourite weapon of mine in the days when I used to play OTB chess regularly.)
But equally, the opposite task, the task you're asking me to do, the task of proving that Black can equalise against White's best play, is too big a task for one person, because I would have to find White's best move at every juncture, and I'm not a good enough player or analyst to think I could achieve that. So I'm not going to flap my arms just to give you the pleasure of watching me make mistakes. Instead, I'll sit back and watch
you make mistakes, which you will do if you keep on insisting you can prove the assertions you're making.
Anyway, I don't really care if you refute the Two Knights, and why should I? I'm still going to play it and I'm still going to win with it. And lose, sometimes, but then I win some and lose some with
any opening. I don't know what the result would be if I were to play the Two Knights against you, but that's because I don't know what your overall strength as a player compared to mine is. (I'm very interested in watching your game against Arkhein, though. I still think you're missing the main point of the game, which is not to refute one subvariation of a subvariation, but to bring home the lesson that you attach too much importance to material advantage, and therefore the lines where you bring the analysis to a halt and say "White is simply better" may bear further study.)