Muir came up with the correct refutation of the Berliner Variation which was obvious once I plugged it into Fritz 8 i.e my 13.Qf2 was a positional treatment when I should have opted for tactics; obviously, once I could actually see 13.Qf2 on a chessboard, it was clearly a blunder.
Here is the simple refutation of one line of the Berliner Variation: 4.Ng5 d5 5.exd5 Nd4 6.c3 b5 7.Bf1 Nxd5 8.Ne4 Qh4 9.Ng3 Bg4 10.f3 e4 11.cxd4 Bd6 12.Qe2 (The Muir Variation) O-O (No better or worse than 12...Be6) 13.fxg4 (Not so much win material, which it does, but more importantly keeping the e-file closed) 13...Bxg3ch 14.Kd1 & Fritz 8 has this as +- after an eventual Qxb5. Anyone care to equalize?
What the wonderful members of this post don't seem to understand is that after 10.Qa4, this is an ENDGAME not a MIDDLEGAME. In other words all your suggestions that apply in a MIDDLEGAME don't apply in an ENDGAME. The only reason I suggested 10...Nc5 was to avoid a losing endgame by staying in an inferior middlegame a pawn down with better practical chances than an endgame where a strong Grandmaster has 30-40 moves to grind out the win in what is known as a "cat and mouse" position i.e. excellent winning chances and no losing chances, just the kind grandmasters love.
Here is what I mean by middlegame strategies. When you castle in response to 10...Ndf4, getting the King out of the center in the middlegame makes sense in the middlegame, makes no sense in the endgame. In the endgame, the King should be moving towards the center, not the edge of the board. So you can scrap any ideas like Kf1 (in the endgame), ideas like meeting Ndf4 with Bxf4?? or playing f5, which gives the King an invasion route on e6 in the endgame.
When you people don't realize that White invested ten tempos just to compromise Black's Queenside structure in the endgame, while all the Two Knights' Tango does is to dance around and accomplish nothing useful. Do any of you know what a pawn island is?
When you people don't recognize that 11.d4 is forced or that 11...Nxg2ch is forced. When you don't realize that 11...Nxg2ch 12.Ke2 gains a tempo over 12.Kf1 or that 13.Kf3 gains a second tempo in the endgame.
When you people don't know that by some strange coincidence that after Rc2, White defends b2 in case of Rb8 without losing time, but that after Nxg2, Black must eventually spend a tempo to protect the pawn on g7 after White plays Rg1.
You people don't have a clue what chess strategy is; all you know is how to plug a chess position into a computer and spit out results.
I am reminded of the comment made by Steinitz when a kibitzer said to him, "Herr Steinitz. I do not understand your style of play!" Steinitz responded, "That's easy. Did you ever see a monkey play with a watch?"
I feel I am working with a bunch of monkeys who know what the chess pieces can do without understanding the game.
HgMan wrote on 01/04/09 at 22:55:55:
sloughter wrote on 12/30/08 at 15:06:16:
My innovation in the Berliner Variation (Gambit) replaces an entire page of BCO 2.
This is, what? Almost twenty years old, now? I'm not sure I remember the last time I even consulted it...