1.d4 d5 2.e4 dxe4 3.Nc3 Nf6 (3...f5!?; 3...Bf5!?) 4.f3 Bf5 (4...c6!) 5.fxe4 Nxe4 6.Qf3 Nd6 7.Bf4 e6 8.0-0-0 Nd7 9.g4 Bg6 10.h4 h5 11.g5 c6 12.Bd3
Uruk wrote on 02/24/09 at 22:22:51:
Exchange light-squareds before landing on f5,
12...Bd3: 13.Qd3: Qa5
An illustration 14.g6? f6 15.Re1 0-0-0 16.Re6: Qf5! white pawns are all weak.
13. Rxd3! seems stronger (than 13. Qxd3).
In the BDG building up pressure on the f-file is one of the key ideas. The Rd3 might even participate in this plan, in some lines it could move to f3 or g3. If 13...Nf5 14.Qe2 intending g5-g6, or if Black plays g6 himself, the square f6 becomes weak.
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My BDG articles (Kaissiber 5 & 8) claimed that the traditional lines after 4...exf3 give White enough for the pawn, and there were many positions where I'd like to be White. But 3...f5 and 3...Bf5 (Morlo) were problematic, and since 1986 I believe that 3...Nf6 4.f3 c6! is the hardest nut for White to crack.
Regarding another point in this thread, that it were better if young players would not learn the BDG. Here I am not so sure. Many creative players started with the King's Gambit (Steinitz, Tartakower [who later invented the BDG, by the way, so perhaps it should have rather be called the BTG], Reti, Larsen come to mind - and, of course, E. J. Diemer himself), later they changed their repertoire and preferred serious openings (OK, with one exception). I don't think that enjoying tactics in your younger years is a mistake, rather the opposite.
Look at the great masters: Young Emanuel Lasker played 1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 d6 3.d4 Bg4 (? Kasparow: "Every schoolboy knows...") 4. dxe5 Nd7!?. And the young Capablanca even used the most irregular opening of his time: the Caro-Kann Defense...