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Very Hot Topic (More than 25 Replies) Grandmaster Repertoire 1.c4 by Marin (Read 377941 times)
Markovich
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Re: Grandmaster Repertoire 1.c4 by Marin
Reply #425 - 11/28/10 at 03:52:59
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Please, let's not bring sloughter into this.

Neric, I spent the Thanksgiving week away in Seattle, or I would have chastised you sooner.  Stop imputing bad motives to Marin and to people who post here, and keep your posts focussed on chess.

I'm not going to go back and clean up your bad posts here, but I'll be deleting any of your future posts that keep this up.

At the end of the day, it's a set of books.  Buy it or don't buy it -- nobody here really gives a frig.  However, the balance of expert advice is that Marin's effort is a worthy one.

But stop posting in such a saucy vein, trying to get a rise out of people.  Talk chess, you know?
  

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Re: Grandmaster Repertoire 1.c4 by Marin
Reply #424 - 11/27/10 at 16:05:04
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Neric wrote on 11/27/10 at 13:49:28:
I don't know what you are trying to prove. The line you are showing leads to a position where white has to prove that he is not worse in the endgame, while my improvement 11.Nc3 leads to an advantage.

Other than that I am curious why we don't see these lines in cathegory 20+ tournaments. Why draw each other in the Slav or the Marshall Attack, when all you got to do is to consult Marin (current Elo 2562) to get the job done?

Does anyone here want to answer that question? I am curious.



Me, I'm far too much of a patzer to understand any of this. That's why I follow Nigel Davies's 'Play the Third-Rate Move and Win' and pray my opponent hasn't consulted the Gambit Guide to Cowardly Openings. 

[Some provocative, off-topic remarks redacted by Markovich]
« Last Edit: 11/28/10 at 21:37:19 by Markovich »  

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Re: Grandmaster Repertoire 1.c4 by Marin
Reply #423 - 11/27/10 at 15:10:24
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Neric wrote on 11/27/10 at 13:49:28:
I don't know what you are trying to prove. The line you are showing leads to a position where white has to prove that he is not worse in the endgame, while my improvement 11.Nc3 leads to an advantage.

Funnily enough, both I and Fritz 9 (plus several other enginges) think white is better (Fritz is claiming a clear advantage Shocked) and black has to play accurately.  Stockfish disagrees, but Fritz is punching holes in it's analysis after which Stockfish suddenly agrees white is better (sometimes jumping from -0.30 to +1.30).

How are you evaluating these positions?
  
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Neric
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Re: Grandmaster Repertoire 1.c4 by Marin
Reply #422 - 11/27/10 at 13:49:28
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I don't know what you are trying to prove. The line you are showing leads to a position where white has to prove that he is not worse in the endgame, while my improvement 11.Nc3 leads to an advantage.

Other than that I am curious why we don't see these lines in cathegory 20+ tournaments. Why draw each other in the Slav or the Marshall Attack, when all you got to do is to consult Marin (current Elo 2562) to get the job done?

Does anyone here want to answer that question? I am curious.
  
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Re: Grandmaster Repertoire 1.c4 by Marin
Reply #421 - 11/26/10 at 22:19:03
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Neric wrote on 11/25/10 at 14:41:47:

His proof probably consists of some games where a 2600-player beat some 2400-player, because Jobava vs. NN is pretty much the most recent reference.


Can you tell me which of the following you class as Jobava vs 'NN' - or is it all of them?: 
Jobava,Ba[2556]-Kovacevic,A[2553] Leon 2001 (1-0)
Jobava,Ba[2614]-Alekseev,E[2634] Moscow 2006 (1-0)
Jobaba,Ba[2669]-Pogorelov,R[2451], Budva 2009 (1-0)
Jobaba,Ba[2669]-Inarkiev,E[2656], Budva 2009 (1/2-1/2)
Jobava,Ba[2695]-Timofeev,A[2655], Rijeka 2010 (1/2-1/2)

I am curious about how an unbeaten 4/5 vs 2590 rating average is dismissed.  Or did you miss some of these games due to the move order? I may have missed more. Frankly if the line is capable of that, I wouldn't be so quick to claim it's totally equal - especially since Jobava only duffed up someone 200 points below him once.

I'd like to note that Alekseev won the Russian Championship later on in 2006.  You can't call him 'NN', at least.

BTW, IM John Watson - generally considered to know a thing or two about the English - is quite positive about white's chances in Mastering The Chess Openings Volume 3, and basically implies that theory is in white's favour using this Bg5/Qc1 stuff.  Marin isn't a lone voice in the wilderness.  Watson bases his analysis on Jobava-Alekseev, and having flicked through Marin's work I know he was looking at Jobava's games.

I'd also be obliged if you could explain exactly how black transposes to Bf4/Bd2 by avoiding ...h6.  Watson's explanation as to why black flicks it in is that after 7...0-0 8 0-0 d5 9 Rb1 will probably end up transposing after a later ...h6, and white has extra options like 9 Qc1 and 9 Qa4 so black avoids these.

Finally, Marin actually thinks 6 d4!? is quite promising for white but he didn't think it fitted well with the repertoire.

Oh and about specific analysis...
Neric wrote on 11/25/10 at 14:41:47:

Let's take a look at the line: 1.Nf3 d5 2.g3 Nf6 3.Bg2 c6 4.c4 dxc4 5.0-0 b5 6.a4 Bb7 7.b3 cxb3 8.Qxb3 Nbd7 9.Ba3 a6 10.Rc1 Qb6. Here Marin gives analysis by someone else (obviously he doesn't want to take responsibility) that goes 11.Ng5 e6 12.Bxf8 Rxf8 13.Nc3 with "compensation". Amazingly the totally obvious 13...h6 14.Nge4 Nxe4 15.Nxe4 c5 equalizes on the spot, so much about that...


First, "with compensation" actually doesn't mean "with an advantage" - equality is not contradictory.  The with compensations sign even has a "=" in it.  Ever wonder why?

In the meantime, I'll thank Stockfish for the analysis, since it is the only engine I have claiming this "instant equality" - tossing off that "obvious", "instantly equalizing" line seems to be the provence of computers. After 15...c5, it seems to think 16 Qb2 f5 17 Nxc5 Nxc5 18 Bxb7 Nxb7 19 Qxg7 Rf7 20 Qh8+ Rf8 21 Qg7 Rf7 22 Qh8+ is best play and hence the 0.00 evaluation.

A couple of my other engines jump on the chance to play 17 a5! Qc7 18 Nxc5 Nxc5 19 Bxb7 Qxb7 20 Rxc5 Kf7 

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- which, whatever it may be, is not "instant equality".  Black has some long term chances thanks to the protected passed pawn on b5, which is about his only asset, but white has a strong iniative and black's king is having to walk.  I'm not sure white is better, and I can't find anything absolutely clearcut, but black has to be extremely careful.  Certainly the engines don't seem to agree on the evaluation here.

As for the part I've bolded above - it's fairly common in academic circles and books to name someone whose analysis you've taken.  Otherwise, you know, you get accused of theft, or not given credit.  Your interpretation only makes sense if you are desperately trying to make someone look bad, whereas it actually shows Marin to be conscientious.
  
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Re: Grandmaster Repertoire 1.c4 by Marin
Reply #420 - 11/26/10 at 19:57:06
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Good God. I'm as ardent a student of theory as anyone, but never will I claim a variation is completely solved until I see the analysis for myself. Regardless of the books I have, engines I have, or analysis I have already done it doesn't mean it's impossible to miss a subtlety.

Dispute the analysis and conclusions drawn, but making blanket statements without seeing it is retarded.
  

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Re: Grandmaster Repertoire 1.c4 by Marin
Reply #419 - 11/26/10 at 15:38:12
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[quote]... I don't like this specific approach by Marin in this specific case. Whenever I read or see (Dzindzi's videos for instance) that someone tries to sell me that white is better after 1.Nf3 d5 2.g3 c6 3. Bg2 Nf6 4.c4 dxc4, I simply feel cheated. [/quote]

I thought you were complaining at Marin's saying there's 'compensation', rather than that he says there's an advantage. So why connect Marin and Dzindzi?

[quote]It is not that I hate chessbooks and think that GMs are crooks ... It is just that I don't like this specific approach by Marin in this specific case. [/quote]

But above you categorically suggested Marin is a 2600 cheat!



  
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Re: Grandmaster Repertoire 1.c4 by Marin
Reply #418 - 11/26/10 at 15:24:17
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I am not arrogant enough not to buy a book because one line isn't convincing or something. It goes much deeper and it has some sort of history.

If you could see my library you would recognize that I never hesitated to buy a book on openings in the past. I am a curious person and I bought whatever book promised to answer my questions.

My oldest book is in swedish and it is Collins Larobook I Schack from 1921. I also own a copy of Bogoljubow's "Die moderne Eröffnung d2-d4" from 1924. I have invested well over €10k in chess books. I owned the whole Batsford series at one point...before I decided to clean up and throw most of it in the trashcan, including all my Informants and so on.

The point is that I am a burned child so to say. I spend a ton of money on basically a huge pile of crap. Nowadays I just use TWIC and my engines and that coupled with my accumulated knowledge on chess openings over 30 years on the tournament level and my own experience playing up to 2nd Bundesliga is enough to establish evaluations that hold even on correspondence level.

When I write that 1.Nf3 d5 2.g3 Bf5 3.c4 e6 promises no advantage, then it is just the tip of the iceberg, it is the conclusion of sometimes years of study. I should mention that we have 2600 GMs on our team and I do have access to high class opinions on these issues.

When I say that I don't buy Marin's book, because he tries to establish an advantage after 1.c4 and 2.g3 then it means that I am sure that this approach is insufficient. If he had started with 1.c4, 2.Nf3 and 3.g3, I would have bought the book in a heartbeat. In fact I had it preordered for half a year until Amazon cancelled it and I was about to order it again when I got the shocking news about the variations he is recommending.

It is not that I hate chessbooks and think that GMs are crooks. For instance I highly recommend Shipov on the Hedgehog. It is just that I don't like this specific approach by Marin in this specific case. Whenever I read or see (Dzindzi's videos for instance) that someone tries to sell me that white is better after 1.Nf3 d5 2.g3 c6 3. Bg2 Nf6 4.c4 dxc4, I simply feel cheated. It is wrong, it is a lie and I am not going to pay any money for it.
  
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Re: Grandmaster Repertoire 1.c4 by Marin
Reply #417 - 11/26/10 at 14:47:58
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Neric wrote on 11/25/10 at 14:41:47:

Let's take a look at the line: 1.Nf3 d5 2.g3 Nf6 3.Bg2 c6 4.c4 dxc4 5.0-0 b5 6.a4 Bb7 7.b3 cxb3 8.Qxb3 Nbd7 9.Ba3 a6 10.Rc1 Qb6. Here Marin gives analysis by someone else (obviously he doesn't want to take responsibility) that goes 11.Ng5 e6 12.Bxf8 Rxf8 13.Nc3 with "compensation". Amazingly the totally obvious 13...h6 14.Nge4 Nxe4 15.Nxe4 c5 equalizes on the spot, so much about that...

What he did not tell you is that 11.Nc3! (N) is move that changes the evaluation to the desired result. Did he know this? Yes, of course he did, he just didn't tell you. This move is the most obvious improvement to come up with if you check the position with any kind of scientific approach. So much about honesty.

Last but not least, you got this statement including a pretty strong novelity for free. If you want to pay 30 bucks to have a 2600-GM cheat you, it is not my problem.


My problem is not that there's no advantange in some line of the symmetrical. You can find my comments a few pages earlier that I just simply don't believe that Marin can prove an edge everywhere here. That's fine with me, and as I stated, I'm just looking for interesting positions to play. My problem is simply that you're arrogant enough not to buy the books because you think Black equalizes in ONE line in ONE of the books. You think Marin has nothing good to say? I think the books are fantastic, and even if he misses some stuff, or misevaluates some positions, there's still a lot of great things he hasn't missed that are in these books.

Also, way to be the second one to find the slight flaw in the sample. You were second only to....drumroll please....me.

Grin
  
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Re: Grandmaster Repertoire 1.c4 by Marin
Reply #416 - 11/26/10 at 14:22:52
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Neric wrote on 11/25/10 at 14:41:47:
(cut)
Let's take a look at the line: 1.Nf3 d5 2.g3 Nf6 3.Bg2 c6 4.c4 dxc4 5.0-0 b5 6.a4 Bb7 7.b3 cxb3 8.Qxb3 Nbd7 9.Ba3 a6 10.Rc1 Qb6. Here Marin gives analysis by someone else (obviously he doesn't want to take responsibility) that goes 11.Ng5 e6 12.Bxf8 Rxf8 13.Nc3 with "compensation". Amazingly the totally obvious 13...h6 14.Nge4 Nxe4 15.Nxe4 c5 equalizes on the spot, so much about that...

What he did not tell you is that 11.Nc3! (N) is move that changes the evaluation to the desired result. Did he know this? Yes, of course he did, he just didn't tell you. This move is the most obvious improvement to come up with if you check the position with any kind of scientific approach. So much about honesty.

Last but not least, you got this statement including a pretty strong novelity for free. If you want to pay 30 bucks to have a 2600-GM cheat you, it is not my problem.


Given the enormous range of possibilities in chess, it should come as no surprise that Marin's huge project has some gaps, and some assessments that can be disputed. However, to imply that some of these are deliberate and to call him a "cheat" is unfair, not to say libellous.

A line such as 1.Nf3 d5 2.g3 Nf6 3.Bg2 c6 4.c4 dxc4 5.0-0 b5 6.a4 Bb7 7.b3 cxb3 8.Qxb3 is extremely hard to assess with certainty, especially for the engines, since Black is a clear pawn up and White's compensation is not immediately obvious, as it usually is in traditional gambits.

Thus I would advise extreme caution in making statements such as (after 1.Nf3 d5 2.g3 Nf6 3.Bg2 c6 4.c4 dxc4 5.0-0 b5 6.a4 Bb7 7.b3 cxb3 8.Qxb3 Nbd7 9.Ba3 a6 10.Rc1 Qb6 11.Ng5 e6 12.Bxf8 Rxf8 13.Nc3) "Amazingly the totally obvious 13...h6 14.Nge4 Nxe4 15.Nxe4 c5 equalizes on the spot, so much about that..."

First, what sort of "equality" are we talking about here? Black is still a pawn up; so logically if the position is equal White must still have substantial compensation, there are serious imbalances (Silman's term) in the position and thus still everything to play for. I suggest that after 16 d4 the game sharpens considerably and, if it opens up, White's compensation (safer king, more active rooks, better coordination) might well give him rather more than this "equality" which you toss around so glibly.

I agree that 11 Nc3 (the first suggestion of most engines, incidentally) is also playable and interesting, but only a very deep analysis would enable anyone to assert with total confidence that it is stronger than 11 Ng5.
  
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Re: Grandmaster Repertoire 1.c4 by Marin
Reply #415 - 11/26/10 at 11:17:50
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Neric wrote on 11/25/10 at 14:41:47:
There is a difference between trivial statements and science. I am not making a trivial statement, neither is Marin. We talking about theoretical proof of an opening advantage and not that the better player is more likely to outplay his opponent from virtually any position. This isn't about arrogance of vanity either. It is about facts, conclusions and false promise.

When he claims that white has an advantage in that specific line, he claims to know something that databases cannot prove, that engine analysis cannot prove and that top class GMs like Carlsen, Anand, Ivanchuk, Topalov, Bareev, Leko, Gelfand (add whomever you wish) do not seem to know either.

Maybe it is the other way around and Marin doesn't know something that the whole world except him seems to know.

Now, first of all, I want to show you something. Another poster in this thread mentioned that Marin is recommending the Bg5-line and tries to exploit that black plays h6. His proof probably consists of some games where a 2600-player beat some 2400-player, because Jobava vs. NN is pretty much the most recent reference.

I have not checked that game and obviously I don't know Marin's analysis, but believe it or not, black doesn't even have to play h6. If you check this with your database you will find a transposition to games played by Polugaevsky and other big names and guess what, none of them lost (against equal opponents). Bg5 isn't better than Bd2 or Bf4 as none of these moves leads to anything.

Second, I want to show you something that I know from the pdf-sample from the publisher about the first book of that series. This sample tells me a lot!

Let's take a look at the line: 1.Nf3 d5 2.g3 Nf6 3.Bg2 c6 4.c4 dxc4 5.0-0 b5 6.a4 Bb7 7.b3 cxb3 8.Qxb3 Nbd7 9.Ba3 a6 10.Rc1 Qb6. Here Marin gives analysis by someone else (obviously he doesn't want to take responsibility) that goes 11.Ng5 e6 12.Bxf8 Rxf8 13.Nc3 with "compensation". Amazingly the totally obvious 13...h6 14.Nge4 Nxe4 15.Nxe4 c5 equalizes on the spot, so much about that...

What he did not tell you is that 11.Nc3! (N) is move that changes the evaluation to the desired result. Did he know this? Yes, of course he did, he just didn't tell you. This move is the most obvious improvement to come up with if you check the position with any kind of scientific approach. So much about honesty.

Last but not least, you got this statement including a pretty strong novelity for free. If you want to pay 30 bucks to have a 2600-GM cheat you, it is not my problem.


You should get in touch with sloughter. I think you two would get along very well.
  

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Re: Grandmaster Repertoire 1.c4 by Marin
Reply #414 - 11/26/10 at 10:50:27
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Is <2200 a somewhat competetive level?
  

Don't check me with no lightweight stuff.
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Re: Grandmaster Repertoire 1.c4 by Marin
Reply #413 - 11/26/10 at 10:14:39
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parisestmagique wrote on 11/26/10 at 08:32:50:
Dear Neric, when you says : "I have not checked that game and obviously I don't know Marin's analysis, but believe it or not, black doesn't even have to play h6" it tells a lot ... Marin analyses a lot of lines and h6 is just one of the possibilities ... Hopefully you will find some improuvments in a more than 1120 pages of analysis. I suggest you to read the book and review it after.


The problem with these 1120 pages is that if one critical line doesn't work and you can't fix it, then you can safely forget about the rest. Just compare it to the Sicilian Alapin.

That reminds me of something. If this topic was about the Sicilian Dragon for black, you wouldn't accept it. With your white repertoire you obviously seem to be much more generous, because "at least" a draw looks kinda good enough. There is a good chance that your opponent won't play the critical lines after all. In the age of databases this is pretty naive though. I cannot remember a single tournament game over the last 20 years that I didn't prepare for and where my opponent didn't prepare for me. If you play on a somewhat competitive level, this is just how it goes these days.
  
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Re: Grandmaster Repertoire 1.c4 by Marin
Reply #412 - 11/26/10 at 08:32:50
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Dear Neric, when you says : "I have not checked that game and obviously I don't know Marin's analysis, but believe it or not, black doesn't even have to play h6" it tells a lot ... Marin analyses a lot of lines and h6 is just one of the possibilities ... Hopefully you will find some improuvments in a more than 1120 pages of analysis. I suggest you to read the book and review it after.
  
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Re: Grandmaster Repertoire 1.c4 by Marin
Reply #411 - 11/25/10 at 15:49:50
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TN wrote on 11/25/10 at 13:39:27:
It was established by Francisco De Castellvi and Mr. Vinoles in the post-mortem.
  Grin
Very arrogant indeed of GM Marin trying to question Neric' truth. The idea!
  

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