Gambit wrote on 04/27/09 at 05:18:07:
After 1 d4 Nf6 2 f3 g6 3 Be3 Bg7 4 Qd2 00 we have a Pirc Defense. Personally, I prefer to exchange the pesky Bg7 via Bh6! as soon as possible. This prevents any cheapo tricks on the long a1-h8 diagonal and confuses the vast majority of my opponents. Oh, the Bg7 is gone! Now what to do? Trust me, not everyone knows!
Any decent Pirc-player knows and that is something I know from my own experience. One of the opening lines I really know something about is the Argentinean Attack 1.e4 d6 2.d4 Nf6 3.Nc3 g6 4.f3 followed by 5.Be3 and 6.Qd2. I have played and studied it for more than 25 years. A few short remarks about it.
1) this move order is imprecise because Black will not castle if he has looked into a book on the Pirc for more than 5 seconds. (S)he will play b7-b5 and Qd8-a5 instead. The black king is safer in the centre.
2) so these days White choses another move order (4.Be3) and only plays f2-f3
after Black has castled. I have scored more than 80% with this.
3) after 4.f3 Black does not even need to play ...Bg7; again ...b5 is superior.
Conclusion: 1.d4 Nf6 2.f3 g6 3.Be3 (are you sure you don't mean 3.e4 first?) d6 4.Qd2 Black plays c6. Oh! 5.Bh6 is a loss of tempo! What to do! Trust me, even LDZ does not know. At least he does not tell us; as usual founding his conclusions on at least one inferior move by Black (0-0?!).
Even worse - maybe ...0-0 is not inferior at all. I refer to Vigus' work on it for more details.
And that's the first justification of 1.d4 Nf6 2.f3 g6!? - if White plays Nc3 Black gets a good version of the Pirc. So White should enter the Sämisch. I imagine that quite a few KID-players will be very happy with that.
Another suggestion: 1.d4 Nf6 2.f3 d6 3...Nbd7 and 4...e5. Oh! The idea Be3, Qd2, Bh6 loses a piece! What to do! LDZ is on a loss!
Anyhow, this is (or 2...c5) is what a player as Black should do if (s)he wants to enter the Hübsch.