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Very Hot Topic (More than 25 Replies) C00-C19: Are we, French players nuts? (Read 40130 times)
BPaulsen
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Re: Are we, French players nuts?
Reply #18 - 05/21/09 at 11:53:15
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Novosibirsk wrote on 05/21/09 at 08:49:30:

GM Peter Kiriakov who always plays the french and probably always has .....completely condemned the french defence (strangely) saying it it very passive (in an ICC channel). Roman Dzindzichasvilli also claims it is very passive.
Yes it is passive.....but at the same time it is very resilent. White cant just wipe black of the board. Playing the french is like "playing in a box". You have to fight to get out and your oponent has to fight to get in and take you out from the box. But thats the point I guess. French players are used to get worse in the opening and out from that position  try to work their way back into the game and to get counterplay.


Whether the French is passive, or not, depends on the player using it. If all a person uses is the Rubenstein/Fort Knox/Burn Variation then yeah, it's really passive.

Winawer/MacCutcheon are extremely combative.

As far as being used to being worse out of the opening - that news to me. I usually had no problem equalizing in the heavily theoretical lines, but admittedly of late I haven't been running into the Universal System Tarrasch against 3...Be7, which is the only area I'm aware of right now that black is really struggling theoretically. However, it seems the Guimard is doing well, so who knows...

The only time I end up worse out of the opening is in the less theoretical variations which require precision.
  

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Re: Are we, French players nuts?
Reply #17 - 05/21/09 at 08:49:30
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French is probably an opening which many 1.e4 dislike to face. Thats why they condemn it. I have played the french and still find it interesting as Khalifman also says in his "beating the french series".

GM Peter Kiriakov who always plays the french and probably always has .....completely condemned the french defence (strangely) saying it it very passive (in an ICC channel). Roman Dzindzichasvilli also claims it is very passive.
Yes it is passive.....but at the same time it is very resilent. White cant just wipe black of the board. Playing the french is like "playing in a box". You have to fight to get out and your oponent has to fight to get in and take you out from the box. But thats the point I guess. French players are used to get worse in the opening and out from that position  try to work their way back into the game and to get counterplay.

I myself prefer to play the sicilian now (sveshnikov and kalashnikov) which I find much more funny to play than the french. And it gives me more chances to imbalance the game.

French defence will always be there as an interesting alternative.
  

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Gilmour
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Re: Are we, French players nuts?
Reply #16 - 05/20/09 at 22:59:35
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O.k. guys, as you don´t seem ready to give up (not yet  Cheesy) - 
another one from me.

We are still drifting away from the origin topic, but as "my" scandinavian is attacked I must react.

Why should one complain about a draw with black ?
If draw with black against other grandmasters is not o.k. - well then Kramnik should not be playing the petroff either as he has a huge drawing rate also against "weaker" grandmasters with this opening.
If a first class player like Tiviakov is held to draw by another grandmaster  - so what ?
I don´t rate this as a disadvantage of the scandinavian. And I can´t see that the french has more ways to play for the full point against weaker opposition than the scandinavian. 

Ni, Svidler and Gashimov are not so bad, aren´t they. One can loose to them and looking at the opening I would dare to say that the losses did not happen because of the opening. And if you quote earlier games like Ni, Svidler and Gashimov then one should also not forget games like Anand-Tiviakov; Grischuk-Tiviakov; Kamsky - Tiviakov etc.  

results in 2009:

Sulskis 2573 - T.   0 : 1   Neustadt an der Weinstrasse 2009
Pikula 2570 - T.   0,5 : 0,5  Budva 2009
Inarkiev 2656 - T.  0,5 : 0,5  Moskow 2009
Mastrovasilis 2580 - T.  1 : 0   Budva 2009
Stojanovic 2472 - T.  0 : 1  Budva 2009
Lanin  2457 - T.   0,5 : 0,5  Moskow 2009

I wouldn´t call that bad, would you ? Or in other terms, do you believe that results would have been better with the french ??


Adams - Morozewich - I know the games. There you´ve found - may be the only player who was able to withstand Adams in the Tarrasch.
But if you need the talent of Morozewich then good night to everyone else. I don´t know the exact killing rate of Adams against other players - and we speak here of grandmasters - in the french, but as I could see from the games on chessgames.com it must be about 70 - 80 %.  

The fact that white has other systems against the scandinavian can hardly be mentioned as a disadvantage of the scandinavian or an advantage of the french Qd5 system in the Tarrasch.   I just tried to prove that Qd6-scandinavian in certain variations can be similar to the Qd5 french Tarrasch.
I would rather say that there are many variations in the scandinavian, because nobody has found a clear way to a significant advantage.

To MilenPetrov:
Of course I put my faith in the scandinavian. Show me what variation in your opinion kills the scandinavian and I will defend.

I don´t want to burn the french.
Play it - and suffer  Cheesy 

All the best to you  (because you need it   Grin)

Greetings

Gilmour

 






  
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MilenPetrov
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Re: Are we, French players nuts?
Reply #15 - 05/20/09 at 17:32:54
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It appears that Gilmour is a Scandinavian or Caro Kann fan. He is trying to burn the French but it is still alive and flexible as GM Moskalenko states Wink.
If he has something to show in Scandinav, please opena a new topic and show your ideas there. We will see whether they will survive. May be they will, but who knows...
Speaking against the French in the topic where all fans of this defence are sharing ideas seems not a good idea.
And about Black's chances - simply check this topic: http://www.chesspub.com/cgi-bin/yabb2/YaBB.pl?num=1241894660
Do you have something to say on that?
  
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Re: Are we, French players nuts?
Reply #14 - 05/20/09 at 17:22:00
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Gilmour wrote on 05/20/09 at 15:59:14:
Oh man,

where to start ... and where to end. So in "short"

1. I can´t see that the scandinavian is "hammered" in grandmaster play. Especially with regard to black players  often being weaker than their opponents, their results are really acceptable. 
Tiviakov lost a few games in the Ne5-variation, but overall his results are more than o.k.   And greek GM Kontronias lately also more and more becomes an scandinavian specialist with good results.


His results of late are not "more than ok" (Ni, Svidler, Gashimov all beat him recently, he hasn't beaten a GM with it since before getting beat those three consecutive times). The novelty value that 3...Qd6 originally had has mostly worn off.

Using the fact black tends to be lower rated is an excuse. Higher rateds aren't using it, wait for it...because it's not as good as you think.

Just like the best of the best aren't using the French with any regularity, because 1...e5 and the Sicilian are just plain better.

Quote:

And by the way - may be you recognized that the french - especially in the upper class over 2650 is regularely smashed. Even specialists like Gurevich; Bareev seldom got a chance in this area and
Morozewich also "forgot" his french.
If you see the results of Anand, Svidler and Adams against the french it is easy to see that the french demands much of it´s followers.


Apparently you haven't seen Adams' score against Morozevich in the 3...Be7 Tarrasch, have you? +1 =2 -2 is not smashing. Yeah, he smashes everyone else, but he doesn't do well in that variation. Adams, being the Tarrasch specialist that he is, struggling against something shows the French is fine against him.

Svidler's record against 2500+ is not impressive. +9 -8 and a ton of draws. That is not smashing.

Anand does own the French, I'll give you that one. Anand is also a world champion, he owns a lot of things. +18 -4 and some draws is awesome.

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2. In the Tarrasch with Qxd5 the queen moves  to d6 after Bc4 and later often goes to c7.
Now let´s look at the Qd6 scandinavian. There are several ways of handling this position. One of those possibilities is the formation e6; a6/b5 and Bb7 (if white allows this of course); the queen takes the journey Dxd5- d6 followed by c7. If you compare the structure of these two variations there are striking similarities: 
pawn on e6; queen on c7; light squared bishop is developed on the queenside.


Notice the words if white allows this. White has no choice in the Qxd5 Tarrasch, he has a very broad choice, however, against the Scandinavian.

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3. Fort knox and Caro-Kann 
One of the strategies in the caro-Kann is to give up the bishop pair and then to build up  light squared control with pawns and knights. No matter if you take the caro kann classical Capablanca, the two-knights or some panow variations black often parts with the bishop pair . So I can´t agree that in the caro-kann black keeps the bishop pair.


Parting with the bishop pair is only one aspect of it. It's the combination of having surrendered them, and the pawn structure. 

The structure is similar, the play, however, is markedly different. Nobody is going to argue the Fort Knox is better than the Caro-Kann.
  

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Re: Are we, French players nuts?
Reply #13 - 05/20/09 at 15:59:14
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Oh man,

where to start ... and where to end. So in "short"

1. I can´t see that the scandinavian is "hammered" in grandmaster play. Especially with regard to black players  often being weaker than their opponents, their results are really acceptable. 
Tiviakov lost a few games in the Ne5-variation, but overall his results are more than o.k.   And greek GM Kontronias lately also more and more becomes an scandinavian specialist with good results. 

And by the way - may be you recognized that the french - especially in the upper class over 2650 is regularely smashed. Even specialists like Gurevich; Bareev seldom got a chance in this area and
Morozewich also "forgot" his french.
If you see the results of Anand, Svidler and Adams against the french it is easy to see that the french demands much of it´s followers.

2. In the Tarrasch with Qxd5 the queen moves  to d6 after Bc4 and later often goes to c7.
Now let´s look at the Qd6 scandinavian. There are several ways of handling this position. One of those possibilities is the formation e6; a6/b5 and Bb7 (if white allows this of course); the queen takes the journey Dxd5- d6 followed by c7. If you compare the structure of these two variations there are striking similarities: 
pawn on e6; queen on c7; light squared bishop is developed on the queenside. 

3. Fort knox and Caro-Kann 
One of the strategies in the caro-Kann is to give up the bishop pair and then to build up  light squared control with pawns and knights. No matter if you take the caro kann classical Capablanca, the two-knights or some panow variations black often parts with the bishop pair . So I can´t agree that in the caro-kann black keeps the bishop pair.


4. I never said that Guimard/Be7-variation sidesteps certain structures. Of course every variation produces it´s own character and structures.


Everything I wanted to express is, that the basic, origin structures of the french are pawn chains and isolani positions. 
And I´m pretty sure that I´m not the only one who believes that playing the french means mastering especially those two pawn structures. 
By the way this is not "my wisdom". If you do not believe me, read Nimzowich or buy Jacoby´s chessbase DVD on the french pawn play. 2400 speaks for itself.

As lately "my part of the discussion" drifts more and more away from the topic initiated by pingudon I leave it this way.
For those who believe that one can master the french without knowing how to handle pawn chains and isolanis then do so.

Greetings

Gilmour
  
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Re: Are we, French players nuts?
Reply #12 - 05/20/09 at 00:35:13
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Gilmour wrote on 05/19/09 at 14:38:55:
Hi MilenPetrov,

of course there will always be chances so sidestep typical pawn formations, if you do not want to play them. Wether this is a good policy in the long run is another question. 
Qxd5 in the Tarrasch sesembles more the Qd6-scandinavian  Wink, doesn´t it ?!
3...Nf6 still often leads to isolani-positions, as black needs to move the backward pawn on e6 to free the lightsquared bishop unless he/she wants to employ the c8-d7-e8-g6(h5) manoever, which is rather tempi-comsuming. The advantage may be, that black can choose the moment to transpose to isolani-positions.
Fort Knox is from it´s character more a Caro-Kann than french defence; dxe4 followed by Qd5 may be playable, but does this give anymore the "french feeling" ? Then better play the scandinavian.

So I agree with you, that you have many possibilities in the french to sidestep special pawn structures but in doing so you lose a great deal of the aggressive options of this defence. 

Greetings

Gilmour

And trust me  Smiley : in a few years nobody will play Nc3 anymore to sidestep the Qd6-scandinavian 



The Qd6 Scandinavian has been getting hammered in GM play of late, including its leading exponent Tiviakov. 

The Fort Knox has its own character due to the lack of a light squared bishop, so while the structure is similar, it is markedly different from the Caro-Kann/Scandinavian where black keeps his bishop pair.

Qxd5 in the Tarrasch in no way resembles play from the Scandinavian, it resembles play from the Sicilian (both in structure, and white plans).

Black also has the Guimard which has risen in respectability and produces original structures, the 3...a6 (this leads to Isolani usually), and 3...Be7 which very often produces structures all its own due to ...g5 ideas. 3...Be7 is arguably the most aggressive choice for black, and it doesn't side-step anything, it just creates different options.
  

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Re: Are we, French players nuts?
Reply #11 - 05/19/09 at 16:05:29
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I do not want to go deeper on what is good and what is wrong in the French because it is still in my repertoire. Of course both sides have their pluses ans minuses and surproise weapons.
And if you want to discuss something about Scandinav i think that French topic is not the right place. I am happy with my results and achievements in that opening and I welcome everyone who wants to enter it in my games. But of course if there are any variatons which deserve attention I am ready to discuss them but not here.
  
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Re: Are we, French players nuts?
Reply #10 - 05/19/09 at 14:38:55
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Hi MilenPetrov,

of course there will always be chances so sidestep typical pawn formations, if you do not want to play them. Wether this is a good policy in the long run is another question. 
Qxd5 in the Tarrasch sesembles more the Qd6-scandinavian  Wink, doesn´t it ?!
3...Nf6 still often leads to isolani-positions, as black needs to move the backward pawn on e6 to free the lightsquared bishop unless he/she wants to employ the c8-d7-e8-g6(h5) manoever, which is rather tempi-comsuming. The advantage may be, that black can choose the moment to transpose to isolani-positions.
Fort Knox is from it´s character more a Caro-Kann than french defence; dxe4 followed by Qd5 may be playable, but does this give anymore the "french feeling" ? Then better play the scandinavian.

So I agree with you, that you have many possibilities in the french to sidestep special pawn structures but in doing so you lose a great deal of the aggressive options of this defence. 

Greetings

Gilmour

And trust me  Smiley : in a few years nobody will play Nc3 anymore to sidestep the Qd6-scandinavian 

  
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Re: Are we, French players nuts?
Reply #9 - 05/19/09 at 07:46:34
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Gilmour wrote on 05/18/09 at 20:33:16:
And Tarrasch often ends in an isolani position, which you will have to play far less often in a scandinavian . Therefore I´m rather sure that choosing an opening often means choosing special pawn structures.

It is up to Black to decide whether he wants to enters position types with isolated pawns. So i think it is not necessary at all to know them.
Just a couple of examples:
1) Black may play Qxd5
2) Black may choose 3...Nf6 instead of 3...c5
3) Black may choose Fort Knox
4) Black even may play ...dxe4 followed by ...Qd5 as a good surprise.

Of course everyone has his own preferences, for example I do not like playing the KID Wink.
The fact that French has been played but strong GMs like Yusupov, Morozevich, Short, Topalov, Petrosian, Botvinnik speaks a lot about the opening. I can not recall too much top GMs playing Scandinav for example  Wink. The only name which pops up is Tiviakov but recently his results are not so great in it.

  
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Re: Are we, French players nuts?
Reply #8 - 05/18/09 at 20:33:16
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May be I missed something way back when I used to play the french  Smiley
If it is that easy to play an opening without learning and specializing in the pawn structures that mostly result from a special opening, well then I will play Najdorf sicilian from today on. Would be interesting to know how to master the french without knowing how to handle pawn chains. 
And Tarrasch often ends in an isolani position, which you will have to play far less often in a scandinavian . Therefore I´m rather sure that choosing an opening often means choosing special pawn structures.

But on the other hand one has to know as many middlegame positions as possible  in any case. So I guess we needn´t argue about that point.
 

And I never said that french is worse than other openings, I just said that in my personal ranking it is on fifth place. 

Greetings

Gilmour
  
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MilenPetrov
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Re: Are we, French players nuts?
Reply #7 - 05/18/09 at 15:54:03
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I have played the French and still play it, not frequently but enough, in my games. What I like in this defence is that clear pawn structures and typical positions arise, which are easier for studying. For example if one takes Sicilian, then he/she must learn at least 10 different typical pawn structures, plans and concrete moves. This is not the case in French. You can learn 2-3 structures at the beginning and master them and then you can extend your repertoire introducing new structures and variations. Of course Black has some problems in certain systems, but I believe that a new paths will be found. I do not think that French is worse than Caro Kann or Pirc or Modern or Scandinav. It is a normal opening which offers both sides good chances.
  
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Re: Are we, French players nuts?
Reply #6 - 05/17/09 at 21:52:25
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I also believe that you will find that any one who has played an opening for a long period of time is willing to defend it till the end. For instance I am a Birds Opening player. I wont say I play 1.f4 and win but I will say that my results have been better than when I played 1.e4 or 1.d4. I have a lot of fond memories from playing a 1.e4 gambit based repertoire but f4 is now opening choice. Am I crazy for sticking with an opening no. One would be crazy not to express their fondness for their favorite set ups. 

  
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Re: Are we, French players nuts?
Reply #5 - 05/17/09 at 20:32:33
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Pingudon wrote on 05/17/09 at 02:18:12:
I have noticed that when a French players talk about "their" defence is like when a priest talks about religion. Usually a French player thinks 1.e4 e6 and Black wins. It seems a matter of faith. A French player very seldom abandon it. I have been playing the French for 10 years now I am thinking about playing it 10 years more. What do you think? Roll Eyes

Sounds like a BDG-addict.
  

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Re: Are we, French players nuts?
Reply #4 - 05/17/09 at 12:14:55
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With all due respect, you don't have to master the isolani, backward, passed, hanging, doubled, closed or whatever pawn structure in order to play the French, you just have to push 1...e6 after e4. As far as I can see, the French is as good a defense as any other, and doesn't lead to such wild, er... enthusiasm as other openings, especially in the US of A. In Russia & Europe it is often the first choice for improving players, you may call it a poor man's sicilian, yet quite respectable in itself. As you say, Black gets used to many variations and subsystems, which is a good thing in itself. One danger though is to lock oneself into a kind of "white square repertoire" ; at some point it is necessary to try other setups, if nothing else to sharpen one's sense of danger.  
  
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