Keano wrote on 08/17/09 at 10:43:43:
I wish that were only true, however at the stratospheric levels of 2650+ or 2700 I have the feeling my beloved French may not be as Khalifman puts it "even a fully correct" opening - as I said before its irrelevant for the rest of us, but look at the way expert Mikhail Gurevich was made to grovel against Leko in the candidates - that particular agony of suffering a hopeless bad bishop ending doesnt happen to him against lesser mortals.
Interesting also was that after Radjabov won this "brilliancy prize" (which was a disgraceful decision in itself) he nevertheless abandoned the French defence after this tournament - in fact I think he abandoned it during the tournament for the latter part.
Well, there are some 2700+ players who throw it in regularly:
Grischuk have been quite successful recently in the poisoned pawn Winawer. Remember, he even outplayed the 2700+ theory monster Dominguez. 2008-2009 he has scored 5 wins 5 draws and 1 loss in the French where the loss was a blitz game vs. Dominguez where he was better after the opening.
Kamsky also got a great position vs. Karjakin in the same PP variation, but blundered.
And he played the French vs. Topalov in their match. Not with success, but did he really lose those games in the opening?
Ivanchuk and Moro play the occasional French.
Other 2700+ players with at least 1 standard time black game since 2007:
Topalov, Mamedyarov, Nakamura, Polgar, Gelfand, Shirov, Ponomariov, Akopian, Alekseev, Bacrot, Vallejo...
I still think the French is problematic at 2600+. The statistics do not lie, it just helps you getting closer to the real truth. In fact, the statistics ARE the truth in this case, with some consideration for the sample variance which decreases the higher number of games.
But some top players seem to think it is good enough to surprise their opponents and get an advantage in the preparation.