TN wrote on 11/02/09 at 20:24:04:
While this is all very interesting, the discussion has gone completely off-topic from the original subject of the thread. I suggest splitting the thread at where the discussion starts to drift from openings.
No probs
Quote:
Returning to the original topic, I would suggest the Czech Benoni as being a good choice for players aged 40+ with a rating of 1600-2000, since it is very solid, very few White players have a detailed knowledge of the theory, the theory changes quite slowly, and Black can still achieve active play on the kingside in each line with ...Be7, ...0-0, ...Nbd7, ...Ne8, ...g6, ...Ng7 and ...f5, with ...Nf6, ...Kh8 and ...Ng8 before f5 if Black needs to evict a bishop on h6.
The Czech is underestimated, though it is a bit passive. I remember when I made my first "positional discovery" with that opening. The idea to play Be7, Bg4, Ne8, Bxf3 and Bg5 to stick white with a bad bishop. It worked wonders in a couple of games until I got a smarter opponent who played h3 before I could play Bg4...
The horror
In any case playing the Benoni also forces you to play a 1.c4 c5 as now I have discovered an excellent weapon against the Benoni by going 1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 c5 3.Nf3. This apparently is the symmetrical English, but somehow I tend to end up in the Maroczy accelerated dragon, as black often develops with g6 giving me time for e4.