Ametanoitos wrote on 02/23/10 at 11:33:59:
I searched in my library for sources on the Tarrasch and i think i found gold! In
Winning Chess Middlegames super-GM Ivan Sokolov makes a lot of usefull comments on the Tarrasch defence when he annotates some typical games. One of these games are
Petrosian-Spassky, 1969 when Sokolov actually reccomends for Black a sideline in the
9.Bg5 cxd4 10.Nxd4 h6 11.Be3 and now
11...Bg4! Spassky's pet move instead of the more common
11...Re8 where he gives excellent analysis with lots of comments of the game
Kramnik- Illeskas Cordoba 1994 which is better for White according to Sokolov (if you interested i can give some analysis here). I analysed a bit and here is what i think:
["Sokolov's recommendation"]
[ECO "D34"]
[Annotator "Sokolov, Ametanoitos"]
1. d4 d5 2. c4 e6 3. Nc3 c5 4. Nf3 Nf6 5. cxd5 exd5 6. g3 Nc6 7. Bg2 Be7 8. O-O O-O 9. Bg5 cxd4 10. Nxd4 h6 11. Be3 Bg4! {Spassky}
"It is not clear to me why this logical move has disappeared from grandmaster practice" (page 102) and
"As explained in Petrosian-Spassky (Game 23), 11...Bg4 is definately worth analysing" , (page 121) ,Sokolov 12. Nb3
(12. Qa4 Na5 13.Rad1 Nc4 14. Bc1 {Khalifman and Cox} Nb6! with equality {Sokolov})
12... Be6 13. Rc1 Re8 14. Re1 Qd7 15. Bc5 Rac8 16. Bxe7 Qxe7 17. e3 Red8 18. h3!N
"...securing White a small advantage", Sokolov (18. Qe2 Bg4! = ,Sokolov (Petrosian-Spassky, 1969))
Now i have analysed:
18... Ne4 (
18... Ne5 also looks OK
19. Qe2 (19. Kh2 a6 (19... Nc4) 20. Qe2 b5)
19... Ne4 20. Nxe4 dxe4 21. Bxe4
Bxh3)
19. Nd4 (
19. Qe2 Bf5 20. Red1 Nxc3 21. Rxc3 d4)
19... Qf6 looks equal
(Analysis with FireBird 1.1)
So, Sokolov wipes out Cox's and Khalifman's recommendation (he offers good analysis there) and he also offers recommendations against other White's options (f.e 12.h3 or 14.Nb5 in the main game). So, are we back in business with 9...cxd4?
So... let’s see what “dwarf” Keilhack has on
11...Bg4.
First he is a bit reserved, calls it a move that’s quite common in the middle ranks, but to quite a large extend mistrusted in the GM ranks. "It’s attraction may come from that it looks more active than 11...Re8, but it is a fictuous activity". Keilhack’s main line is
12.Qa4.
With the variation you quote from Sokolov you run in a damned problem that blossoms in the whole 9...cxd4 main line: Move ordering. With
12.Nb3 Be6 13.Rc1 Re8 you have drifted into 11...Re8 12.Rc1 Bg4 13.Nb3 Be6.
Doesn’t matter, you might say refering to your findings after
14.Re1 Qd7 15. Bc5 Rac8 (15...Rad8 - Geller)
16. Bxe7 Qxe7 17. e3 Red8 18. h3!N (Keilhack only has 18.Qe2 Bg4! 19.f3 Petrosian - Spasski wc m 4 1969, with a severe battle to follow and gives 19.Qf1!?)
"...securing White a small advantage", Sokolov. He is right I feel. Black’s bishop is bit bad. Your
18...Ne4 isn’t connected to really active options (but I only had it on the board and tend to overlook deeper tactics), white has smothered some of your possibilities with h2-h3. Because black has no dark bishop, the slight weakening of white’s king’s fortress, which in other variations (with dark bishop on board) gives attacking possibilities, is not an unsurmountable problem if he is aware of the sting against h3 (e.g. with Qd7 in combination with Ne4's kick on f2). So white shouldn’t hurry. On
19.Qe2 you give
19...Bf5 20.Red1 but that fails to keep black at bay as you show. What about say
20.Nb5 overprotecting d4? And I’m toying with
19.Re2, protecting f2 with a glance on c2 too, perhaps later again with sth. like Nb5.
And you have to deal with the interesting move
14.Bd4!? Keilhack gives with some lines. On
14...Nxd4 15.Qxd4 the queen is centralized and white plans Nc5 and/or Rfd1. The bishop as a blockader is unusual but it is difficult to handle for black who is tied to d5 and has to keep an eye on options like Bxf6 chopping down a defender or white manoeuvres behind the bishop.
But as said Keilhack’s main line is
12.Qa4 right in Sokolov’s way
12...Na5 13.Rad1 Nc4 14. Bc1. He calls 14...Nb6 15.Qb3 as obviously passive (and gives - with deviations and lines - 14...Qc8 15.Qb5! Nb6 16.Bf4! asf. in the end resulting a white plus in Stull - Poulsen, corr. 1989).
Keilhack also quotes that game Vadasz-Szilagyi, Budapest 1974, but calls the course of the game not really evidential
15...Qd7 16 Be3 Bc5?! 17.Nxe6! as Khalifman (or he as him...). But Keilhack writes on 15...Qd7 “seems logical, but it is not good due to the shaky position of the Nb6." Without words and lines he gives
15...Rc8 as the alternative As I saw in your last post Sokolov has worked on this idea with some lines.
Black’s mainline against 12.Qa4 is acc. Keilhack
12...Qd7 which offers d5 (and if white takes - best with
13.Bxd5 - the conclusion is that black is worse but only in relatively slight dimensions). After
13.Rfd1 an interesting game with tactical possibilities rises.
There are structural or theoretical defects in black’s position but there are tactical or practical chances too.
GM Marjanovic is the master of ceremony in the 11...Bg4-variation and played many games with it. So there is a strong player who constantly believes in it for many years. An argument, that should count.
Keilhack’s conclusion is: "Whether the often proved richness of possibilities compensates for the theoretical soft spots of this variation, every player has to decide on his own."
I think, that is overall the very core of the Tarrasch...
cheese