proustiskeen wrote on 02/21/10 at 02:28:09:
For the rest of us who just want to learn about the Tarrasch, might you repost the lines that got accidently deleted?
Reposting the lines wasn’t a matter of two mouse-clicks. I have no word-doc on it. I really had to write them again plus translate Keilhack again and that costs some time, all the more because simultaneously I check what I write.
In regard of your nickname I had to laugh out loud. Proust is keen. In German Marcel Proust’s Masterpiece is called “Auf der Suche nach der verlorenen Zeit” - in search for the lost time. Yes. Indeed.
So here I am again with the variations.
Keilhack calls the variation Markovich has given (
1.d4 d5 2.c4 e6 3.Nc3 c5 4.cxd5 exd5 5.Nf3 Nc6 6.dxc5) the “belated Tarrasch Gambit” (the real Tarrasch Gambit starts with 5.dxc5).
He deals with it on about one page. First he follows what Markovich has given, that is
6...d4 7.Na4 Bxc5 8.Nxc5 Qa5+ but then the opinions diverge.
Markovich gave
9.Bd2 Qxc5 10.e3 dxe3 11.Bxe3. But I (and obviously Keilhack too) think that 10...dxe3 only develops white and in fact gives him a plus.
Keilhack gives
10...Bg4 11.exd4 Qe7+! 12.Be2 Bxf3 13.gxf3 Nf6, Knaak - Lalic, Varna 1986, as unclear. At least that offers more spots to play for then 10...dxe3.
Nevertheless
Keilhack shares Markovich’s opinion on that variation, but his concrete line in my eyes is more to the point:
9.Qd2! Qxc5 10.e3! dxe3 11.Qxe3+ Qxe3+ 12.Bxe3. Two bishops + slight lead in development = slight but enduring advantage for white. Keilhack gives Knaak - Petursson, Novi Sad ol 1990:
12...Nge7 13.Bc4 Be6 (hm, perhaps ?!, don’t know, but black definitely has problems. “This converts a drawback - opponent’s two bishops - into a structural weakness”, Keilhack)
14.Bxe6 fxe6 15.Ng5 Kd7 16.0-0-0+ Nd5 17.Rhe1 Ncb4 18.a3 Rac8+ 19.Kb1 Nc2 20.Re2 Nxe3 21.Rxe3 Rce8 22.Re5 Rhf8 23.f3 Kd6 24.f4! h6 25. Nxe6 asf.
Quite impressive though - but for white. So is Markovich in the end right with his verdict? Well according to Keilhack there are two possible cures for black.
First: 6...Nf6 (instead of d5-d4). If now
7.Be3 (otherwise ...Bxc5) then
7...Qa5 “with adventurous play” e.g.
8.a3 Ne4 9.Rc1 Be6 10.Qa4 (10.g3!? Van der Sterren, 10.Nd4!? Bxc5 11.Nxe6 fxe6 12.Bxc5 Nxc5 13.b4 Nxb4, yes, adventurous...)
Qxa4 (weaker is 10...Bxc5, Karolyi - Wells, Malta 1980)
11.Nxa4 Na5 12.b4 Nc4 13.Bd4 b5 14.Nc3 Nxc3 15.Rxc3 a5, unclear, our no less adventurous
9...Be7 (good old Krause)
10.Qxd5 Nxc3 11.Rxc3 Bf6 12.Nd4 Be6 13.Qe4 0-0-0... all too wild that? Well then...
Second: 6...d4 (again)
7.Na4 b5!? 7.axb6 axb6. With the additional moves Nf3/Nc6 this resembles the Haberditz Gambit, so you can call it “belated” again, (normally reached via 5.dxc5 d4 6.Na4 b5 and dealt with on one an a half pages by Keilhack) “untested and unclear” according to Keilhack, “but may well be the strongest continuation. It is difficult to say who will profit from the inserted moves Nf3/Nc6. White’s try to use this insertation with
9.Qb3 will be answered by
9...Bb4+ 10.Bd2 b5 11.Bxb4 Be6!”
All in all these two attempts both bear much more life than the attempt to survive drowning with the pseudo-active 6...d4 7.Na4 Bxc5...
So that’s for that. I hope, it helps.
cheese