[quoteMamedyarov, Tkachiev, and Safarli are playing the Norwegian, and their assessments are based on an extremely deep understanding of the variations. 9.Bd2 is not the main move, as you claim. 9.c4 is the main move. Anyway, Black has no proplems after 9.Bd2 Nxb3 10.Nxb3 Rb8! (reserving a8 for the bishop, making Na5 pretty pointless). Did you ever consider that maybe Mamedyarov, Tkachiev, and Safarli might have a point and your 50 year old ancient and stereotypical assessments might not be entirely viable now? [/quote]
Ouch. It always amuses me when someone moans about the hostility of others, when their tone towards other people is nothing but hostile.
I went solely from the point of view of the databases that I have looked at, where 9.Bd2 has been played more than 9.c4, despite the advocation of the latter move by several recent works. I do not claim to be an expert on these lines, nor do I claim to know the actual assessments given by Greet et al., but it is always amusing to have my opinions labelled as stereotypical.
As for the players named... Carlsen and Ivanchuk played the Alekhine at the highest levels. Does that mean they knew something everyone else did, and that the Alekhine is the strongest defence to 1.e4? Or does it mean that by playing something less-travelled at that level, they were more likely to have a theoretical edge, despite the actual merits of the system. Sadly, Mamedyarov doesn't post here, so it is impossible to get his actual feelings... but I would opine that he has not played this often, and certainly it is not his main choice in important games, so I would suggest his faith in it is more based on the considerations of surprise and relative validity in blitz.
For what it's worth, I agree with MNb's second line, 11.a4 Be7 12.ab ab 13.Qe2 Qd7 14.e5 and white is better. White's pieces are better, I opine. His Ra1 is on the open file, the e-file will become open and black might well not have the rights to castle. Black may well have the dynamic advantage of the two bishops, but at the moment his position is not dynamic, and this is only a visual advantage.
Perhaps the game may continue something like 14...dxe5 (what else?) 15.Qxe5 f6 16.Qe2 Qc6 17.Qg4 Qxc2 18.Nd4! (Not 18.Re1 Qxb3 19.Qxg7 Qc2!, ensnaring the queen and setting up a vicious attack) Qe4 19.Qxe4 Bxe4 20.Re1 f5 21. Nc3 - white has more than enough compensation for his pawn and can retreive it whenever he wishes, he will almost certainly also take away black's two bishop advantage. His pieces are far more active, with his rook primed to come into a7 in the next few moves. Enough to win? Perhaps not... but white is pretty comfortable here. And this is just one such line. Black may be surviving, and I have never claimed that this is unsound... however "black has no problems", after a two move variation, is absolute nonsense.
If you propose improvements for black, or interesting ideas, I will be happy to respond, as I always am. If there is any further hostility then I will not, as it is not worth my time arguing with you.
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