Stigma wrote on 04/08/10 at 07:44:20:
Chess_Addict wrote on 04/07/10 at 21:47:43:
I like to play cxd4 and ...g6 for practical reasons:
a) I can (and do) play the same positions against 2.c3
b) when you play a gambit you hope your opponent takes the pawn and gives you all the initiative: by playing something positional the psychological momentum is clearly on the black side.
I actually recommended that to a student the other day; combine 2.c3 g6 and 2.d4 cxd4 3.c3 g6 for simplicity. I used the 2.c3 coverage in "Chess Openings for Black, Explained" as a base.
One thing I've wondered though: If White is determined to gambit the pawn, how long can he keep it going without recapturing on d4? Moves like Nf3, Bc4, 0-0, e5, Re1 are available. Or even h4!? if White delays castling. ...g6 is not the best defence in the Morra accepted, so I don't think Black wants to take on c3 unless there is some specific reason.
Interesting point! Not sure about it but I guess a few points can be made:
-if white is to take on d4 he should make with a pawn,
-after black has played a few more developing moves then I guess he should be able to safely take on c3 (white cannot develop the b1 N, the a1 R, if he castles then he can't play h4 stuff any more)
-black hasn't (yet) committed any crime so an assault against the king with h4 shouldn't be that dangerous as white's king will be in the center and I don't see how white can get enough pieces near our king. Possibly Nf6,d6 and h5 will suffice (ok, we need a real position to get some moves in). Also some ...Qa5 idea may be interesting pinning c3 and keeping an eye on h5 and g5.