|
Hello, as I told you my kids practice chess and my daughter is a Frenchie as me, the other day I was showing her the possibilities in the Winawer besides the poisining pawn variation, as showing her 7)..., 0-0; 7)...,Kf8 even 7)...,g6 and suddenly she said "Dad I like 7)..., Ng6 ", my first reaction was to tell her that her option is bad and she should forget about it, but I remembered a friend of mine who told me not to break my kid's creativity, so I decided to show her that the variation was not good with concrete analysis, so I told her that the knight will be in problems after 8)h4, she answered 8)...,h5 then I went 9)Qg3 and she answered 9)...,c4 ; then I realized her point, she said that the light square white bishop never will reach the square d3, and that if 7)...Kf8 or 7)...g6 are playable then 7)...Ng6 must be playable as well. So we start researching in the database and we found a game played by Petrosian!! in the sixties which lost after: 1)e4,e6; 2)d4,d5; 3)Nc3,Bb4; 4)e5,c5; 5)a3,Bc3; 6)bc,Ne7; 7)Qg4,Ng6!?; 8)h4,h5; 9)Qg3,Qa5!?; 10)Bd2,Nc6; 11)Bd3,Nce7; 12)dc5,Qc5; 13)Nf3,Bd7; 14)00,Bb5; 15)Be3 1-0 We think (me and my daughter) that is very important not to allow Bd3, so after 10)Bd2 Petrosian should have played 10)...c4 and then follow the same plan Nc6 -e7; get the black light square bishop to a4 aiming towards the weak c2 pawn and move the queen back to the kingside. This variation I played against FRITZ12 which beat me but I think I came out of the opening well, I use this variation in blitz games with a plus score so far. What do you think about this line?? Is there any work regarding 7)...Ng6!?; please let me know your thoughts regarding this line which I am about to use it in FIDE rated tournaments soon. Thanks in advance for your answers.
|