Markovich wrote on 10/02/10 at 02:47:01:
Well, I can only say that your knowledge of this game vastly exceeds mine if you can claim with any certainty that the QGD, or the Slav for that matter, is better for Black than the Symmetrical English. Personally I hold the opposite view, but I have no claim to Chess Truth. I think that some of our disagreement on this point arises from our different approaches as Black; you're looking to flat-out equalize, I'm looking for un certain je ne sais quoi.
But it does seem to me that if 1...d5 is the best that Black can do against 1.Nf3, then 1.d4 is clearly imprecise, which strikes me as an absurdity.
1. d4 has tries after 1...d5 that 1. Nf3 doesn't have access to - ie: Queen's Gambit Declined, Exchange Variation. In comparison it's ridiculously hard to find
anything worth mentioning in some Catalan lines (ie: 4...Bb4+), Queen's Gambit Declined with 5. Bf4 (6...Nbd7), and 5. Bg5 (Lasker, Tartakower), as examples. With all due respect, the notion that 1. d4 is an inaccuracy if 1. Nf3 is best met by 1...d5 is flatly ridiculous, given it ignores all associated move order nuances that favor 1. d4.
If what you're striving for by playing 1...c5 is some sort of imbalance different from the often drab equality resulting from, for example, the Lasker QGD, that's all well and fine. However, that's markedly different from reaching theoretical equality, which as you've noticed is my primary concern.
I make my statements based on the theory I've built up to this point over the last decade. If something significant comes along it is subject to change.
Quote:
And yes, I was using "Khalifman's repertoire" in the sense of "1.Nf3 intending 1...Nf6 2.c4 and 1...d5 2.d4," not in the sense of the particular moves that he put down in his books.
Understood.