MNb wrote on 06/06/11 at 18:56:03:
Markovich wrote on 06/06/11 at 18:09:29:
Yes, really. I think that especially with 5.e5 d5 6.Bb5 Ne5 7.Nd4 Bc5, White's game is not so easy. He's playing a blockading game, while Black's striving to open up with ...f6. In general I think the latter is easier to handle.
I agree. But you might be amazed how few amateurs as Black dare to play this. So one can make an argument for playing 5.e5 while making sure how to handle 7...Bc5. After 8.Be3 Bd7 9.Bxc6 bxc6 10.Nd2 White has a quick development, so opening up with ...f6 is not a big deal.
Funny enough nobody as White has tried this against me.
That Sveshnikov line always has looked suspicious to me as spending a tempo for the relatively useless c2-c3 doesn't feel good.
Yeah, the only time I've ever played that 7. ...Bc5, I was black. And white responded with Be3, exactly like you said, rather than go in for the more tactical game, which is exactly how I'd play it as white, too.
And yeah, that Giuoco Piano line isn't the most aggressive, but it serves its purpose. You'd be amazed how often my opponents find a way to vary from book before we even get that far. Like I said, it's mostly just lower rated opponents who play e5 on the first move. Below 1400, everyone plays both sides of 1. e4 e5. But it's like once people break 1400, they start experimenting with other openings, and very few ever come back.