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ErictheRed
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Re: Bogo-Indian move order
Reply #22 - 04/20/13 at 01:22:50
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Bobby, your lines look playable; give them a try.  I still don't know what you want from the rest of us, though, so I don't think that I have anything else to add.   
  
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BPaulsen
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Re: Bogo-Indian move order
Reply #21 - 04/20/13 at 00:51:35
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You changed the line again. This is getting annoying. If you choose that move order, then white has 10.Qc3 Rd8 11.Nbd2 and he went on to win in D. Talos-S. Vatansever, E-Mail 2011.

And in the other continuation with 9.Na3 e5 10.dxe5 Nxe5 11.Nxe5 Qxe5 12.Nxc4 Qe7 13.0-0 0-0 14.b3 was eventually 1-0 in G. Guattrocchi-M. Palladino, E-Mail 2011.

This is a far cry from your assertion of 
"If this is the largest edge White has, presumably Black will have no trouble drawing all correspondence games and equalizing in all human games even against grandmasters."

He's having some problems. The position isn't as easy as you think it is, and that small edge has some bite. Feel free to play the black side as you wish, but I don't expect white players to be discouraged from 7.e3.

I'm done with this conversation. Getting one long line doesn't qualify as analysis, nor are the games actually played in this line being discussed. It's pointless. 

Now back to analyzing the Botvinnik Semi-Slav.
  

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BobbyDigital80
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Re: Bogo-Indian move order
Reply #20 - 04/19/13 at 23:48:26
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BPaulsen wrote on 04/19/13 at 16:29:07:
BobbyDigital80 wrote on 04/19/13 at 05:03:28:
ErictheRed wrote on 04/18/13 at 05:21:04:
Bryan: I agree that in the 9.Na3 line, White looks somewhere between += and =; see my suggested improvement over BobbyDigital80's long variation.  As a practical over the board player, I would prefer the White side after the line I gave ending in 11.Qd4, but it's possible that White has nothing better than equality/compensation/unclear here and my preference for the White pieces is entirely subjective.  

BobbyDigital80: I'm not sure what you want.  You asked an initial question that gave absolutely no indication about the way you intended to continue.  That question was answered.  

You then suggested that Black should reply with ...d5 and ...Nc6, when White has nothing.  That's it, no indication of the order of moves (you seemed to mean that you'd start with ...d5 as you wrote that first), no lines that you've looked at, nothing.  Pantu made good points in his response, I think.

Later you said "1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 e6 3.Nf3 Bb4+ 4.Bd2 Qe7 5.g3 Bxd2+ 6.Qxd2 Nc6 looks really good. Black will follow up with ...d5. I don't see how White has anything at all in this."  Now you've seemingly changed the order of moves: you want Black to start with ...Nc6.  (That wasn't clear from your previous post).  You also gave absolutely no chess content, not a single line that you've looked at or considered following ...Nc6, no indication of which lines you think are the most important, etc.  

I asked how you were planning on following up and you took a condescending jab at the "so-called" stronger players on the forum.  

Tony37 posted a suggestion for a way forward with White, and you finally did post one long variation.  I suggested a more aggressive setup for White and also a possible improvement in the line you responded to Tony37 with.  

So Tony37 and I (also Bryan) suggested places to start investigating, and you haven't responded with any more chess content.  You accuse some people of trolling (I'm sorry if my "Rybdini" post seemed rude), yet don't seem interested in carrying on a chess discussion outlining how you think Black should play.  Others have suggested ways for White to proceed.

So at this point...what is it that you want from the other members of the forum??


I should've been more clear about the order of the moves ...Nc6 and ...d5. Maybe both are playable, but I think Nc6 first is better.

I thought if Black can play ...Nc6, ...d5, ...dxc4, and ...e5, then he should be alright. I don't see how comparing this line to Catalan positions played by Topalov and Kramnik has any value. They are too different to make general statements in that opening apply to this one.

In this line it looks to me like White just had lingering pressure without any real plan to turn it into anything: 1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 e6 3. Nf3 Bb4+ 4. Bd2 Qe7 5. g3 Bxd2+ 6. Qxd2 Nc6 7. e3 d5 8. Bg2 dxc4 9. O-O e5 10. Nxe5 Nxe5 11. dxe5 Qxe5 12. Na3 O-O 13. Nxc4 Qe7 14. b3 c6 15. Qd6 Re8 16. Rad1 Be6 17. Rd4 g6 18. Rfd1 Nd5 19. R1d2 f5 20. Qe5 Rad8 21. R4d3 Qg7 22. b4 Qxe5 23. Nxe5 Rc8 24. a3 Nb6 25. f4 Re7.
BPaulsen suggested 9.Na3, and I think it transposes into this line after the same plan by Black.
Another option is 18. ...Bd5, which also looks quite solid.

If this is the largest edge White has, presumably Black will have no trouble drawing all correspondence games and equalizing in all human games even against grandmasters.


If black were doing that great, then it would have been a trivial draw in the correspondence game to reach the line. Instead he lost, and in a very typical manner for this pawn structure. The problem for black stems entirely from his easily restrained majority, while white's can advance more easily later on. Engines are bad at evaluating these structures as equal early on, and human input can do much to guide them if the person knows what they are aiming towards.


It's a common fallacy to think that if a line is equal, every decent correspondence or OTB player should draw the game from a holdable position. The objectivity of the line doesn't depend on the result of one game, but on the actual analysis of the position. Of course, I'm not positive that it holds, but your explanation doesn't help us much at arriving at the truth of the position.

Here's another line:
1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 e6 3. Nf3 Bb4+ 4. Bd2 Qe7 5. g3 Bxd2+ 6. Qxd2 Nc6 7. e3 d5 8.
Bg2 O-O 9. O-O dxc4 10. Na3 Rd8 11. Qc3 Nd5 12. Qxc4 Na5 13. Qe2 b6 14. Rfd1
Bb7 15. Ne5 f6 16. Nd3 e5 17. dxe5 fxe5 18. Rac1 c5 19. Nc4 Nxc4 20. Rxc4 Rab8

The position after 13. ...b6 looks fine for Black; it's just some solid position like usual. Black is one or two moves away from Rac8 and c5 =. White can try a few attempts for a pull but probably has none.
  
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BPaulsen
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Re: Bogo-Indian move order
Reply #19 - 04/19/13 at 16:29:07
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BobbyDigital80 wrote on 04/19/13 at 05:03:28:
ErictheRed wrote on 04/18/13 at 05:21:04:
Bryan: I agree that in the 9.Na3 line, White looks somewhere between += and =; see my suggested improvement over BobbyDigital80's long variation.  As a practical over the board player, I would prefer the White side after the line I gave ending in 11.Qd4, but it's possible that White has nothing better than equality/compensation/unclear here and my preference for the White pieces is entirely subjective.  

BobbyDigital80: I'm not sure what you want.  You asked an initial question that gave absolutely no indication about the way you intended to continue.  That question was answered.  

You then suggested that Black should reply with ...d5 and ...Nc6, when White has nothing.  That's it, no indication of the order of moves (you seemed to mean that you'd start with ...d5 as you wrote that first), no lines that you've looked at, nothing.  Pantu made good points in his response, I think.

Later you said "1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 e6 3.Nf3 Bb4+ 4.Bd2 Qe7 5.g3 Bxd2+ 6.Qxd2 Nc6 looks really good. Black will follow up with ...d5. I don't see how White has anything at all in this."  Now you've seemingly changed the order of moves: you want Black to start with ...Nc6.  (That wasn't clear from your previous post).  You also gave absolutely no chess content, not a single line that you've looked at or considered following ...Nc6, no indication of which lines you think are the most important, etc.  

I asked how you were planning on following up and you took a condescending jab at the "so-called" stronger players on the forum.  

Tony37 posted a suggestion for a way forward with White, and you finally did post one long variation.  I suggested a more aggressive setup for White and also a possible improvement in the line you responded to Tony37 with.  

So Tony37 and I (also Bryan) suggested places to start investigating, and you haven't responded with any more chess content.  You accuse some people of trolling (I'm sorry if my "Rybdini" post seemed rude), yet don't seem interested in carrying on a chess discussion outlining how you think Black should play.  Others have suggested ways for White to proceed.

So at this point...what is it that you want from the other members of the forum??


I should've been more clear about the order of the moves ...Nc6 and ...d5. Maybe both are playable, but I think Nc6 first is better.

I thought if Black can play ...Nc6, ...d5, ...dxc4, and ...e5, then he should be alright. I don't see how comparing this line to Catalan positions played by Topalov and Kramnik has any value. They are too different to make general statements in that opening apply to this one.

In this line it looks to me like White just had lingering pressure without any real plan to turn it into anything: 1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 e6 3. Nf3 Bb4+ 4. Bd2 Qe7 5. g3 Bxd2+ 6. Qxd2 Nc6 7. e3 d5 8. Bg2 dxc4 9. O-O e5 10. Nxe5 Nxe5 11. dxe5 Qxe5 12. Na3 O-O 13. Nxc4 Qe7 14. b3 c6 15. Qd6 Re8 16. Rad1 Be6 17. Rd4 g6 18. Rfd1 Nd5 19. R1d2 f5 20. Qe5 Rad8 21. R4d3 Qg7 22. b4 Qxe5 23. Nxe5 Rc8 24. a3 Nb6 25. f4 Re7.
BPaulsen suggested 9.Na3, and I think it transposes into this line after the same plan by Black.
Another option is 18. ...Bd5, which also looks quite solid.

If this is the largest edge White has, presumably Black will have no trouble drawing all correspondence games and equalizing in all human games even against grandmasters.


If black were doing that great, then it would have been a trivial draw in the correspondence game to reach the line. Instead he lost, and in a very typical manner for this pawn structure. The problem for black stems entirely from his easily restrained majority, while white's can advance more easily later on. Engines are bad at evaluating these structures as equal early on, and human input can do much to guide them if the person knows what they are aiming towards.
  

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BobbyDigital80
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Re: Bogo-Indian move order
Reply #18 - 04/19/13 at 05:03:28
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ErictheRed wrote on 04/18/13 at 05:21:04:
Bryan: I agree that in the 9.Na3 line, White looks somewhere between += and =; see my suggested improvement over BobbyDigital80's long variation.  As a practical over the board player, I would prefer the White side after the line I gave ending in 11.Qd4, but it's possible that White has nothing better than equality/compensation/unclear here and my preference for the White pieces is entirely subjective.  

BobbyDigital80: I'm not sure what you want.  You asked an initial question that gave absolutely no indication about the way you intended to continue.  That question was answered.  

You then suggested that Black should reply with ...d5 and ...Nc6, when White has nothing.  That's it, no indication of the order of moves (you seemed to mean that you'd start with ...d5 as you wrote that first), no lines that you've looked at, nothing.  Pantu made good points in his response, I think.

Later you said "1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 e6 3.Nf3 Bb4+ 4.Bd2 Qe7 5.g3 Bxd2+ 6.Qxd2 Nc6 looks really good. Black will follow up with ...d5. I don't see how White has anything at all in this."  Now you've seemingly changed the order of moves: you want Black to start with ...Nc6.  (That wasn't clear from your previous post).  You also gave absolutely no chess content, not a single line that you've looked at or considered following ...Nc6, no indication of which lines you think are the most important, etc.  

I asked how you were planning on following up and you took a condescending jab at the "so-called" stronger players on the forum.  

Tony37 posted a suggestion for a way forward with White, and you finally did post one long variation.  I suggested a more aggressive setup for White and also a possible improvement in the line you responded to Tony37 with.  

So Tony37 and I (also Bryan) suggested places to start investigating, and you haven't responded with any more chess content.  You accuse some people of trolling (I'm sorry if my "Rybdini" post seemed rude), yet don't seem interested in carrying on a chess discussion outlining how you think Black should play.  Others have suggested ways for White to proceed.

So at this point...what is it that you want from the other members of the forum??


I should've been more clear about the order of the moves ...Nc6 and ...d5. Maybe both are playable, but I think Nc6 first is better.

I thought if Black can play ...Nc6, ...d5, ...dxc4, and ...e5, then he should be alright. I don't see how comparing this line to Catalan positions played by Topalov and Kramnik has any value. They are too different to make general statements in that opening apply to this one.

In this line it looks to me like White just had lingering pressure without any real plan to turn it into anything: 1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 e6 3. Nf3 Bb4+ 4. Bd2 Qe7 5. g3 Bxd2+ 6. Qxd2 Nc6 7. e3 d5 8. Bg2 dxc4 9. O-O e5 10. Nxe5 Nxe5 11. dxe5 Qxe5 12. Na3 O-O 13. Nxc4 Qe7 14. b3 c6 15. Qd6 Re8 16. Rad1 Be6 17. Rd4 g6 18. Rfd1 Nd5 19. R1d2 f5 20. Qe5 Rad8 21. R4d3 Qg7 22. b4 Qxe5 23. Nxe5 Rc8 24. a3 Nb6 25. f4 Re7.
BPaulsen suggested 9.Na3, and I think it transposes into this line after the same plan by Black.
Another option is 18. ...Bd5, which also looks quite solid.

If this is the largest edge White has, presumably Black will have no trouble drawing all correspondence games and equalizing in all human games even against grandmasters.

  
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ErictheRed
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Re: Bogo-Indian move order
Reply #17 - 04/18/13 at 05:21:04
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Bryan: I agree that in the 9.Na3 line, White looks somewhere between += and =; see my suggested improvement over BobbyDigital80's long variation.  As a practical over the board player, I would prefer the White side after the line I gave ending in 11.Qd4, but it's possible that White has nothing better than equality/compensation/unclear here and my preference for the White pieces is entirely subjective.   

BobbyDigital80: I'm not sure what you want.  You asked an initial question that gave absolutely no indication about the way you intended to continue.  That question was answered.   

You then suggested that Black should reply with ...d5 and ...Nc6, when White has nothing.  That's it, no indication of the order of moves (you seemed to mean that you'd start with ...d5 as you wrote that first), no lines that you've looked at, nothing.  Pantu made good points in his response, I think.

Later you said "1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 e6 3.Nf3 Bb4+ 4.Bd2 Qe7 5.g3 Bxd2+ 6.Qxd2 Nc6 looks really good. Black will follow up with ...d5. I don't see how White has anything at all in this."  Now you've seemingly changed the order of moves: you want Black to start with ...Nc6.  (That wasn't clear from your previous post).  You also gave absolutely no chess content, not a single line that you've looked at or considered following ...Nc6, no indication of which lines you think are the most important, etc.   

I asked how you were planning on following up and you took a condescending jab at the "so-called" stronger players on the forum.   

Tony37 posted a suggestion for a way forward with White, and you finally did post one long variation.  I suggested a more aggressive setup for White and also a possible improvement in the line you responded to Tony37 with.   

So Tony37 and I (also Bryan) suggested places to start investigating, and you haven't responded with any more chess content.  You accuse some people of trolling (I'm sorry if my "Rybdini" post seemed rude), yet don't seem interested in carrying on a chess discussion outlining how you think Black should play.  Others have suggested ways for White to proceed.

So at this point...what is it that you want from the other members of the forum??
  
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Re: Bogo-Indian move order
Reply #16 - 04/18/13 at 03:21:55
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In BobbyFischer80's line 9.Na3 (this was the point of white's move order mentioned by tony37) 9...e5 10.Nxe5 Nxe5 11.dxe5 Qxe5 12.Nxc4 Qe7 13.0-0 0-0 is something between += and = (the one correspondence game I see in the line ended 1-0, and based on my own understanding of chess I am not that surprised). Deeper analysis would need to be done to determine if white's kingside majority can be mobilized, because engines can be notoriously slow in recognizing the danger of it.

Outside of correspondence I wouldn't fancy black's task, and would prefer the white side over-the-board, even if black is very close to equal.

In ErictheRed's choice white has compensation, but looking at the correspondence games I'm not seeing any more than that.

I don't have any horse in the race, but both sides are playable. I don't think white should be discouraged from 7.e3 yet, though.
  

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BobbyDigital80
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Re: Bogo-Indian move order
Reply #15 - 04/18/13 at 02:45:55
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ErictheRed wrote on 04/18/13 at 01:59:48:
BobbyDigital80 wrote on 04/18/13 at 01:10:55:

If these 'so-called' stronger players can't figure out this standard idea, you have to question if they're even strong players.


Yayy, chess content!  I'm sure that the stronger players around here could figure out that one of Black's plans is ...dxc4 followed by ...e6-e5; it happens in the QGA, the Ragozin, the Slav, the Semi-Slav, the QGD...the trouble was, you had never given more than one ply of what you were talking about.

The line you cited looks cooperative for White.  Why 7.e3, before Black even has the possibility of ...d5xc4??  As I posted previously, White's best is surely 7.Nc3 (avoiding 7.Bg2 Ne4 8.Qc2 Qb4+).  

7.Nc3 d5 8.Ne5 is probably the place to start.  Now if 8...dc 9.Bg2 Nxe5 10.de Nd7 11.Qd4 looks like fairly typical Catalan-like play, with good chances for a White edge.  My instinct is that White is better here.  There is also 11.f4 to consider, and earlier perhaps even 9.f4.

I disagree that 7.e3 looks like such a clever idea, and don't think the Knight is misplaced on c3.  Many players (Kramnik, Topalov...) have shown that in these kinds of positions White can get excellent long-term compensation for the pawn with a Knight on c3.  

Even in your line, it looks to me like White has chances of an edge with something other than 15.e4.  15.Rfd1!? keeps the King from going to c7, for instance.  

I'd still like an explanation of Black's ideas from you, since you're the one claiming White has nothing.  More branches and less trunk, please.


One of the posters suggested 7.e3 as having a great score in correspondence play, so that's why I pasted the line.

The truth is that you're not necessarily going to see the idea of dxc4 and e5. Just because an idea occurs in other openings doesn't mean you will automatically recognize it in other lines. I think some people on this forum just like to be skeptical of people's ideas for no specific reason than to troll.

You said "Many players (Kramnik, Topalov...) have shown that in these kinds of positions White can get excellent long-term compensation for the pawn with a Knight on c3." What are you referring to with this? Can you give an example? This position isn't directly analogous to a Catalan line.

"More branches and less trunk, please."
What do you want? Ten equalizing lines for Black or what? Why don't you just give a logical explanation for why White is better?

  
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ErictheRed
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Re: Bogo-Indian move order
Reply #14 - 04/18/13 at 01:59:48
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BobbyDigital80 wrote on 04/18/13 at 01:10:55:

If these 'so-called' stronger players can't figure out this standard idea, you have to question if they're even strong players.


Yayy, chess content!  I'm sure that the stronger players around here could figure out that one of Black's plans is ...dxc4 followed by ...e6-e5; it happens in the QGA, the Ragozin, the Slav, the Semi-Slav, the QGD...the trouble was, you had never given more than one ply of what you were talking about.

The line you cited looks cooperative for White.  Why 7.e3, before Black even has the possibility of ...d5xc4??  As I posted previously, White's best is surely 7.Nc3 (avoiding 7.Bg2 Ne4 8.Qc2 Qb4+).  

7.Nc3 d5 8.Ne5 is probably the place to start.  Now if 8...dc 9.Bg2 Nxe5 10.de Nd7 11.Qd4 looks like fairly typical Catalan-like play, with good chances for a White edge.  My instinct is that White is better here.  There is also 11.f4 to consider, and earlier perhaps even 9.f4.

I disagree that 7.e3 looks like such a clever idea, and don't think the Knight is misplaced on c3.  Many players (Kramnik, Topalov...) have shown that in these kinds of positions White can get excellent long-term compensation for the pawn with a Knight on c3.  

Even in your line, it looks to me like White has chances of an edge with something other than 15.e4.  15.Rfd1!? keeps the King from going to c7, for instance.   

I'd still like an explanation of Black's ideas from you, since you're the one claiming White has nothing.  More branches and less trunk, please.
  
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Re: Bogo-Indian move order
Reply #13 - 04/18/13 at 01:10:55
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ErictheRed wrote on 04/16/13 at 06:57:30:
BobbyDigital80 wrote on 04/15/13 at 02:11:21:
1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 e6 3.Nf3 Bb4+ 4.Bd2 Qe7 5.g3 Bxd2+ 6.Qxd2 Nc6 looks really good. Black will follow up with ...d5. I don't see how White has anything at all in this.


Bobby, I'm sure that what you're suggesting is playable.  But if you want people to respond, please supply more than 1 ply of analysis.  Are you planning on playing ...dxc4?  What's the idea?  The stronger posters aren't responding to you because they don't know what you're getting at.


1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 e6 3. Nf3 Bb4+ 4. Bd2 Qe7 5. g3 Bxd2+ 6. Qxd2 Nc6 7. e3 d5 8.
Bg2 dxc4 9. O-O e5 10. Nxe5 Nxe5 11. dxe5 Qxe5 12. Na3 c3 13. Qxc3 Qxc3 14.
bxc3 c6 15. e4 Kd8 16. Rfe1 Kc7 17. e5 Ng4 18. Nc4 Be6 =
I got the idea from an IM and a GM I know personally. The idea of taking on c4 and playing e5 to equalize has been played by Carlsen in Bxd2+ Bogo Indian positions before and is quite basic and standard. If these 'so-called' stronger players can't figure out this standard idea, you have to question if they're even strong players.
  
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Re: Bogo-Indian move order
Reply #12 - 04/17/13 at 20:10:45
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Actually 7.e3 looks like a clever idea. I suppose the point is that after 7.Nc3 d5 8.Bg2 dxc4, the knight is suddenly not optimally placed on c3. Instead after 7.e3 0-0 8.Bg2 d5 9.0-0 dxc4, White has 10.Na3. Besides, after 7.e3 White does not have to fear 7...Ne4 8.Qc2 Qb4+ 9.Nbd2 since the d4 pawn is protected.
  
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Re: Bogo-Indian move order
Reply #11 - 04/16/13 at 23:20:24
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That looks odd.  So who played that way with White?
  
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Re: Bogo-Indian move order
Reply #10 - 04/16/13 at 22:51:57
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maybe 4.Bd2 Qe7 5.g3 Bxd2+ 6.Qxd2 Nc6 7.e3 O-O 8.Bg2 d5 9.O-O is where white should be looking, the score is 3 white wins and 2 draws (only correspondence games)

at first sight I don't see an easy equaliser here
  
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Re: Bogo-Indian move order
Reply #9 - 04/16/13 at 06:57:30
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BobbyDigital80 wrote on 04/15/13 at 02:11:21:
1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 e6 3.Nf3 Bb4+ 4.Bd2 Qe7 5.g3 Bxd2+ 6.Qxd2 Nc6 looks really good. Black will follow up with ...d5. I don't see how White has anything at all in this.


Bobby, I'm sure that what you're suggesting is playable.  But if you want people to respond, please supply more than 1 ply of analysis.  Are you planning on playing ...dxc4?  What's the idea?  The stronger posters aren't responding to you because they don't know what you're getting at.
  
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Re: Bogo-Indian move order
Reply #8 - 04/15/13 at 06:42:45
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Speaking of Bxd2 and Qxd2, Ulf Andersson seemed to like to place the Knigt at d7 intead of c6, it almost transposes exept that in you line white has played g3 instead of e3.


  
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