Stigma wrote on 12/29/18 at 00:21:40:
I'm not sure what you mean here. Several strong players have used 9.Ne1 d5 10.Be3 with success. One reason it hasn't trickled down to lower-rated players all that much may be it's ignored in all the theory works. I hope I'm wrong, but I suspect the authors may be doing this on purpose: They don't want to draw attention to such a depressing line for Black and increase the risk of facing it themselves.
What I usually would want to do is cheque the correspondence database for what this line has there. Unfortunately I have no corr base and I am not paying 100,€ or however much the ChessBase one costs. They often play the best lines in correspondence, so I wonder how Black responds to this line there.
Even so, if many titled players have played I would have thought that someone would mention it in some article somewhere. Or some White repertoire book would choose 9. Ce1 for their White repertoire choice against Dutch. Anyways, the entire situation seems curious to me.
Stigma wrote on 12/29/18 at 00:21:40:
P. S.: Why do you use Spanish piece letters when writing in English?
Those are symbols for both Catalán, and Spanish too I guess. It is a kind of habit. This is what I see in all of my ChessBase files, so if I need to visualise, I use the same notation when writing. I can also do Norwegian too: 9. Se1 d5 10. Le3
There was a discussion on Quality Chess blog about using the unicode, but typing that constantly on a laptop must be some almighty pain in the arse.