The Queen's Gambit & Catalan for Black by Lasha Janjgava

The Queen's Gambit & Catalan for Black



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The Queen's Gambit & Catalan for Black Lasha Janjgava ebook
ISBN: 1901983374, 9781901983371
Publisher: Gambit Publications
Format: pdf
Page: 98


White will either follow up with Bg5 or Bf4, or aim for a Catalan-like formation with g3, without gambiting a pawn. As a response to the Reti anyway. The Queen's Gambit & Catalan for BlackEbook Free DownloadThe Queen's Gambit & Catalan for Black. A sharp Queen's Gambit Declined, transposing into a Catalan, between Alexander Khalifman and Evgeni Sveshnikov, played in Elista in 1996. Colle, London, Veresov, Torre, Zuckertort etc.), Anti-Ben-Oni approaches (4.Nc3 ) as same as .. Khalifman vs Sveshnikov – Catalan Opening – Elista, 1996. Nf3 Nf6 I'm ready to play a King's Indian . Aronian annexes a pawn in a Cambridge Springs Queen's Gambit, but Navara has compensation in his better development. Aveskulov does not limit himself to the Benko- and Blumenfeld Gambit itself but also represents answers to rare moves such as Queen's pawn openings (i.e. All theoretical explainations are also available on youtube! The classic main line A quieter alternative to 5 Qb3 and 5 g3 is the transposition to the Exchange Variation of the Queen's Gambit Declined with 5 cxd5 exd5. The minimum openings I'd recommend for black would be stuff like the Benko Gambit, Scandinavian Defenses (although I think the Scandinavian is a really lame opening) and so forth, while with white you can still get away with the c3 Sicilian, and 3.Nc3, 3. This is my preferred method of meeting it, but one also has to know the Black side of the Catalan fairly well so as not to get caught up in positions you do not know. Anand has an interesting development idea on the Black side of Ponomariov's Catalan. Grandmaster Sadler explains the key ideas behind the Queen's Gambit Declined, one of Black's most dependable responses to the queen's pawn. The move 5 Qb3 hopes to improve on 5 e3 by defending against Black winning a pawn by 5…dxc4 followed by 6…b5, while at the same time not blocking in his queen's bishop. I would like to present you a complete repertoire for black against 1.d4 based on the Queen's Gambit Declined (QGD) and to share my thoughts and ideas with you! I still remember how Boris Avrukh managed to lift the Catalan's reputation with his books and I'm sure Victor Mikhalevski will do the same with the Spanish Opening! Nf3 I personally play Nf6 and leave almost all options open (except the Dutch Defense) but again, d5-e6 is a universal prescription, if you're not afraid to play the Black side of the Queen's Gambit.