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| From | Message | Posted by houseofcook austinfilmfestival.org
6/16/2008 10:29:18 Play online chess | Subject: French Defence, What do you play as White.
Message: Hi there,
A question for players who play the French defence as their main opening.
What openings would you play as white ? I know this is dependant on the response by black. Is it a similar setup to the French, or totally unrelated?
What was your thinking in choosing these setups ?
| Posted by ionadowman austinfilmfestival.org
6/16/2008 13:38:35 Play online chess | My own favorite...
Message: ... for White is 3.Nc3, hoping for the Winawer (an opening I like as Black as well, which says something about this line): 1.e4 e6 2.d4 d5. 3.Nc3 and if Black plays 3...Bb4 we have the Winawer line, leading to a good fighting game. Black can try instead the exchange on e4 (I have a consultation game going on Gameknot at the moment in which the opponents have played this). Or he can try 3...Nf6, an OK line, but one I dislike as Black.
Playing the French OTB almost exclusively for several years, I found four opponents out of five favoured the Tarrasch, 3.Nd2, keeping the c-pawn free to advance. Not particularly committal, it's not easy for Black to get a hold on the ensuing game. I favoured the Guimard (3...Nc6) with considerable success, but blocking Black's c-pawn isn't everyone's cup o' java.
Finally, there's the more committal Advance Variation: 1.e4 e6 2.d4 d5 3.e5 (3...c5 4.c3 Nc6 5.Nf3 Qb6 are often played. White can then continue with the "standard" 6.Be2, or try the more ambitious 6.Bd3, possibly heading for the violent Milner-Barry Gambit: 6...cxd4 7.cxd4 Bd7 8.0-0 Nxd4 9.Nxd4 Qxd4 10.Nc3 Qxe5 11.Re1 ... An example is the game kikoursus vs ionadowman played in 2005.
There may be other lines (I gather 1.e4 e6 2.Nf3 is sometimes played), but these are the main ones.
Cheers,
Ion
| Posted by kansaspatzer austinfilmfestival.org
6/16/2008 14:48:14 Play online chess |
Message: I think he's asking what openings French players play when they're White. But FWIW, I play 2.Qe2 when faced with the French. ——— For 2nd Year, Younger Women Beat Older Men at Czech Event — In chess, men almost always outperform women, and younger chess players often beat older ones. But which group — women or older players — has the advantage when they face each other? The annual Czech Coal Chess Match provides a clue. For now, the answer seems to be women. In last year’s tournament, the women, all of them young, and whom the organizers called the Snowdrops, edged the Old Hands team of men, 16.5 to 15.5. This year, the women won even more decisively, 18 to 14, despite losing the last round, 3 to 1. The women were led both years by Humpy Koneru of India, who is No. 2 on the list of top women chess players. She was the tournament’s top scorer this year, with ...
Posted by chessisvanity austinfilmfestival.org
6/16/2008 22:34:55 Play online chess | pffft...
Message: Throw them off....I play the exchange.
Why would I sit there and let a guy play his favorite opening?
If i play 1.e4 and he plays 1...e6 I know he knows the French.
So i play 2.d4...d5
3.exd5!
Yes some say this might be drawish....but unless he is 2200 or better then i have the advantage.
The same goes with the caro-kann. The exchange variation!! ——— Vishy Anand and Magnus Carlsen lead the field for London Classic — Last year's London Classic at Olympia attracted large audiences, so its 2010 version on 8-15 December, with the reigning world chess champion Vishy Anand now in the field, will be of great interest. Its added spice is the rivalry at the top of the world chess rankings between Anand, Norway's 20-year-old Magnus Carlsen, and Russia's ex-champion and current world No4, Vlad Kramnik. The global chess body, Fide, still hopes to persuade Carlsen to rescind his withdrawal from the May 2011 candidates matches and has announced a new date of 22 December for contract signing. How he performs in London, just a week before the contract deadline, may affect the talks and whether he can take ...
Posted by houseofcook austinfilmfestival.org
6/16/2008 23:27:35 Play online chess | French Defence,what do you play as white.
Message: Thanks for the replies.
It was interesting to find out what French players would play against the French.
I appreciate the in depth reply from ionadowman, but I did mean what does a French player play as white, what would be your initial moves, would you start with 1.d4 or 1. e4 or something else ? ——— The Man With Too Much Chess Talent — Dragoljub Velimirovic used to be one of the world's most feared attackers, always looking for the impossible. His imaginative play was compared to the colorful world chess champion Mikhail Tal's razzle-dazzle. His playing style was unique, daring and often falling off the edge. He made risky moves and so many of them that you wondered how much punishment his chess pieces could take. He loved to create confusion on the chessboard, always believing he could find a beautiful escape from a bad situation. He had enough talent to pull it off, perhaps "too much talent" as Bobby Fischer once put it when we discussed the play of the Serbian grandmaster and champion. At 68, Velimirovic doesn't seem to ...
Posted by chessisvanity austinfilmfestival.org
6/16/2008 23:31:54 Play online chess | ...
Message: well duh...
A french player will have an advantage playing against the French so I imagine they play 1.e4 as white. ——— Chess: A sacrificial rook — Sacrificing a chess piece is a nerve-racking business, but think of the warm glow when it pays off. RB If chess pieces could talk, they would be screaming at me something like: "Can't you take a hint, dummy? We're all pointing in one direction – at c3!" And I would say back to them: "Yes, thank you, I see that, but I have to tell you that I am always nervous of sacrificing a chess piece when I can't calculate a forced mate or win of material." But let's try to get the nerves under control and venture the less valuable piece first: 1...Bxc3. What's to stop White playing 2 bxc3, and if 2...Qxc3 3 Bb3, with threats against f7? That doesn't seem to help Black much, so what about the rook: ...
Posted by ionadowman austinfilmfestival.org
6/17/2008 00:44:42 Play online chess | Sorry -
Message: - Misunderstood you to mean what would I play if faced with the French.
But you can infer that I was not afraid to face the French myself, so would open 1.e4 at least sometimes.
But my stock opening as White, for even longer than the French was when I was Black, was the English Opening: 1.c4. 1.e4 was more of a "change" opening, just for the sake of variety. Some "English" players tend to stick with "pure" English positions, but I was more than happy to transpose into King's Indian Defences (from White's perspective), Sicilians Reversed or (surprisingly frequently) Maroczy Binds. Quite a few French defence player like the King's Indian Attack as White, but I never had much luck with it...
Cheers,
Ion ——— Polgar Defeats a Slumping Topalov at Ajedrez Event — Marriage seems to have hurt Veselin Topalov’s chess career, for now. Topalov, 35, a former world chess champion who was ranked No. 1 in the world as recently as 14 months ago, has seen his ranking slide to No. 5. His manager, Silvio Danailov, said in a recent interview that Topalov married a few months ago and was “enjoying life a little bit,” adding, “He is not motivated to play chess tournaments right now.” Topalov may also be suffering from a sort of psychological hangover after losing a grueling world chess championship match in April and May to Viswanathan Anand. He has not really played well since. His latest setback occurred at the Ajedrez UNAM Quadrangular chess tournament in ...
Posted by lighttotheright austinfilmfestival.org
6/18/2008 12:53:52 Play online chess |
Message: Ion,
You and I apparently like the same openings with the same variations! That's spooky. Maybe we know some things others don't.:-O
| Posted by ionadowman austinfilmfestival.org
6/18/2008 13:43:38 Play online chess | ...
Message: Ken -
I wonder what they can be?? :-/
Maybe we just like lines with a bit of fight in them?
(I have to admit, though, my record with the English on GK hasn't been all that wonderful...)
Cheers,
Ion
| Posted by premium_steve austinfilmfestival.org
7/07/2008 12:25:10 Play online chess |
Message: i'm a french player now (i used to play the alekhine and scandinavian), and i most often prefer 1.e4.
it's true that as black i like to play fairly solidly with 1.e6 because i have found that most lines give me a position i am comfortable with - without much risk of being a lot worse out of the opening.
as white i feel i can take more liberties in an open style game and look for some kind of attack. (that being said, i still fear open sicilians as white!)
sometimes i'll give 1.d4 or 1.f4 a try, or maybe 1.g3.
| Posted by markb56 austinfilmfestival.org
7/13/2008 15:44:40 Play online chess | Maginot Line / Hitler Gambit
Message: If I were playing white against the French I would try to try to get black to play the Maginot Line after which it's an easy matter to maneuver your pieces around the flank. However, white must be careful and avoid the now refuted Hitler Gambit, because if white gets too bold he will find himself fighting on two different fronts.
| Posted by kansaspatzer austinfilmfestival.org
7/13/2008 17:19:33 Play online chess |
Message: I just recently switched to the French and I normally play e4, although there are certain opponents I'll play d4 against. I must admit I'm not all that booked up against the Sicilian but playing lots of Gameknot games using the opening DB helps when you get OTB, IMO.
| Posted by wulebgr austinfilmfestival.org
7/25/2008 12:03:17 Play online chess | As I French player,
Message: I understand the futility of 1.e4. I play 1.g3, 1.d4, 1.c4, and 1.Nf3, reserving 1.e4 for weaker opponents and blitz.
| Posted by kansaspatzer austinfilmfestival.org
7/26/2008 22:27:47 Play online chess |
Message: So what is the Hitler gambit? The only Google hit for it is this page...
| Posted by jstevens1 austinfilmfestival.org
7/26/2008 23:49:54 Play online chess | Expert Draw!
Message: Hi everyone! Just to let you know that there is a game on the Public Annotations where I had the black pieces and played against The Tarrasch. The game is called Expert Draw because at the time my opponent was 832 points north of my rating. Despite a 2 pawn deficit I managed to draw it. This was a big result because it is still the only time I have managed to draw against an Expert. Ionadowman has already commented on the game but if any of you have anything to add please feel free to do so.
Hope you have all enjoyed your weekend.
Cheers and bye for now.
Joanne
| Posted by savage4731 austinfilmfestival.org
7/29/2008 01:22:30 Play online chess | Kansaspatzer
Message: That's because the correct way for black to play is just to resign as soon as possible.
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