A SHARP LINE IN THE BURN-RUBINSTEIN FRENCH

During the last few weeks I have been working on a new French Defence course that will extend the French material covered in the Building an Opening Repertoire course. The new repertoire covers many of the same lines but just in greater depth, and with options against 1.e4 e6 2.d4 d5 3.Nd2 and 3.Nc3 apart from the Rubinstein Variation with 3...dxe4.

Against 1.e4 e6 2.d4 d5 3.Nc3 the new option is 3...Nf6, when besides 4.e5 White can pin the knight on f6 with 4.Bg5. What should Black do here? For someone who already has a background in the Rubinstein, 4...dxe4 (known as the Burn Variation) 5.Nxe4 and now 5...Nbd7 is an excellent choice, which transposes into a Rubinstein line where White has already committed his bishop to g5. The main line then runs 6.Nf3 h6 7.Nxf6+ Nxf6 8.Bh4 c5 after which 9.Bb5+ Bd7 10.Bxd7+ Qxd7 11.Qe2 Be7 12.O-O-O O-O 13.dxc5 Qc6 14.Ne5 Qxc5 reaches the position in the diagram below:

Position after 14...Qxc5

Although this is a solid line for Black, things sharpen up quite a bit at this point with 15.Bxf6 Bxf6 16.Nd7, after which the obvious way out of the fork with 16...Qg5+ leaves Black with an uncomfortable postion after just 17.Kb1. What Black should do instead is surprising (see diagram below):

Position after 16.Nd7

The star move here is 16...Bxb2+!! after which White must tread carefully. 17.Kxb2 is forced after which 17...Qb4+ 18.Kc1 Qa3+ 19.Kd2 is White's only way to avoid an immediate draw by perpetual check. The position now reached is pictured below:

Position after 19.Kd2

Here Black should continue with the logical 19...Rfd8 after which the best line is 20.Ke1 Qa4 21.Qd3 Rac8 22.Rd2. What should Black do in this situation as 22...Rc7 is bad because of 23.Nf6+? Well the answer is quite subtle, and puts the onus on White to find the only way to keep the balance. Take a look at the position below and figure it out for yourself:

Position after 21.Qd3

The answer is the calm 22...Kh8!, just leaving White with the pin on his knight and avoiding any Nf6+ ideas when Black plays 23...Rc7 on his next move. It's now White's turn to find an only move and he has to see 23.Qb3! after which 23...Qe4+ 24.Qe3 Qb4 25.Qb3 Qe4+ repeats the position and results in a draw.

This is one of the sharpest lines in my French repertoire as the focus is on simple and logical lines that are easy to remember or work out at the board. This one too is very logical, but it helps to know it.

When will my French course be out? Hopefully in a week or two, I'm recording more video whenever I have time.

Nigel Davies

BUILDING AN OPENING REPERTOIRE

Building a chess opening repertoire is a fundamental aspect of becoming a strong player. It also takes time to do so and there are top Grandmasters who spend many hours every day just on this. Besides understanding the plans and ideas they will need to know about the latest finesses, which sometimes occur 20-25 moves or more into the game. There is also the issue of computer testing, which with the sharpest openings will be a big job requiring some very serious technology.

The fact that top players want to do this leads amateurs to think that they need to as well, yet how is this possible with things like a job and family to consider? The short answer is that it is not, they need to make simpler choices whilst using their time to develop core skills such as positional understanding and a knowledge of endgames. Yet this is not what chess publishers seem to indicate as they churn out countless volumes of densely packed analysis. Here's a picture of four books which cover what might seem to be a simple repertoire; 1.d4 as White and then the Caro-Kann and Slav with Black. The thing to the right is my coffee cup:

Four Book Repertoire

A count of the number of pages shows a total of around 1,750 pages, many of the variations extend to 20 moves or more and there are probably around 10 variations a page. Is it practical for anyone with any kind of life outside of chess to study these monstrosities? The answer is a clear NO! So why do people buy them? Perhaps they are tired of bad positions and have heard somewhere that they should play the main lines as a remedy?

Is playing main lines a remedy? Well kind of, though this should not necessitate having 1,750 pages/17,500 variations worth of repertoire. If someone learns and understands logical openings, where there is no immediate sharp conflict, then nothing too bad will happen to them in the opening. I should add that if their general chess understanding is good then they will probably get the better of an opponent who has booked up on variations but does not understand too much. Trust me, they will not be able to remember all 17,500 variations and are more likely to get brain damage than chess strength.

So where can someone find repertoires which depend largely on plans and ideas? Unfortunately they are difficult to find, and this is why I decided to create one. A few years ago I developed the Building an Opening Repertoire course here, which features 21.5 hours of video and pgn files which can be loaded into software such as Chess Position Trainer and Chessable. I deliberately made the lines as simple and logical as possible so as to aid the assimilation of plans and ideas, for example as Black I gave the French (including the Rubinstein Varation with 3...dxe4) and older lines of the Queen's Gambit Declined. For White I gave the Colle System (1.d4 followed by 2.Nf3 and 3.e3) and showed how White could then adapt his later plans to however Black responded, sometimes going for a queenside pawn advance (c2-c4, b2-b4 and a2-a4) and at others setting up a Stonewall Formation (Nf3-e5 and f2-f4). People who have bought this course have responded very positively, many starting to understand typical plans for the first time despite having shelves full of openings books. Below is a position from one of the lines in which White has established a knight on e5:

Stonewall Attack Formation

The main target audience for the Building an Opening Repertoire course is the 1300 to 2000 Elo range, though even stronger players have found it useful. I am now working on some follow up courses, the first of which will be an expanded version of the French and include lines against both 3.Nd2 and 3.Nc3 as alternatives to the Rubinstein (3...dxe4 against both). I will be announcing it here when it is out, though you will get the news faster by signing up for the Tiger Chess Newsletter.

Nigel Davies

HOW TABLE TENNIS HELPS YOUR CHESS

Playing table tennis can help your chess. It's not just a question of getting some exercise and thus facilitating the flow of blood to your brain. There are habits and attitudes that are very useful for chess players and having a second activity can help console you if the first one goes badly. As Mark Taimanov said after he was battered 6-0 by Bobby Fischer: "I still have my music."

My son Sam has been playing table tennis for around 18 months and it has helped him a lot in many ways. We started by having a knock about on a table at a shopping mall and then progressed on to having some games in a bar with a table tennis table in it. Unfortunately (or maybe fortunately) he was asked his age after a few visits and it turned out that he was not allowed in there. So we needed to come up with an alternative and found that we could hire a table at a local leisure centre.

Never one to do things by halves I suggested we find a coach and started taking lessons. After a couple of months of lessons, and dedicated practice of everything we were taught, Sam was good enough to play at a club. This is now a regular Monday night activity, he's playing in a League team some other evenings and we are doing tournaments! From a parenting point of view this is a bit like going to chess tournaments, though your offspring needs a bat instead of a pen and the parents do not usually get a quiet place to sit. After being pelted with table tennis balls on a few occasions I now retire to the car. Sam is pictured below playing at his club:

Sam Davies (left) on a club night

So how does table tennis help your chess? First of all there are no draws, so you get used to playing a game with just two outcomes, a win or a loss. The practice ethic is similar to chess but when people see its importance in a second activity it becomes a universal rule of excellence. The psychological aspects are also similar, but in table tennis you have to play the ball when it comes to you, there is no time to delay or think about it. This in turn makes the possibility to think into something that is valued. I could go on but the most important point is this; Sam's chess has been transformed of late so that he is now far more pugnacious and more willing to take calculated risks.

Of course it does not need to be table tennis or even any kind of sport, there are other activities which have great value. Since taking up tai chi over a decade ago I have found it to be a wonderful way to get away from the stress of competition and I would not want to be without it. Though I should mention that to go deep into any activity needs time, and this in turn means that you should not try to do too many of them. I know of many children who are encouraged to try a vast range of activities, never practice any of them (there simply is not time) and do not progress at any of them. I would say that two or three is enough for most people, and perhaps just one if time is very limited.

Nigel Davies

DARNALL & HANDSWORTH RAPIDPLAY 2018

For the last 8 years I have been going to lots of tournaments, but taking my son Sam rather than playing myself. The most recent of these was the Darnall & Handsworth Rapidplay in Sheffield, which took place on September 1st. Sam had another pretty good result, finishing 4th= in the Major with an 1878 Elo performance. This seems to be more or less in line with his current strength, though his rating is lagging behind at the moment.

A few people who have watched Sam's steady progress from unspectacular beginnings wonder about our training regime. Essentially it's all here on Tiger Chess, with a strong emphasis on endgames and strategy rather than the standard junior fare of openings and sacrificial attacks. His openings could certainly be better, and this is something we've been working on of late. But it takes time to develop a sophisticated repertoire that is dependent on understanding and concepts rather than rote learning and tricks.

From a chess parenting perspective one of the great things about the chess circuit is how Sam is making friends with other chess playing youngsters, and in his case adults too. Below he is pictured on the right together with Anita Somton and Armaan Gogia. Anita was 4th= in the Open with a 2066 performance whilst Armaan also did well in the Open with a 1944 performance. Both Anita and Armaan are coached by Anita's father, Ukken Somton, who has a strong focus on endgames and has been very successful in developing young players.

One Lioness, Two Lions

Where are we going next? Probably to a tournament in Nottingham at the end of September and then on from there. What's the goal? Our provisional aim is that he should be around 2200 strength at 18, at which time we will be reviewing the situation.

Nigel Davies

ENGLISH CHESS ACADEMY – SEPTEMBER 2018

For the last year I've been coaching at ECF (English Chess Federation) Chess Academy weekends with the most recent one being held last weekend. These events have been hugely successful, with many of the most promising juniors in England receiving expert coaching as well as taking part in events including a blitz tournament on the Saturday evening. Some of the younger coaches even took part whereas those needed a break retired for the evening to a local hostelry. Picture below, from left to right, are FMs Tim Wall and Charlie Storey, IM Andrew Martin and GM Glenn Flear:

Chess Coaches Relaxing

The Academy was created by the outgoing ECF Junior & Education Director, Traci Whitfield, who has done an amazing job putting it together. Tact and diplomacy tend to be rare talents in the chess scene but they are invaluable for such a project. I am sure that she will be missed by the ECF.

Traci Whitfield

As usual the basis of my sessions were examples taken from the 160 lesson Tiger Chess Strategy Course, which members can access here. Occasionally I have to take material from the 160 lesson Tiger Chess Endgame Course which is here. One of this weekend's topics was the role of the open file which I cover quite extensively; for the young players I was teaching this weekend I took the classic example of Alekhine - Yates, London 1922:

Alexander Alekhine had successfully penetrated along the open c-file and doubled rooks on the 7th rank. He finished the game beautifully with 36.Nf6! Rgf8 (capturing the knight with 36...gxf6 allows 37.Rh7#) 37.Rxg7! Rxf6 38.Ke5! 1-0. The only way for Black to save the rook on f6 is to move one of his two rooks to f8, but this allows mate with 39.Rh7+ followed by 40.Rcg7#.

Nigel Davies

LLANDUDNO SIMUL

On August 22nd I visited the ICCF Congress in Llandudno to give a simultaneous display. It went quite well despite my lack of tournament practice with 15 wins and 3 draws against a field which included two ICCF Grandmasters, two Senior International Masters and some young Welsh stars. I confess that I have been playing a lot of blitz (5 minutes with a 3 second increment) against my son Sam and it does seem to have sharpened us both up. There were several moments where I found some strong tactical sequences, such as this one:

Here I sacrificed a knight with 23.Nxf7! Kxf7 24.Ng5+, seeing that after 24...Kg8 I had 25.Re8+! and that after 24...Kf6 I had at least a draw with 25.Nh7+. When my opponent did play 24...Kf6 I found 25.Qf4! threatening 26.Re6 mate, and when my opponent failed to find a defence he graciously asked me whether I would prefer him to take the queen or allow the mate. I plumped for the latter and the game ended with 25...Nxf4 26.Nh7#.

The opening is worth noting as I think that the quiet Italian Game (the game started with 1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bc4 Nf6 4.d3) is an excellent option for those who open with 1.e4 but prefer to learn strategy rather than opening analysis. For members interested in the complete game I have included it in the August 2018 members clinic. If you are not a member but would like to join you can do so here.

It was also interesting to play over the board games against very strong correspondence players, not least because I have suffered against them when playing them at their own time limit. For many years I have used secret correspondence games to test openings, a practice I believe other over-the-board GMs use as well. My impression was that they have a good understanding of chess and better openings than players of a similar strength who just play over-the-board. At the same time they might benefit from faster time controls where fast reactions and tactical awareness are at a premium.

Nigel Davies

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