olzbutton.blogg.se

Black knights tango 3.d5
Black knights tango 3.d5









The book includes 331 annotated games (plus more in the notes) and 50 training positions. There is even coverage of the Scotch (1.e4 Nc6 2.d4 e5 3.Nf3 exd4 4.Nxd4 g6!?). It focuses on 1.e4 and 1.d4 and after 1.e4 Nc6 2.d4 it discusses both 2.d5 and 2.e5 lines. The basic repertoire is good, with several different variations and options. Igor Berdichevsky, Modern Practice 1.Nc6!? (Russian Chess House 2004)Īn excellent repertoire book written in Informator notation and multiple languages. Especially if you would like to experiment with the Albin (1.d4 d5 2.c4 e5) as an occasional gambit alternative to the Chigorin (which you would still need to know to meet 1.d4 d5 2.Nf3 Nc6 etc.) then this is a must-have book. The basic coverage of the Chigorin is solid and while none of the coverage is very much in depth it is quality stuff. Offers good coverage of lines with an early 1.c4 e5 and 2.Nc6 for Black (which you could play 1.c4 Nc6 and 2.e5, of course).Ĭhris Ward, Unusual Queens Gambit Declined (Everyman 2002)Ĭovers the Chigorin, the Albin, and Keres's.

black knights tango 3.d5 black knights tango 3.d5

d5 structures.Īlex Raetsky and Maxim Chetverik, English. Richard Palliser, Tango! A Dynamic Answer to 1.d4 (Everyman 2005)Īn excellent book on the Two Knight's Tango (1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 Nc6) that makes significant additions to Orlov and does a better job of presenting a repetoire that is not completely focused around building up a dark-square structure around. The coverage features well-annotated, recent GM games and is a great introduction to the Chigorin and anti-English lines with an early. This book has a very misleading title, since it is really a repertoire book focused on the Chigorin (1.d4 d5 2.c4 Nc6), the. Ideas Behind the Modern Chess Openings: Black (Batsford 2005) I may also dig a few up in the coming weeks and will revisit this list if I do.

black knights tango 3.d5

I have tried to make this bibliography as complete as possible and would appreciate any additions you can recommend.

black knights tango 3.d5

Recent publications continue to group some of these lines under "1.Nc6," but I suggest that we return to Walter Korn's idea of calling it all the Kevitz System ( Chess Review, August-September 1954) after the New York master who first experimented with these lines over 50 years ago. e5 (1.e4 Nc6 2.d4 e5), the Two Knights Tango or Kevitz-Trajkovich (1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 Nc6), the Chigorin Defense (1.d4 Nc6 2.Nf3 d5 or 2.c4 d5), the Bozo-Indian or Lundin or Mikenas or Kevitz-Trajkovich (1.d4 Nc6 2.d5 Ne5), and several others. Nc6 is wide and varied and includes the traditional Nimzovich Defense (1.e4 Nc6 2.d4 d5), the Kevitz System or Nimzovich with. The Black repertoire that can follow from an early.











Black knights tango 3.d5