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Dark Knight / Le Chevalier Noir
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Harold Dondis and Chris Chase of the 'Boston Globe' maintain that Baadur Jobava is a "longtime favourite" of theirs so I'm somewhat surprised that they would choose to show one of his miniature losses ):
Pleasantly surprised by his recommendations of the books of Alekhine and Schlechter. Who knew? - and the photo of Grischuk's look at Jobava is priceless!
According to Jobava Capablanca was the best blitz player ever (also Lasker's opinion)! He gave many strong players 1 minute to 5 minute odds. But stronger than Bobby Fischer?? - that I would have liked to see.
The generally accepted name for that opening is now the Nimzowitsch-Larsen Attack although I have heard it called Larsen’s Opening. The last two games I see at chessgames.com have Baadur playing it in 2015 against Mamedyarov (1-0, FIDE Grand Prix, Tbilisi) and Carlsen (0-1, Tata Steel). The loss in the latter was not due to the opening.
This morning I received notification that the New In Chess Yearbook 117 is out and a photo of Baadur graces the cover because he has authored an article on 1.b3. This quote is given in the blurb:
“After having spent hours on some small differences on the 22nd move in the Berlin or on long-term nuances in the Catalan, 1.b3 was like a breath of fresh air”, writes Baadur Jobava in his stunning 14-page Survey on the move that he revived in modern GM practice in 2012.
It sounds entertaining and instructive. I wonder what name he gives to the opening, if any?
Richard Rapport has opened with 1.b3 a good deal more frequently than Baadur Jobava the past 2 years (most of Jobava's 1.b3 games were in 2012 and 2013), and is a composite +9, -3, =6 (66.7%) in games at chessgames.com. One of those wins was a 21-move miniature at the 2014 Chess Olympiad against Alexander Onischuk (:
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