Junkyard Openings 2.0: The Latvian Gambit

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  • #16
    Re: Junkyard Openings 2.0: The Latvian Gambit

    Originally posted by Craig Sadler View Post
    which is the critical main line? 4. ...Bg4? from my less than lofty perch, i find white just grinds for an advantage. i've experimented with 4. ...dxe5 5.Nxe5 c6 and spent far too much time trying to make 4. ...dxe5 5.Nxe5 Nd7 6.Nxf7 work for Black :)
    By critical main line, I meant simply the position after 4.Nf3. The line that looked of remote interest to me was 4...dxe5 5.Nxe5 g6, after which play may continue 6.Bc4 c6 7.0-0 Bg7 8.Re1 (I've seen an old book by Burgess where in the line 8.Nd2 0-0 9.Ndf3 Nd7 10.Nd3 a5 11.a3 he gave 11...Bf5 as leading to a slight plus for Black) 8...0-0 9.Bb3 and now a footnote in ECO gives Kasparov-Adams, Linares 1997 which continued 9...Nd7 10.Nf3 N7f6 11.c4 and White gained a big edge eventually. Bagirov's suggestion 10...a5!? is provided, without evaluation. It's probably +/= though.

    Another part of the footnote that may lend itself to comparison is 9...a5 10.a4 Be6 11.c3 Qc7 12.Nd3 Nd7 13.Nd2 Rfe8 14.Ne4 h6 +/= Godena-Kveinys, Debrecen, 1992. In all these cases I couldn't shake the feeling that Black's game was somewhat passive and still needed to be freed properly.
    Anything that can go wrong will go wrong.
    Murphy's law, by Edward A. Murphy Jr., USAF, Aerospace Engineer

    Comment


    • #17
      Re: Junkyard Openings 2.0: The Latvian Gambit

      Originally posted by Kevin Pacey View Post
      I had imagined diagrams really should be shown at least for every labelled variation's starting point. I also tended to put one before a minor (unlabelled) variation was offered. It may be feasible to keep these criteria and otherwise use the 4-8 half move diagram rule you suggest, in case I or anyone else make similiar posts regarding openings/games/analysis in future, assuming there are not too many labelled variations.

      I assume slow loading of diagrams is, for this thread (so far) at least, only really a problem for dial-up users, of which I assume you are one.

      Btw, though I now have high speed myself, by some quirk I sometimes get 'disconnected' (though at all times while I'm on the internet I apparently have a dial tone on my phone line). Perhaps it's because we previously had a dial-up account, and it may not have been discontinued properly .
      No, I'm not a dialup user. I just like pages to appear quickly. And I still find there are just too many diagrams which is actually my larger complaint.

      Comment


      • #18
        Re: Junkyard Openings 2.0: The Latvian Gambit

        Originally posted by Alan Baljeu View Post
        No, I'm not a dialup user. I just like pages to appear quickly. And I still find there are just too many diagrams which is actually my larger complaint.
        From my Scavenging Junkyard Openings thread:
        "Originally Posted by Egidijus Zeromskis
        Probably it would better to dedicate a thread to every analyzed opening, and add more diagrams"

        Sadly, as the old saying goes, you can't please everyone. If I do more of these posts with multiple diagrams, I'll try to compromise by reducing the total number of diagrams, e.g. in a manner like I described in my previous reply to you.
        Anything that can go wrong will go wrong.
        Murphy's law, by Edward A. Murphy Jr., USAF, Aerospace Engineer

        Comment


        • #19
          Re: Junkyard Openings 2.0: The Latvian Gambit

          Originally posted by Kevin Pacey View Post
          By critical main line, I meant simply the position after 4.Nf3. The line that looked of remote interest to me was 4...dxe5 5.Nxe5 g6, after which play may continue 6.Bc4 c6 7.0-0 Bg7 8.Re1 (I've seen an old book by Burgess where in the line 8.Nd2 0-0 9.Ndf3 Nd7 10.Nd3 a5 11.a3 he gave 11...Bf5 as leading to a slight plus for Black) 8...0-0 9.Bb3 and now a footnote in ECO gives Kasparov-Adams, Linares 1997 which continued 9...Nd7 10.Nf3 N7f6 11.c4 and White gained a big edge eventually. Bagirov's suggestion 10...a5!? is provided, without evaluation. It's probably +/= though.

          Another part of the footnote that may lend itself to comparison is 9...a5 10.a4 Be6 11.c3 Qc7 12.Nd3 Nd7 13.Nd2 Rfe8 14.Ne4 h6 +/= Godena-Kveinys, Debrecen, 1992. In all these cases I couldn't shake the feeling that Black's game was somewhat passive and still needed to be freed properly.
          Baburin plays 5. ...c6, so that if 6.Bc4 then he can play ...Nd7, ...N7f6, ...Bg4/e6 and not have to make a decision which diagonal to put the other bishop on.

          Comment


          • #20
            Re: Junkyard Openings 2.0: The Latvian Gambit

            Originally posted by Craig Sadler View Post
            Baburin plays 5. ...c6, so that if 6.Bc4 then he can play ...Nd7, ...N7f6, ...Bg4/e6 and not have to make a decision which diagonal to put the other bishop on.
            Not sure which line in the Alekhine you mean. After my given 1.e4 Nf6 2.e5 Nd5 3.d4 d6 4.Nf3 dxe5 5.Nxe5, my ECO doesn't mention 5...c6 at all.
            Anything that can go wrong will go wrong.
            Murphy's law, by Edward A. Murphy Jr., USAF, Aerospace Engineer

            Comment


            • #21
              Re: Junkyard Openings 2.0: The Latvian Gambit

              Originally posted by Kevin Pacey View Post
              Not sure which line in the Alekhine you mean. After my given 1.e4 Nf6 2.e5 Nd5 3.d4 d6 4.Nf3 dxe5 5.Nxe5, my ECO doesn't mention 5...c6 at all.
              are you sure? chessgames.com has it as the most popular line...first try was by Miles in 1995 and it has blown up in popularity since then

              Mamedjarov, Baburin, Nisipeanu,among others have played it. here's a game from the recent 2010 USA Women's championship...it transposed back into your line but doesn't have to

              [Event "USA Women Championship"]
              [Site "St Louis USA"]
              [Date "2010.07.13"]
              [EventDate "2010.07.10"]
              [Round "4"]
              [Result "0-1"]
              [White "Alisa Melekhina"]
              [Black "Anna Zatonskih"]
              [ECO "B04"]
              [WhiteElo "2265"]
              [BlackElo "2470"]
              [PlyCount "147"]

              1. e4 Nf6 2. e5 Nd5 3. d4 d6 4. Nf3 dxe5 5. Nxe5 c6 6. Bc4 g6
              7. Nc3 Bg7 8. O-O O-O 9. Ne4 Nd7 10. f4 N7f6 11. Ng5 e6 12. c3
              Qc7 13. Qe1 c5 14. b3 h6 15. Ngf3 cxd4 16. cxd4 Re8 17. Bd2
              Bd7 18. Rc1 Qd6 19. Bd3 Rec8 20. Bc4 b5 21. Bd3 Rxc1 22. Bxc1
              Be8 23. g4 Ne7 24. Qa5 Nc6 25. Qa6 Rb8 26. g5 Rb6 27. Qa3 Qxa3
              28. Bxa3 Nd5 29. Bc5 Rb7 30. Be4 Rb8 31. Bxd5 exd5 32. h4 Nd8
              33. b4 Rb7 34. Nh2 Bd7 35. Nxd7 Rxd7 36. Ng4 hxg5 37. fxg5 Ne6
              38. Nf6+ Bxf6 39. gxf6 Rc7 40. Re1 Rc6 41. Re5 Nf4 42. Re8+
              Kh7 43. Re7 Rxf6 44. Bxa7 Kh6 45. Kh2 Ra6 46. Rxf7 g5
              47. hxg5+ Kxg5 48. Bc5 Kg4 49. a3 Rxa3 50. Rg7+ Kf5 51. Re7
              Rd3 52. Re1 Kg4 53. Rg1+ Kf3 54. Rf1+ Ke4 55. Rf2 Re3 56. Rf1
              Rh3+ 57. Kg1 Rg3+ 58. Kh2 Rh3+ 59. Kg1 Rf3 60. Re1+ Re3
              61. Rd1 Nd3 62. Rb1 Re1+ 63. Rxe1+ Nxe1 64. Kf2 Nc2 65. Ke2
              Nxd4+ 66. Kd2 Ne6 67. Ke2 d4 68. Be7 Kd5 69. Kd3 Nf4+ 70. Kd2
              Kc4 71. Bd6 Nd5 72. Bf8 Nxb4 73. Bd6 Nd5 74. Bf8 0-1
              Last edited by Craig Sadler; Tuesday, 3rd August, 2010, 09:24 AM. Reason: grammar

              Comment


              • #22
                Re: Junkyard Openings 2.0: The Latvian Gambit

                Yep, ECO B (4th Ed., published 2002) doesn't mention 1.e4 Nf6 2.e5 Nd5 3.d4 d6 4.Nf3 dxe5 5.Nxe5 c6. Nor does MCO-15 (published 2008).

                ECO does have footnotes that show Baburin on the Black side of (other!?) 4.Nf3 lines in which Black plays ...c6 sooner or later.

                It's possible ECO considered 4.Nf3 dxe5 5.Nxe5 c6 must/should transpose to other lines. Or they're just biased against the Alekhine's and maybe didn't do a careful job covering it, or were actually indulging in a bit of editorial fashion-steering. The editors are known to take a dim view of offbeat lines/openings, according to Nunn (I believe).

                MCO-15 similarly tows the conventional wisdom line in its evaluations of various lines (i.e. the evaluation of += for this defence as a whole), though in their intro to the Alekhine's they say that this defence may pick up in popularity if a new champion for it steps forward, and it scores well in practice as it is. I might dispute the first or last part of how I summed up their intro, since in my biggest database (circa 2000) in the few top level conflicts I see there, White does very well.

                If this 4.Nf3 dxe5 5.Nxe5 c6 line is considered promising for Black to equalize, or my own research later on suggests it is, then the Alekhine's might start to be of more interest to me. I'll check my databases later (they're on the other side [Windows '98] of my partitioned computer along with other chess software - my internet access is only on this [the Windows XP] half :().
                Anything that can go wrong will go wrong.
                Murphy's law, by Edward A. Murphy Jr., USAF, Aerospace Engineer

                Comment


                • #23
                  Re: Junkyard Openings 2.0: The Latvian Gambit

                  Originally posted by Kevin Pacey View Post
                  Yep, ECO B (4th Ed., published 2002) doesn't mention 1.e4 Nf6 2.e5 Nd5 3.d4 d6 4.Nf3 dxe5 5.Nxe5 c6. Nor does MCO-15 (published 2008).
                  one of the knocks against MCO, if i remember correctly, is that often they would just give the same analyses from previous years. i have MCO-13 or 14 at home...how thick is the section on the Caro-Kann Advanced for instance in MCO-15?

                  Originally posted by Kevin Pacey View Post
                  ECO does have footnotes that show Baburin on the Black side of (other!?) 4.Nf3 lines in which Black plays ...c6 sooner or later.

                  It's possible ECO considered 4.Nf3 dxe5 5.Nxe5 c6 must/should transpose to other lines. Or they're just biased against the Alekhine's and maybe didn't do a careful job covering it, or were actually indulging in a bit of editorial fashion-steering. The editors are known to take a dim view of offbeat lines/openings, according to Nunn (I believe).
                  i think it doesn't have to tranpose...like i said earlier, it allows you to play ...Nd7 without allowing the (infamous) Nxf7 line...c7 is a nice hiding spot for either the knight on d5 or the king(!) depending on how much he gets chased around. if you like it and give it a shot, be sure to give me credit in your annotations :)

                  Comment


                  • #24
                    Re: Junkyard Openings 2.0: The Latvian Gambit

                    Kevin,

                    Jeremy Silman has an in depth analysis of the Latvian in 5 articles on how to beat the Latvian gambit, and in particular, the problem line:

                    1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 f5 3.Nxe5 Qf6 4.Nc4 fxe4 5.Nc3 Qf7 6.Ne3 c6 7.d3 exd3 8.Bxd3 d5 9.OO Bc5

                    LATVIAN GAMBIT
                    A computer beat me in chess, but it was no match when it came to kickboxing

                    Comment


                    • #25
                      Re: Junkyard Openings 2.0: The Latvian Gambit

                      Originally posted by Ernest Klubis View Post
                      Kevin,

                      Jeremy Silman has an in depth analysis of the Latvian in 5 articles on how to beat the Latvian gambit, and in particular, the problem line:

                      1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 f5 3.Nxe5 Qf6 4.Nc4 fxe4 5.Nc3 Qf7 6.Ne3 c6 7.d3 exd3 8.Bxd3 d5 9.OO Bc5

                      LATVIAN GAMBIT
                      Yes, I got some info already from a Bucker article (provided in a link within a post on page 1 of this thread) that covers 9...Bc5 (Bucker gives 10.b4!, like Silman, in the latest Silman Splat the Lat article you gave a link to).

                      If you read an earlier post of mine (on page 1 of this thread) you will see that I came up with 9...Nf6 instead, with the idea if the natural 10.Re1 then 10...Kd8, which at least my puny Fritz6 seemed unable to find more than += for White (in its opinion) in the amount of time I devoted to examining it. The hope for Black is that he can avoid running into any nasty sacs by White while trying to develop. Having his knight on the ideal f6 square may help, since it covers d5 and e4. He may have to at least concede the bishop pair to White at some point, which is something concrete (besides his dislocated king position).
                      Anything that can go wrong will go wrong.
                      Murphy's law, by Edward A. Murphy Jr., USAF, Aerospace Engineer

                      Comment


                      • #26
                        Re: Junkyard Openings 2.0: The Latvian Gambit

                        Originally posted by Craig Sadler View Post
                        one of the knocks against MCO, if i remember correctly, is that often they would just give the same analyses from previous years. i have MCO-13 or 14 at home...how thick is the section on the Caro-Kann Advanced for instance in MCO-15?
                        I bought MCO-15 mainly to get DeFirmian's overall opinion on the overall theoretical status of most openings circa 2008, while hoping for some analysis or evaluations I didn't find elsewhere...I think I got my money's worth, though the binding busted badly soon after I bought the tome. The Advanced Caro-Kann has only a page of sheer analysis to it, with just 6 columns including 25 footnotes (the info for the footnotes listed on the following pages). Do remember that MCO pretends to cover all openings in one book, but covering every conceivable minor sub-variation (even some arguably popular ones) is impossible this way.

                        Originally posted by Craig Sadler View Post
                        i think it [1.e4 Nf6 2.e5 Nd5 3.d4 d6 4.Nf3 dxe5 5.Nxe5 c6] doesn't have to tranpose [to other lines with ...c6] ...like i said earlier, it allows you to play ...Nd7 without allowing the (infamous) Nxf7 line...c7 is a nice hiding spot for either the knight on d5 or the king(!) depending on how much he gets chased around. if you like it and give it a shot, be sure to give me credit in your annotations :)
                        I looked at my more recent database yesterday and discovered 4.Nf3 dxe5 5.Nxe5 c6 is quite popular (at least between 2004 and 2007); Chessbase's opening indicies don't even mention 5...c6 on its own as a sub-variation worth noting either :). On the downside, I noticed Carlsen (as Black) only managed to draw a mere 2550 player with it. On the upside, I recall Spraggett mentioning he was taking up the Alekhine's as Black, so this 'hot' sub-variation may have something to do with it. Also, the juicy trap 6.c4 Nb4!? 7.a3? Qxd4 has caught at least one victim in my databases. It could happen easily enough in many peoples' games.
                        Anything that can go wrong will go wrong.
                        Murphy's law, by Edward A. Murphy Jr., USAF, Aerospace Engineer

                        Comment


                        • #27
                          Re: Junkyard Openings 2.0: The Latvian Gambit

                          Originally posted by Kevin Pacey View Post

                          ...

                          On the downside, I noticed Carlsen (as Black) only managed to draw a mere 2550 player with it.

                          ...
                          did you also notice another game by Carlsen with it?

                          [Event "Morelia-Linares"]
                          [Site "1:00:33-1:11:33"]
                          [Date "2008.02.20"]
                          [EventDate "2008.02.15"]
                          [Round "5"]
                          [Result "0-1"]
                          [White "Veselin Topalov"]
                          [Black "Magnus Carlsen"]
                          [ECO "B04"]
                          [WhiteElo "?"]
                          [BlackElo "?"]
                          [PlyCount "87"]

                          1.e4 Nf6 2.e5 Nd5 3.d4 d6 4.Nf3 dxe5 5.Nxe5 c6 6.Bd3 Nd7
                          7.Nxd7 Bxd7 8.O-O g6 9.Nd2 Bg7 10.Nf3 O-O 11.Re1 Bg4 12.c3 c5
                          13.Be4 cxd4 14.cxd4 e6 15.Qb3 Bxf3 16.Bxf3 Bxd4 17.Bxd5 Qxd5
                          18.Qxd5 exd5 19.Rd1 Bg7 20.Kf1 Rfd8 21.Bg5 Rd7 22.Rd2 h6
                          23.Be3 d4 24.Rd3 Rc8 25.Bd2 Rc2 26.Rb1 Re7 27.a4 f5 28.b3 Rec7
                          29.Be1 Kf7 30.Rd2 Rc1 31.Rxc1 Rxc1 32.Ke2 Rb1 33.Rd3 Ke6 34.h4
                          Kd5 35.Bd2 Ke4 36.Rg3 f4 37.Rd3 Be5 38.f3+ Kd5 39.Be1 Bd6
                          40.Bd2 g5 41.hxg5 hxg5 42.Be1 g4 43.fxg4 Ke4 44.g5 0-1

                          Comment


                          • #28
                            Re: Junkyard Openings 2.0: The Latvian Gambit

                            Haven't seen the Topalov game before, no. A good result for the line, and it would mean even more, perhaps, if one knew it was true that White only wanted to draw.
                            Anything that can go wrong will go wrong.
                            Murphy's law, by Edward A. Murphy Jr., USAF, Aerospace Engineer

                            Comment


                            • #29
                              Re: Junkyard Openings 2.0: The Latvian Gambit

                              Here's another one for Caro-Kann players...note, i have never seen this before, i'm sure it's either heralded by theory or derided but i think it's interesting...

                              1.e4 c6 2.d4 d5 3.f3 Qb6

                              i always used to play 3. ...dxe4 4.fxe4 e5 and always felt like i was half a move from being checkmated. i got the idea on Mark Ginsberg's blog but apparently it's been approved by a higher power...

                              [Event "45th Capablanca Mem Elite"]
                              [Site "Havana CUB"]
                              [Date "2010.06.14"]
                              [Round "5"]
                              [White "Nepomniachtchi,I"]
                              [Black "Ivanchuk,V"]
                              [Result "0-1"]
                              [WhiteElo "2695"]
                              [BlackElo "2741"]
                              [EventDate "2010.06.10"]
                              [ECO "B12"]

                              1. e4 c6 2. d4 d5 3. f3 Qb6 4. a4 e6 5. c3 c5 6. exd5 exd5 7. Bb5+ Bd7 8.
                              Qe2+ Be7 9. dxc5 Qxc5 10. b3 a6 11. Bxd7+ Nxd7 12. Nh3 O-O-O 13. Be3 Qc7
                              14. O-O Ngf6 15. Kh1 Rhe8 16. Qd1 Bd6 17. Bg1 Bc5 18. Ra2 Kb8 19. Rd2 h6
                              20. Bd4 Rc8 21. Nf2 Bxd4 22. Rxd4 Ne5 23. Rd2 Re6 24. Re1 Rce8 25. Rde2 g5
                              26. Nd3 g4 27. Nxe5 Rxe5 28. Rxe5 Rxe5 29. Rxe5 Qxe5 30. a5 h5 31. g3 gxf3
                              32. Qxf3 Qe1+ 33. Kg2 Ng4 34. Qf4+ Ka8 35. Nd2 Qe2+ 36. Kg1 Qxh2+ 37. Kf1
                              f5 38. Ke1 h4 39. Nf1 Qb2 40. gxh4 Qxc3+ 41. Nd2 d4 42. h5 d3 43. Kf1 Qa1+
                              44. Kg2 Qxa5 45. h6 Qd5+ 46. Kg3 Qg8 47. Kf3 Qe6 48. Nf1 Nxh6 49. Qd4 Qe2+
                              50. Kg3 Qe1+ 51. Qf2 f4+ 52. Kf3 Qe5 53. Nd2 Nf5 54. Kg4 Qe2+ 0-1

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