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Richter-Veresov System

The Chameleon Chess Repertoire

192 Seiten, kartoniert, Thinkers' Press, 1999

Aus der Reihe »New Ideas«

21,95 €
Inkl. MwSt., zzgl. Versandkosten
Final vergriffen
Ultimately, most of us play to win and, we'll try anything legal, including playing a "system" which often can wriggle into a King's Pawn opening (French, Pirc, Philidor, Caro-Kann, or Pirc Defence) by beginning with 1. d4! Seven chapters concentrate on avoiding the Richter-Veresov proper. However, seventeen chapters do concentrate on a straightforward method of play which can involve excitement, combinations, and daring as much as any other chess opening. Over 550 game citations are offered, including 21 by Master Veresov and 10 by Master Richter. Modern grandmaster treatments are seen by Mestrovic, Miles, and Morozevich-the M&Ms. This comprehensive 1999 study is the first since Bellin's 1983 work.
Grandmaster Gufeld is a prodigious chess writer, formerly from the Soviet Union, as is his research assistant Master Oleg Stetsko.


My good friend Bob Long is a staunch advocate of the Richter-Veresov opening, which he employs for the psychological reason of steering (perhaps herding is more appropriate) his opponents into unfamiliar territory on the second move: 2. Nc3. This denies Black the chance to play the typical responses to 1. d4, that is, the Queen's Gambit, the King's Indian, or the Grünfeld. For his psychological motives and his numerous games with the Richter-Veresov, I must grant Mr. Long a Doctorate in Psychology.
Aside from the psychological advantages of playing this opening, "Dr." Long demonstrates that the Richter allows White the option of central or kingside play. The following game illustrates this feature quite nicely, and it shows how the accumulation of small advantages results in a strong attack.
Long-Shall, Moline, IL1992:1. d4 Nf6 2. Nc3 d5 3. Bg5 Bf5 [3... Nbd7 is more popular these days] 4. f3 [Supporting central play with an eventual e4, or kingside play with g4.] c6 5. g4!?[An interesting and aggressive plan.] Bg6 6. h4 h6 7. Bf4 e6 8. e3 Bd6 9. Nh3 Qc7 10. Bd3 e5 [If 10... Bxd3 11. Qxd3, White will castle long and utilize his kingside advantage. Therefore, Black tries for counterplay in the center.] 11. dxe5 Bxe5 12. Bxg6 fxg6 13. Qd3 Bxc3+ [If 13... Kf7, then 14. Bxd6 Qxd6 15. Nf4.] 14. Qxc3 Qf7 15. 0-0-0 [Or 15. g5 hxg5 16. Nxg5 Qe7.] Nbd7 16. Qb4!!. A grandmaster move which prevents castling on both wings and exploits Black's weakened dark squares, for if 16... 0-0-0, then 17. Qa5 and White is winning. White now has a winning advantage [What more could one want from an opening?] which he eventually converted on move 46.

GM Eduard Gufeld 1999, Foreword
Weitere Informationen
EAN 9780938650973
Gewicht 300 g
Hersteller Thinkers' Press
Breite 15,2 cm
Höhe 22,8 cm
Medium Buch
Erscheinungsjahr 1999
Autor Eduard GufeldOleg Stetsko
Reihe New Ideas
Sprache Englisch
ISBN-10 0938650971
ISBN-13 9780938650973
Seiten 192
Einband kartoniert
004 Symbols
005 Preface
006 Introduction

1. d4 Nf6 2. Nc3 d5 3. Bg5
013 One: 3... c5
021 Two: 3... c5 4. e3
024 Three: 3... Bf5
030 Four: 3... Bf5 4. Bxf6
038 Five: 3... Bf5 4. e3
041 Six: 3... Nbd7 4. Nf3/4. e3
049 Seven: 3... Nbd7 4. Nf3 e6
060 Eight: 3... Nbd7 4. Nf3 g6
072 Nine: 3...Nbd74.Qd3
082 Ten: 3... Nbd7 4. f3 c6
088 Eleven: 3... Nbd7 4. f3 e6
091 Twelve: 3... Nbd7 4. f3 h6
096 Thirteen: 3... c6 4. Bxf6 / 4. Qd2
101 Fourteen: 3... c6 4. f3
103 Fifteen: 3... c6 4. Qd3
108 Sixteen: 3... c6 4. e3
110 Seventeen: 3... g6 / h6 / Nc6

Deviations
122 Eighteen: After 2. Nc3
125 Nineteen: 2... c5 3. Bg5
130 Twenty: 2... c5 3. Bg5 Qb6
136 Twenty-One: 2... c5 3. dxc5
144 Twenty-Two: 2... e6 3. Bg5
152 Twenty-Three: 2... e6 3. e4 Bb4
156 Twenty-Four: 2... d6
162 Twenty-Five: 2... Bf5 / f5
170 Games from 1998-1999
176 Openings' Index
185 Players' Index
189 The Authors
190 Colophon and Diskette Info
191 The Publisher's Notes