Download Easy Guide to the Classical Sicilian: Including by Jouni Yrjola PDF

By Jouni Yrjola

Renowned on the optimum degrees, the Classical Sicilian is strangely ignored in chess literature. the following, Grandmaster Demetrios Agnos ultimately unearths either the idea techniques at the back of this well-respected establishing.

Show description

Read Online or Download Easy Guide to the Classical Sicilian: Including Richter-Rauzer and Sozin Attacks PDF

Similar chess books

How to Solve Chess Problems

Fifty eight two-move difficulties, forty six three-movers, and 8 four-movers composed over the last 30 years and illustrative of the simplest paintings of 27 remarkable American challenge composers. the writer has integrated sensible feedback for fixing each one challenge, a proof of universal phrases and an exhaustive index.

Easy Guide to the Nge2 King's Indian

The King's Indian turns out to give White with a vintage ''man or mouse'' choice - take Black on in a single of the severe major traces, or ward off the problem with an risk free sideline. while you're uninterested in maintaining to this point with quickly altering main-line idea, yet don't need to squeak your means in the course of the starting, the Hungarian assault deals a truly welcome ''third way''.

Survival Guide for Chess Parents (Everyman Chess)

In Survival consultant for Chess mom and dad, Tanya Jones concentrates at the quite a few elements of being a "chess mother or father" and solutions the numerous questions dealing with people with chess-playing childrens. there is definitely extra to this than meets the attention. difficulties are as various as 'How am i able to assist in the very early phases?

Extra resources for Easy Guide to the Classical Sicilian: Including Richter-Rauzer and Sozin Attacks

Example text

Tf8, protecting e7 in an oddball manner. f81 Answer: Oddball it is. This is more accurate than 30 . tf6 when Black's king doesn't have access to f6. txg4 .. Question: It looks to me like Black stands worse, despite his extra pawn. Aren't all his pieces tied up? Answer: All except one: his kin g ! �g71 Watch how this guy scales the summit. 33 h4 �f6 34 :d3 h S I Fixing a pawn target o n h4. tg7 36 �e2 35 Th e C a r o - Ka n n: M o ve by M o ve Exercise {planning): H ow can Black make progress? t>e51 Black's king brashly marches into enemy territory all alone.

D3 lLlxf2 and White is in deep trouble. :ac8 19 'it'C2 lLle4!. The knight is immune from prosecution and Black has a strong attack n o matter how White plays it. t2Jbd7 .. Question: Violating a principle? Shouldn't Black just castle? This is the third time the knight moves in the opening. Answer: And the fifth time for White's knight! My rule of thumb for Black: challenge the strong point on es whenever you can. id7 14 c4! ic6 (maybe he should play 14.. :Ue8 19 i.. ::t a d8 2 1 l2Jd4. Miton, Bermuda 2003.

Tbd8. d2 ... Question: Isn't White clearly better? After all Black made a self-inflicted hole on bS. Answer: I think Black is fine. True, he made a hole, but after Black's n ext m ove White, in a strange way, allows Black control over dS. Question: H ow so? White can play c4 kicking out a piece on ds. Answer: True again, but at an incredibly high cost of creating dark-square punctures on cs and b4. lLlbd s! Are you really prepared to play c4 in this position to eject the knight? tbs Question: Why doesn't White try to occupy bs with a knight after 1S lLld4?

Download PDF sample

Rated 4.77 of 5 – based on 5 votes