Opening Study Forum: Alekhine's Defense - Four Pawns Attack

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A little about the Alekhine's Defense (wikipedia)

Alekhine's Defence is a chess opening beginning with the moves

1. e4 Nf6

It is named after Alexander Alekhine, who introduced it in the 1921 Budapest tournament in games against Endre Steiner[1] and Fritz Sämisch.[2] Four years later, the editors of the Fourth Edition of Modern Chess Openings (MCO-4) wrote, "Nothing is more indicative of the iconoclastic conceptions of the 'hypermodern school' than the bizarre defence introduced by Alekhine ... . Although opposing to all tenets of the classical school, Black allows his King's Knight to be driven about the board in the early stages of the game, in the expectation of provoking a weakness in White's centre pawns."[3] White's imposing mass of pawns in the centre often includes pawns on c4, d4, e5, and f4. Grandmaster Nick de Firmian observes of Alekhine's in MCO-15 (2008), "The game immediately loses any sense of symmetry or balance, which makes the opening a good choice for aggressive fighting players."[4]

In addition to Alekhine, another early exponent of the defence was Ernst Grünfeld. Its popularity waxes and wanes; currently it is not very common. De Firmian observes, "The fashion could quickly change if some champion of the opening takes up the cause, as the results Black has obtained in practice are good."[4] The opening's current highest-rated proponent is Grandmaster Vassily Ivanchuk, although Grandmaster Lev Alburt has done much to promote it. De Firmian writes, "Currently Grandmasters Shabalov and Minasian use the opening with regularity, while Aronian, Adams, and Nakamura will use it on occasion. In the past, great players such as Fischer and Korchnoi included the defense in their repertoire, leading to its respectable reputation."[4]


 

The main responses can be categorized in six areas

  1. The Four Pawn Attack
  2. The Exchange Variation
  3. The Modern Variation
  4. Two Pawns Attack
  5. Two Knights Variation
  6. Offbeat Lines

This week, I will cover the Four Pawns Attack.  The analysis of this line comes from my over the board games, GM Boris Alterman's Gambit Guide, IM Jeremy Silman's Blog, Fritz 11, and looking over GM games.  Let the discussion begin.  I hope you like it.   Please be sure to look over the variations, ask questions, and make comments. 

Key

Silman = Jeremy Silman

B.A. = Boris Alterman

Politicalmusic = Me

Knightrunner

This was an extraodinary game, and a extraodinary opening, I could see how allot of the black moves seems to  force move whites positioning peices...this was a great game of strategy..i loved it, and thanks for the enlightenment!

Politicalmusic

No problem.  I forget which master actually played the original game, but I used it and the variations as a stem of analysis for the entire opening.

ncrewments
the "chase variation"is considered "offbeat"?
JosephLeeA

This is one of my favorite games in history. No lie. But I have never performed it.