Showing posts sorted by relevance for query interesting french exchange. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query interesting french exchange. Sort by date Show all posts

Wednesday, March 03, 2010

The Interesting French Exchange XII

A rose by any other name?

Forgive me for I have sinned; it’s been six months since my last TIFE. This post is long overdue and given that the series has now reached its twelfth post, and has just acquired its own Index, it’s also probably about time I got around to having a look at the thorny question of what a French Exchange actually is.

Which positions are lucky enough to be classified as an IFE and which must be considered to come from less thrilling openings? It might seem obvious that we should be looking for games that start 1 e4 e6, 2 d4 d5, 3 exd5 exd5 but Short – Heine Nielsen (TIFE VII) didn’t begin this way and that game certainly makes the cut. For much the same reasons that being born in a barn doesn’t necessarily make one a horse, we're going to have to move beyond the superficial cataloguing of opening move sequences if we really want to discover what counts as a French Exchange.

At last Saturday’s Essex v Surrey u-180 match for example I played a game as Black that kicked-off with 1 e4 c5, 2 c3 e6, 3 d4 d5, 4 exd5 and now 4 … exd5 and boomshanka




we’ve got ourselves an IFE haven’t we? Via the classical move order, I admit, it’s not immediately obvious why White would play 4 c3 but nevertheless to my eyes this is a position that can most definitely be thought of as a French Exchange.

Opening classification, for the Exchange French as elsewhere, can be surprisingly tricky. Consider the first game of the Alekhine-Capablanca World Championship match.







Is this an Exchange, a Winawer, an Exchange-Winawer or perhaps a Winawer-Exchange? Opinion seems to be divided with Uhlmann including the similar Evil Uncle Ernie - Uhlmann (see TIFE V) in the chapter of his book dedicated to the Exchange whilst John Watson treats such positions as Winawers. Whatever the precise technical classification though I suspect that most people, in the unlikely event that they gave a rat's arse in the first place, would consider this position




to be either a genuine French Exchange or at least close enough to be considered as one.

So why not this then?


1 e4 e6, 2 d4 d5, 3 Nd2 c5, 4 exd5 exd5 ?



I suspect that most people would argue that this is not an Exchange because an existing variation, the Tarrasch, has a prior claim and yet thematically speaking it seems to be very similar to an IFE. Obviously there’s the balanced pawn structure, the open e-file and the potential for an IQP (see Kasparov-Korchnoi and Tatai-Korchnoi in TIFEs IX and IV respectively) but there’s also the conventional wisdom that such positions are dull for Black and offer few winning chances. True, 4 Nd2 is even less likely than 4 c3 after 1 e4 e6, 2 d4 d5, 3 exd5 exd5 but does that really matter?

I’m not sure I’m going to convince the rest of the world that these lines should be C01s rather than C09s but they make sense as a variation of the Exchange to me. Curiously, just like the Exchange, once I stopped worrying about what I’d read about the IQP Tarasch and started to actually to play it I found that I rather liked the positions that arose. The ‘conventional wisdom’, for club players anyway, seems highly questionable to me.

Here’s an email game I played about a year ago. It ends prematurely and is not the most accurate encounter ever to grace a chessboard but I enjoyed sacrificing the pawn for a general lead in development rather than for specific attacking chances and I also liked my opponent’s pithy post-game conclusion: “Your activity was annoying”.







So, Blue or Red Pill moment … is this game an IFE or not? I say a most definite “Yes” and when I finally come to write my definitive tome on the variation - coming to a vanity publisher near you some day soon - I’ll be sure to include a chapter on the Exchange (Tarrasch). I'm sure there's plenty of people who'll say I'm wrong but perhaps the French Exchange, like all other forms of beauty, is in the eye of the beholder.




The Interesting French Exchange Index





Wednesday, September 17, 2008

The Interesting French Exchange VI

incorporating JB's Favourite Moves III

Today is the day that the Tick Tick Tick ... is over. I've finally arrived at the age of 40 so a celebration is in order I think. What could be better than an S&BCC blog post that covers one of the most fascinating opening variations and one of my favourite moves at the same time?

After 1. e4 e6, 2. d4 d5, 3. exd5 exd5, 4. Bd3 Nc6, 5. Ne2 Bd6, 6. c3 how about Alekhine's 6. ... Qh4?*



White's quiet play leaves Black with a lot of options to choose from here. Psakhis, for example, has analysed ... Nge7 and Watson mentions ... Bg4 while somewhat further back Nimzowitsch recommended ... Nf6 and Alekhine himself also suggested ... Qf6 as a possibility.

Regardless of the objective merits of these moves it seems to me that amusement value alone demands 6. ... Qh4 be played. After all, it's not often that flinging your queen into opposition territory right at the beginning of the game is a remotely sensible idea. There's also the fact that ... Qh4 only works because Black is taking advantage of being a move behind in development**. Pleasing as these two points are, what I really like about the idea ("!!" according to C.J.S. Purdy, a more restrained "!" from Watson) is that Black isn't trying to start



or conclude


A. Bloke v J.B. @ RHP



an attack. No, he's chucking his queen deep into the enemy position simply to impede White's development. "It was important to prevent 7. Bf4" says old Alexander*** and I can't but agree.

What's not to love about 6. ... Qh4?**** The only downside is that I so rarely get to play it. Just once in fact and then, sadly, although I got an extremely good position out of the opening the game ended as if Amir Khan had suddenly taken over control of the Black pieces. Cue an instant knock-out.

Ah well. Maybe I'll get a chance to make amends to ... Qh4 soon. In the meantime there's always Alekhine's games to enjoy.












Two Alekhine wins on the Black side of a ... Qh4 French Exchange and the prospect of cake later on too. Being 40 is turning out to be not too bad at all.





The Interesting French Exchange
TIFE
OK, I admit it. The French Exchange can be dull.

TIFE II
Castle long then chop him up.

TIFE III
Castle short then (nearly) chop him up.

TIFE IV
Korchnoi shows the way.

TIFE V
Uhlmann can do it too.


Other posts that cover the French Exchange
Gurevich-Short, 1990
Nosher wins a critical game.

JB Plays the Black side of the French Exchange
but doesn't handle the clock very well.


Favourite Moves
JB's Favourite Moves I
JB's Favourite Moves II

Favourite Moves Index



* Just to be clear, the '?' is for the sentence not the move.

** As pointed out by C.J.S. Purdy. Needless to say Black wouldn't want to play ... Qh4 if White hadn't already committed the knight to e2 thereby losing the option of kicking her majesty with Nf3. Moreover in the French Exchange Black often plays ... Bd6 and ... Ne7 but the response Qh5 is ruled out because White will typically have already blocked the d1-h5 diagonal by developing the king's knight.

*** C.J.S. Purdy quotes Alekhine thus in "Action Chess: Purdy's 24 Hours Opening Repertoire", Thinkers Press Inc. 2000

**** See *

Monday, January 17, 2011

The Interesting French Exchange XIV


Last month, in between doing my Chrimbo shopping and wishing it wasn't quite so cold, I spent a fair bit of time nosing around Chess Pub courtesy of site owner Tony Kosten. Naturally, faced with a database of 16,000+ annotated games that ran across the whole spectrum of chess openings, the first thing I did was bypass the dull stuff - your Dragons, Grunfelds, King's Indians, Marshall Attacks and so on - and dive straight in to that prince of chess openings, the French Exchange.



Tony Kosten:
owns a website dedicated to opening theory and wears a very fine hat



To be honest I didn't expect to find that much as, for some unaccountable reason, most sources tend not to give ECO code C01 their fullest attention.  However, I was pleasantly surprised to find more than thirty games in the chess pub collection - and a little more than half of those were fully-fledged TIFEs as opposed to Exchange Winawers (or Winawer Exchanges if you prefer).  Even better, while they had Gurevich-Short, Manila 1990, most of the collection was new to me.  I didn't know, for example, that Kramnik had ever played an IFE, let alone against Polgar.  Apparently he did though - at Novgorod in 1996.

Top marks for quantity, then.  What of the quality of the games?  Suffice to say that the ChessPub TIFEbase contains games from such renowned French Defenders as Bareev, Uhlmann, Shirov, Short, Psakhis and Stefan Kindermann.  There's also a game each from Ian Rogers and Vallejo Pons, both top GMs, but neither of whom, as far as I knew, were famous for playing the French.

One game I particularly enjoyed was Moskovic - Short from the 4NCL some years back.  Adopting the early 4 Bd3 c5 plan that I've been experimenting with since watching Simon Williams' Killer French DVD, Nosh gives a convincing demonstration of how to go about outplaying a much lower-rated opponent.






I also liked seeing no less a figure than Garry Kasparov getting a TIFE spank, even if it was only in a simul.  TIFE addicts will recall that back in the early 90s Gazza even played 3 exd5 in real games.






Nigel Short:
overjoyed to hear of his latest TIFE appearance on the S&BC Blog



I hate it when opening books make one side win all the games - even when we're talking about the French Exchange.  Happily, Black doesn't have things all his own way in Chess Pub's TIFE coverage.

In his notes to Short's game, for example, McDonald mentions how he once played Moskovic in the exact same line, but lost after impatiently throwing his kingside pawns forward in an attempt to obtain winning chances.  I also found Tregubov - Belov (Chigorin Memorial, 2002), a real warning for Black that s/he should not be lulled into the belief that since White has played 3 exd5 he must only be interested in playing quietly for a draw.






The three games cited here, and indeed all the others in the collection, are fully annotated, the vast majority (over 90%) either by Neil McDonald or John Watson.  The latter has recently taken over the running of the Chess Pub French section and since JW also has a strong history as a writer on all things French, I think we can assume the quality of TIFE coverage will not diminish under his watch.

I'm definitely a fan of Chess Pub's coverage of the French Exchange.  If I have any criticism at all it is only that the classics, Gurevich - Short aside, are rather neglected.  Even that is possibly not such a serious drawback: perhaps I flatter myself, but I believe the interested student can find many of the great historical TIFE encounters right here in this very series, e.g.:-

Tal-Korchnoi, 1955 [TIFE III]; Tatai-Korchnoi, 1978 and Kovacs-Korchnoi, 1969 [TIFE IV]; Winter-Alekhine, 1936 and Apsenieks-Alekhine, 1939 [TIFE VI]; Capablanca-Alekhine, 1927 [TIFE XII]; Enoch-Nimzowitsch, 1927 [TIFE II] not to mention games from renowned GM Frenchies such as Uhlmann [TIFE V], Moskalenko [TIFE VIII] and Williams [TIFE X].

This one reservation notwithstanding, ChessPub is without doubt the finest single resource I've yet to find on the French Exchange and I commend it to anybody interested in exploring this most wonderful of chess openings. For those who don't find this reason enough to take out a subscription to Chess Pub, a full review will appear here in the next week or two.






The Interesting French Exchange Index



Wednesday, September 01, 2010

The Interesting French Exchange XIII

1. e4!
I usually play 1. d4, but I took this decision because I knew that against 1. e4 my opponent always chooses the French Defence, which is also part of my repertoire.

1... e6
Now I do not care about the colour of my pieces!

Viktor Moskalenko: The Flexible French, New in Chess 2008



If I recall correctly Botvinnik counselled against letting our opponents play our favourite defences against us. Still, with due respect to Mikhail Moiseyevich, I have to say I'm with Moskalenko on this one.

I rarely play kings' pawn openings these days so I don't often get the White side of a French Defence any more, but if I know my opponent will answer 1. ... e6 I'll very likely switchback to 1. e4 just for that game. It doesn't always work out - in JB v Peter Lalic, Surrey League 2009 I managed to both mix up my move order and blunder a piece within minutes of the start - but usually I get the sense that I have more of a clue as to what's going on than is typically the case when I try to play chess.

For example, I had this game a couple of years ago:-


White to play
JB v AN Other
Slater-Kennington 2008



I'd reached similar positions previously, but never this exact one. Black's 10. ... f6 had surprised me a little and at first, try as I might, I couldn't find a way to prevent my centre collapsing after something like 11. ... fxe5, 12. fxe5 cxd4, 13. Nxd4 Ndxe5. Eventually I remembered an idea from a line in the Winawer I used to play as Black where White plays exf6 at a certain point then follows up by supporting his f-pawn with his g-pawn.

After 11. exf6 Qxf6, 12. g3 I'd expected mass exchanges on d4 and a decent endgame for me, but instead my opponent pushed his pawn to c4. I had considered this response but had dismissed without too much thought because it seemed to me that pushing the c-pawn, as is usually the case with this kind of French structure, releases all the pressure from White's centre and Black's queenside play will take far too long to organise to be genuinely threatening. As it happens, that turned out to be a pretty accurate assessment and I won the game by hammering away down the e-file and the h3-e6 diagonal. 1-0 to JB, then, the point courtesy of a familiarity with such positions gained by defending the French rather than attacking it.


Not your author's finest hour





Perhaps, though, there are some amongst our esteemed and valued readership who are currently thinking, "This is all very well but it's got jigger all to do with the French Exchange." Well, as Jules might say, allow me to retort ...



Last week, the Ginger GM's newly released Killer French DVDs dropped into my letter box. I'll have more to say about them in due course, but, for now, suffice to say I did what any right-thinking person would do when provided with some new material on the French Defence: I immediately looked up what Williams has to say about the Exchange.

I soon discovered that Williams recommends answering 4. Bd3 with … c5; good news for those of us who’ve been thinking about playing IQP set-ups for some time now. Pasting in some analysis around Korchnoi’s famous battering of Tatai at Beersheva, 1978, [TIFE IV - a game mentioned by our regular visitor Mike G in the comments box to the original TIFE] he is convincing when he suggests that Black’s activity more than compensates for the pawn weakness.


TIFE theory: White to play



I was also pleased to see some time allocated to 4. c4. It’s a move that is sometimes rather neglected in opening books, particularly older monographs, but, in my experience, it’s one of White’s most popular choices at club level. Juniors, especially, seem fond of playing this way: when I was playing the French exclusively against 1. e4 I seemed to be having a munchkin playing 4. c4 against me every couple of months or so.


TIFE theory: Black to play



Anyhoo, have another look at the two diagrams for a moment. The bishop is a little misplaced in diagram one. What if White decides to use his extra move to improve his wayward piece, say by moving it to b5? This could be straightaway with check or perhaps later on to pin a knight on c6. The result, clearly, is diagram two with colours reversed if Black plays a quick ... Bb4+ there (as Williams suggests he should).

So Williams’ recommendation against 4. Bd3 could lead Black to play the French Exchange himself! Not so much "Now I do not care about the colour of my pieces" as "now I don't care about the side of this I take."

I suppose you could say that this is not the same thing at all. The French Exchange could be considered progress for Black (=+ to =) but a retrograde step for White (+= to =). Even so, you don't get positions that you can play with either colour and from either side of the board very often. To my eyes that's something interesting. Very interesting.










Sunday, October 01, 2006

The Interesting French Exchange Index

TIFE XV
Doing it by accident.

TIFE XIV
ChessPub - a font of TIFE wisdom

TIFE XIII
You don't have to have the White pieces to play the French exchange.

TIFE XII
A rose by any other name ...? What actually is a French Exchange?

TIFE XI
A short draw to win the Coulsdon u-130 in 2000.

TIFE X
Williams, Black, sacs a pawn at the Staunton Memorial.

TIFE IX
Kasparov plays the White side.

TIFE VIII
Moskalenko's Kung Fu.

TIFE VII
Nosher beats a strong GM from the White side (sort of).

TIFE VI
An early ... Qh4.

TIFE V
Two wins from Uhlmann.

TIFE IV
A brace of wins from Korchnoi with Black.

TIFE III
Tal-Korchnoi proving you don't have to castle long to get a strong attack.

TIFE II
Nimzo playing ... O-O-O then chopping his opponent to bits.

TIFE
I'll admit it - the French Exchange can be dull.



OTHER POSTS OF INTEREST

Gurevich - Nosher
Manilla 1990

Ftard
Having a good position won't help you if you're an idiot.

Clock Handling
on the Black side of a French Exchange

Sultan Khan - Abrahams
Ramsgate 1929

Friday, January 16, 2009

The Interesting French Exchange IX

Last Saturday I mentioned that this position,



while it may look pug ugly to me has actually been reached by some of the world's best players. Specifically I was thinking of Kasparov - Bareev, from a Paris quickplay tournament in the early 90s.







You could just dismiss this as 'only' a rapid game but around the same time Gazza also punted the Exchange during the Tilburg Grand Master tournament. In fact he played it twice, beating Korchnoi in the second round and having much the better of a draw against Nigel Short in the sixth.











Despite these impressive results it seems that Gazza didn't consider the experiment worth continuing. A few simul games aside I can't find any further examples of Kasparov on the White side of a C01. Shame.

In the comments box to the original TIFE post Angus wrote,
"It seems to me that 3 ed is a shameful move for White to play"
Andrew disagreed but in a manner that implicitly accepted the traditional view of the Exchange French. That is,

"This variation is adopted with a view to obtaining a quick draw...."
Wolfgang Uhlmann, Winning with the French

Perhaps they all have a point but while I know it was just a couple of games and I know it was nearly twenty years ago maybe if Kasparov can use the Exchange to try in win games perhaps we can too?

When it comes down to it isn't the French Exchange, just like any other opening, just as interesting as we choose to make it?

Friday, February 08, 2008

The Interesting French Exchange IV

Today we're going back to my current favourite topic - the Exchange Variation of the French Defence and the fact that it's not necessarily an unrelenting diet of dullsville.

Alekhine, quoted by CJS Purdy in Action Chess,
"... as a matter of fact, Black will at least not have a fewer opportunities for complicating, if he wants to do so, than in most of the other variations of the French."

Justin, from the comments to the most recent post in this series,
"Trouble is, when people tell you about the French Exchange it's always Gurevich-Short [here] and Tal-Korchnoi..." [TIFE III]

To be honest, my opinion is probably closer to EJH than AA. In truth it's not always easy to generate an interesting game in this line and if we were to take Alekhine at his word we'd find as many famous Black wins in the Exchange as we do in the Winawer ... and that's just not the case. It's not all opposite side castling and hacking away (TIFE II) as I acknowledged in TIFE I.

I certainly wouldn't try to claim that Black wins by force here, but then equally, neither is it necessary that s/he need give up the game for dead on move three. I suppose my view would be best summed up by a quote from Nick De Firmian from Batsford's Modern Chess Openings,

“The view that it is a drawing line is only partially correct, as many decisive games occur when one of the players is in a fighting mood.”

Anyhoo, here a couple of more games from Victor Korchnoi who tended to be in a fighting mood whether he was faced with the exchange variation or otherwise.

Tatai-Korchnoi, as mentioned by Mike G. in the comments to TIFE I, is another commonly cited example of Black's opportunities after 3. exd5. It's not typical of the line but definitely it's inspiration for what can happen if you give it a go.

Kovacs-Korchnoi is also fun for Black, although sadly we can't rely on too many players of the White pieces coming up with Kovacs' queen manouevre on move 11.











Next time, I might finally get around to answering Angus' charge that 3. exd5 is a 'shameful' move to play.

Tuesday, April 08, 2008

The Interesting French Exchange V

I was going to write about the King's Head rapidplay today but my brain hurts and I need to get a cup of tea before I head off to work so I'll delay my tournament report for a few days and return to a favourite theme of old - the French exchange.

In the past couple of installments of the series we looked at some examples taken from the games of that master of the French, Viktor Korchoi (winning quickly twice in TIFE IV, just failing to beat Tal in TIFE III). Today I want to examine an old game from Hastings where another of the most faithful Grand Master exponents of 1. ... e6, Wolfgang Uhlmann, gives a slow but sure tonking to notorious kiddie fiddler Brian Eley.

The East German's victory, very much in the style of the better known Gurevich-Short, was cited by Simon Webb in his excellent Chess for Tigers as an example of the ideal way for a stronger player to approach a game against a lower rated opponent. Win on technique and avoid getting sucked into unclear tactical slug fests was Webb's advice - and it's well worth remembering if you're put off playing the French because you fear the Exchange Variation.






OK, this game is not as flashy as either of the Korchnoi games or Nimzowitch's castling long hack from TIFE II. Some might even say this kind of game, just as much as the quick draws seen in TIFE I is exactly the sort of thing that leads to the Exchange Variation's reputation for dullness.

Still, to my eyes learning how to actually win those games that you have reasonable grounds to expect to end up victorious - and to do so without allowing a sniff of a chance of the result going the other way - is very interesting indeed.

If you disagree you probably won't want to bother playing through another example from Uhlmann, also taken from his book, "Winning with the French".





Thursday, December 06, 2007

The Interesting French Exchange

The Most Boring S&BCC Blog Post Ever?

Three short draws in the Exchange French ...

Hort-Petrosian, Hastings 1977/78
1. e4 e6, 2. d4 d5, 3. exd5 exd5, 4. Bd3 Bd6, 5. c3 c6, 6. Ne2 Ne7, 7. Bf4 O-O, 8. O-O Bf5, 9. Bxd6 Qxd6, 10. Ng3 Bxd3, 11. Qxd3 Nd7, 12. Nd2 1/2 - 1/2



Seidman - R. Byrne, USA Ch. 1959
1. e4 e6, 2. d4 d5, 3. exd5 exd5, 4. Bd3 Nc6, 5. c3 Bd6, 6. Ne2 Qh4, 7. Na3 a6, 8. Qd2 Nge7, 9. Nc2 Bf5, 10. Bxf5 Nxf5, 11. Qg5 1/2-1/2



V. Malisauskas (2530) - Gausel. E (2485), Norway 1992
1. e4 e6, 2. d4 d5, 3. exd5 exd5, 4. Nf3 Bg4, 5. Be2 Bd6, 6. c3 c6, 7. O-O Ne7, 8. Re1 O-O, 9. Ne5 Bxe2, 10. Qxe2 Ng6, 11. Nxg6 hxg6, 12. Nd2 Nd7, 13. Nf3 Re8, 14. Qxe8+ Qxe8, 15. Rxe8+ Rxe8, 16. Bd2 Nf6, 17. Re1 Rxe1+, 18. Nxe1 1/2-1/2



You can play through these games below if you think you can stand the excitement.

It's not difficult to see why the French Exchange has a reputation for extreme dullness when it's so easy to find examples like these (I got them from MCO XIV, an Andy Martin tape from Basman's Audio Chess series, and a quick search of ChessBase respectively).

Still, over the next little while I'm going to have a go at saving the variation's honour. I've started with these games just to show I'm not totally deranged and I do understand that games in this line can easily have little content - if that's what both players want.

CJS Purdy once wrote,

"Many French Defence players fear the Exchange Variant because it has the reputation of being terribly drawish. I need not waste space on that idea, and you'll see why later on."

Well, I think idea is worth spending some time on. Unfortunately, the interesting bit starts next time.











Friday, February 01, 2008

The Interesting French Exchange III


Black to Play


When I started this series on the French Exchange I truly believed it would be a subject of interest to absolutely nobody but myself. I was very pleasantly surprised by the amount of comment the post received and it seems the Boylston Blog has joined me in my attempt to prove the Exchange French need not be as boring as hell.

In the most recent in the series we saw Nimzowitch castling long then chopping his opponent to pieces. In today's game that old devotee of the French Victor Korchnoi shows it's possible to launch a direct attack even when the kings are on the same side. True, Black doesn't win this time. After a cascade of sacrifices Tal-Korchnoi was agreed drawn in the position at the head of today's blog. No doubt Korky [(c) Nosher L. Git] was heading for this position when he sacrificed his first piece with 27. ... Qf3, so

(a) how was he intending to finish off here?
(b) why doesn't it work?






Sunday, January 11, 2009

The Interesting French Exchange VIII




Yesterday's position, as we found out in the comments box, derived from a French Exchange that began,

1. e4 e6, 2. d4 d5, 3. exd5 exd5, 4. Nf3 Nc6

Previously I'd always followed Nigel Short's example and played 4. ... Bg4 here but inspired by my pre-Christmas purchase of The Flexible French I gave the knight move a punt recently and it turned out very well indeed.

Chapter Twelve of Viktor Moskalenko's book is dedicated to the analysis of a game that starts from today's position. The Ukranian GM writes,

"The symmetry with 2. exd5 exd5 never guarantees White a quiet life, but this is only possible if you learn to play in 'kung fu' fashion with black." (sic)
Later he gives 4. ... Nc6 an "!?" and says,

"This symmetrical knights' 'Kung fu' allows Black to unbalance the game."



Now I like the move but I'm not too proud to say I don't get the point Mosky is trying to make. Why does developing the queen's knight turn the game into a "Kung Fu Fight"?

Can anybody out there explain?

Sunday, October 01, 2006

The Interesting Sacrificed Exchange Index

TISE
Shirov - Bareev, Lvov 1990: allowing ... Bxa1. Saccing the exchange to get rid of a fianchettoed bishop.

TISE II
Kasparov-Anand, Tilburg 1991Rxf6. An exchange sac to open up the king.

TISE III
Movsesian-Kasparov, Sarajevo 2000... Rxc3. A standard idea in the Sicilian.

TISE IV
Browne-Timman, Wijk aan Zee 1980... Rxb2. A standard KID idea, an exchange sac to power-up a fianchettoed bishop.

TISE V
Houska-Rendell, Sheffield 2011...Bxa1. The exchange sac that didn't happen.

TISE VI
Kosten - Gordon, Torquay 2013Rxf6. Kaboom followed by oops.




Last Year’s Blog This Year



2014: The Year of The ISE

1. Sixty Memorable Annotations #25
- Another New Year, another New Year's Resolution

2. A Blogger Goes Chessing in Hampstead: Close but No ISE
- My opponent could have sacced an exchange but didn't; Anand's opponent did

3. Back in the Day: ISE Confusion
- RDK, Hartston and Basman get ISE-tastic 

4. A Theoretical ISE
- ... Rxf3 in the French Tarrasch

5. Sixty Memorable Annotations #26
- Electronic naughtiness

6. Jack’s Sacs (mostly Black attacks)
-  a plethora of saccery from IM Jack Rudd

7. Standard ISEs
-  in this case, R takes N on h5 when Black has fianchettoed the king’s bishop.

8. When Bishops are too Strong
-  Spess gives up his rook for minor piece to avoid getting mated in a rapid game against Kasparov

9. Back in the USSR
-  The Other K give us rook for bishop to give mate, but why did Malaniuk allow it?

10. Azmai Could Play
-  Trying to give up an exchange to power-up a fianchettoed bishop 

11. Collector’s Item
-  Kramnik plays rook takes minor piece on bishop three ... but it’s a bishop not a knight and on the queenside not on f6.

12. An ISE by any other name
-  What counts as an ISE?

13. Vlad Takes on f6
-  An ISE or a transition into an endgame?

14. BORP? XXIX
- Are exchange sacrifices for the likes of me?

15. Psychological Caution
- A quote from Petrosian that either helps or hinders ... I’m not sure which.

16. BORP? XXX
- Use intuition to justify the sacrifice of an exchange or is concrete analysis a must?

17. On Plans and Advice for Beginners
- sometimes when you’re attacking you have to stop what you’re doing and switch targets

18. Sixty Memorable Annotations #27
- ISEs might not be necessary, even when they’re good.

19. Rook for Bishop
- An unusual fianchettoed bishop ISE

20. ISEs: From the Books
- Panov - Simgin, Moscow 1943 from Secrets of Modern Chess Strategy

21. Ves and Vlad
- Kramnik tries an ISE against an old enemy ... and it doesn’t work.

22. ISEs: From the Books II
- Seirawan - Kozul, Wijk aan Zee 1991 from Secrets of Modern Chess Strategy

23. ISEs: From the Books III
- Karpov - Andersson, Milan 1975 from Grandmaster Chess Strategy

24. ISEs: From the Books IV
- Spassky - Petrosian, World Championship (11), 1969 from Learn From the Legends

25. Ray Saves the Day
- The Times’ Chess Correspondent writes a few articles on ISEs

26. They’re Already Off
- A British Championship ISE: the defensive exchange sacrifice form Wade - Keene, Blackpool 1971

27. Aberystwyth ISEs
- A pair of exchange sacrifices from the 2014 British Championship

28. Ray Could Play XI
- RDK and a 'might have been' ISE from Camaguey 1974

29. Try Try Again
- Kramnik has another bash at ISEing Topalov. This time it works

30. The Best of Times
- The computer suggests an ISE as an improvement for Black in Adams - Grandelius, Tromso Olympiad 2014

31. The Worst of Times
- When you try to play a theoretical ISE in the Pirc but your opponent doesn’t allow it.

32. Ray Could Play XII: Olympic ISEs
- RDK at Nice, 1974.

33. Ray Could Play XIII: Quiero Bailar La Salsa
- Back to Camaguey (1974). Ray’s still doing the ISE shuffle.

34. Ray Could Play XIV: Pretty Good Year
- 1974 was a pretty good year for Ray’s ISEs (even if this post contains a rather egregious error)

35. Ray Could Play XV
- RDK, still a student, gets busy.

36. Interesting and Difficult ISEs: The Baku Grand Prix vs The London League
- A Super GM ISE and an amateur ISE.

37. From a Shoebox Under the Bed: Australia
- The computer suggests an improvement to the finish of a game played twenty years ago on the other side of the world.

38. Day of Days
- Kasparov - Karpov, World Championship Match 1990 Game 4.

39. A Pair of ISEs or An Exchange of Exchanges
- Kasparov - Karpov, World Championship Match 1990 Game 13.

40. Twofer
- Kasparov - Karpov, World Championship Match 1990 Game 14.

41. A Match of ISEs and a Piece of History
- Kasparov - Karpov, World Championship Match 1990 Game 21.

42. Sochi ISEs: Game 6
- In a desperate situation Anand could have but didn’t.

43. Stamp Collecting
- It wasn’t a desperate situation. Anand din’t have to but did.

44. A Career Bookended by ISEs
- Anand lost his last game in a World Championship match because of an ISE ... but won his first for the same reason.

45. Sixty Memorable Annotations #28
- Comparing Anand’s disastrous ISE from Sochi with Alekhine’s at Triberg in 1921

46. Ray Could Commentate: He’s Done it Again!
- Hidden in a post about chess commentary, Nigel Short gives up an exchange to get the light squares in an old rapid game against Gazza

47. Endgame ISEs
- Topalov secures a world championship tournament win

48. Sixty Memorable Annotations #29
- Didn’t quite make the 52 posts this year, but the series ends as it began: with a "normal" exchange sacrifice.










See also:
One for Tom
A Collection of Dutch Bits and Bobs
Ray Could Play VI
Ray Could Play X



The Interesting Sacrificed Exchange Index

2014: The Year of The ISE

1. Sixty Memorable Annotations #25
- Another New Year, another New Year's Resolution

2. A Blogger Goes Chessing in Hampstead: Close but No ISE
- My opponent could have sacced an exchange but didn't; Anand's opponent did

3. Back in the Day: ISE Confusion
- RDK, Hartston and Basman get ISE-tastic 

4. A Theoretical ISE
- ... Rxf3 in the French Tarrasch

5. Sixty Memorable Annotations #26
- Electronic naughtiness

6. Jack’s Sacs (mostly Black attacks)
-  a plethora of saccery from IM Jack Rudd

7. Standard ISEs
-  in this case, R takes N on h5 when Black has fianchettoed the king’s bishop.

8. When Bishops are too Strong
-  Spess gives up his rook for minor piece to avoid getting mated in a rapid game against Kasparov

9. Back in the USSR
-  The Other K give us rook for bishop to give mate, but why did Malaniuk allow it?

10. Azmai Could Play
-  Trying to give up an exchange to power-up a fianchettoed bishop 

11. Collector’s Item
-  Kramnik plays rook takes minor piece on bishop three ... but it’s a bishop not a knight and on the queenside not on f6.

12. An ISE by any other name
-  What counts as an ISE?

13. Vlad Takes on f6
-  An ISE or a transition into an endgame?

14. BORP? XXIX
- Are exchange sacrifices for the likes of me?

15. Psychological Caution
- A quote from Petrosian that either helps or hinders ... I’m not sure which.

16. BORP? XXX
- Use intuition to justify the sacrifice of an exchange or is concrete analysis a must?

17. On Plans and Advice for Beginners
- sometimes when you’re attacking you have to stop what you’re doing and switch targets

18. Sixty Memorable Annotations #27
- ISEs might not be necessary, even when they’re good.

19. Rook for Bishop
- An unusual fianchettoed bishop ISE

20. ISEs: From the Books
- Panov - Simgin, Moscow 1943 from Secrets of Modern Chess Strategy

21. Ves and Vlad
- Kramnik tries an ISE against an old enemy ... and it doesn’t work.

22. ISEs: From the Books II
- Seirawan - Kozul, Wijk aan Zee 1991 from Secrets of Modern Chess Strategy

23. ISEs: From the Books III
- Karpov - Andersson, Milan 1975 from Grandmaster Chess Strategy

24. ISEs: From the Books IV
- Spassky - Petrosian, World Championship (11), 1969 from Learn From the Legends

25. Ray Saves the Day
- The Times’ Chess Correspondent writes a few articles on ISEs

26. They’re Already Off
- A British Championship ISE: the defensive exchange sacrifice form Wade - Keene, Blackpool 1971

27. Aberystwyth ISEs
- A pair of exchange sacrifices from the 2014 British Championship

28. Ray Could Play XI
- RDK and a 'might have been' ISE from Camaguey 1974

29. Try Try Again
- Kramnik has another bash at ISEing Topalov. This time it works

30. The Best of Times
- The computer suggests an ISE as an improvement for Black in Adams - Grandelius, Tromso Olympiad 2014

31. The Worst of Times
- When you try to play a theoretical ISE in the Pirc but your opponent doesn’t allow it.

32. Ray Could Play XII: Olympic ISEs
- RDK at Nice, 1974.

33. Ray Could Play XIII: Quiero Bailar La Salsa
- Back to Camaguey (1974). Ray’s still doing the ISE shuffle.

34. Ray Could Play XIV: Pretty Good Year
- 1974 was a pretty good year for Ray’s ISEs (even if this post contains a rather egregious error)

35. Ray Could Play XV
- RDK, still a student, gets busy.

36. Interesting and Difficult ISEs: The Baku Grand Prix vs The London League
- A Super GM ISE and an amateur ISE.

37. From a Shoebox Under the Bed: Australia
- The computer suggests an improvement to the finish of a game played twenty years ago on the other side of the world.

38. Day of Days
- Kasparov - Karpov, World Championship Match 1990 Game 4.

39. A Pair of ISEs or An Exchange of Exchanges
- Kasparov - Karpov, World Championship Match 1990 Game 13.

40. Twofer
- Kasparov - Karpov, World Championship Match 1990 Game 14.

41. A Match of ISEs and a Piece of History
- Kasparov - Karpov, World Championship Match 1990 Game 21.

42. Sochi ISEs: Game 6
- In a desperate situation Anand could have but didn’t.

43. Stamp Collecting
- It wasn’t a desperate situation. Anand din’t have to but did.

44. A Career Bookended by ISEs
- Anand lost his last game in a World Championship match because of an ISE ... but won his first for the same reason.

45. Sixty Memorable Annotations #28
- Comparing Anand’s failed ISE with a classic effort from Alekhine.

46. Ray Could Commentate: He’s Done it Again!
- Nige does an ISE for colour complex in a speed chess game against Kasparov.

47. Endgame ISEs
- Topalov secures the FIDE title at San Luis in 2005.

48. Sixty Memorable Annotations #29
- Fischer, Spassky, Reykjavik and a "normal" exchange sacrifice to say goodbye.






TISE
Shirov - Bareev, Lvov 1990: allowing ... Bxa1. Saccing the exchange to get rid of a fianchettoed bishop.

TISE II
Kasparov-Anand, Tilburg 1991Rxf6. An exchange sac to open up the king.

TISE III
Movsesian-Kasparov, Sarajevo 2000... Rxc3. A standard idea in the Sicilian.

TISE IV
Browne-Timman, Wijk aan Zee 1980... Rxb2. A standard KID idea, an exchange sac to power-up a fianchettoed bishop.

TISE V
- Houska-Rendell, Sheffield 2011: ...Bxa1. The exchange sac that didn't happen.

TISE VI
- Kosten - Gordon, Torquay 2013: Rxf6. Kaboom followed by oops.





See also:
One for Tom
A Collection of Dutch Bits and Bobs
Ray Could Play VI
Ray Could Play X