Winning with 1.e4 - Andrew Soltis, 1988.pdf

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WITH
1e4
A
COMPTETE OPENING
SYSTEM
ANDREW
SOLTIS
WINNING
WITH
AI\DREW
SOMIS
International
Grandmaster
CHESS
DIGEST, INC.
Table
of
Contents
TABLE
OF
CONTENTS
Page
INTRODUCTION
CHAPTER
ONE
L
e4,
e5
-Double
King
Pawn
ILLUSTRATIVE
GAME
Rubinstein
vs.
Hromadka
CHAPTER
TWO
L
e4,
Nf6
-Alekhine's
Defense
Section
A
t
e4,
Nf6
2
e5,
Nd5
3
d4,
d6 4
Bc4,
Nb6
Section
B
L
e4,
Nf6
2
e5,
Nd5
3
d4,
d6
4
Bc4
c6
5
7
19
26
28
32
ILLUSTRATIVE
GAME
Tukmakov
vs.
Uskovski
CHAPTER
THREE
L
e4,
d6
(or
1...g6)
The
Pirc
&
Modern
Defenses
ILLUSTRATIVE
GAME
Tal
vs.
Hoi
CHAPTER
FOUR
L e4, e6
-French
Defense
ILLUSTRATIVE
GAME
Mohring
vs
Forintos
CHAPTER FIVE
L e4, c6
-Caro-Kann
Defense
Section
A
6...8g4
35
40
50
55
64
69
74
78
82
Section
B
6...e6
ILLUSTRATIVE
GAME
Browne
vs Larsen
Table
of
Contents
Page
89
103
CHAPTER
SIX
I
e4,
c5 -The
Sicilian
Defense
ILLUSTRATIVE
GAME
Rohde
vs
Dlugy
CHAPTER
SEVEN
L
e4,
d5 -Center Counter
Section
A
L
e4,
d5
2
exd5,
Qxd5
Section
B
L
e4,
d5
2 exd5,
Nf6
ILLUSTRATIVE
GAMES
Ostermayer
vs
Strauss
Eslon vs
Rogers
CHAPTER EIGHT
I
e4,
Nc6
-Nimzovich
Defense
Section
A
L
e4,
Nc6
2
d4,
d5
Section
B
L
e4,
Nc6 2 d4,
e5
ILLUSTRATIVE
GAME
Polugayevsky vs
Rossetto
CHAPTER NINE
L
e4,
b6
-Owen's
Defense
ILLUSTRATIVE
GAMES
Erminkov
vs Sahovic
Torre
vs.
Winants
109
110
116
120
125
130
132
135
137
t4l
146
151
Introduction: IVinning
With
I
e4
INTRODUCTION
There are players,
even Grandmasters,
who
survive
in
the world
of
tournament
chess
without
paying
much
at-
tention to
opening
theory.
If,
for
example,
you begin
every
game
with
1
Nf3
and
continue
with
2
93,
3
Bg2, followed
by
castling and
5
d3,
you don't
have
to
worry
much
about
what Black
is
doing.
Similarly,
if
you begin every
game
as
Black
with
a
.-mirror version
of
this--1...g6, 2-,.897,
3...d6
and 4...
Nf6,
etc.
you
can
also
"play without
an
oPponent"
during
the earliest
stage
of
the
opening.
course,
you
Pay
a
price
for
this
narrow
aP-
proach
to
the
game.
You allow your
opponent
to
determine
the
shape
of
the
center
and
the
character
of
the
early
middlegame.
You allow
yourself
to
become
a
target
for
prepared analysis
because
your
system
is
easily
predicted,
Of
and you
simply
limit
your
ways
of
winning
a
game.
Against a
tactically
weak
opponent,
you'll find it's
hard
to
blow
him
of
f
the board
in
20
moves
if
your
first
two
are
1
Nf3
and
2
gs.Against a player who
doesn't
like
to
defend
and who prefers
a
positional
battle, you
may
be
walking
into
his
strength.
What
you
need
is
a
small
set
of
opening
weapons
that
you
can
use
against
the
variety
of
different
I
e4
de-
fenses.
You shouldn't
restrict
yourself
to
positional
systems
or
purely tactical
ones.
The improving player
has
to
learn
to play
gambits
as
well
as
trench warfare.
(But at
the
same
time,
he
doesn't
need
to
play
a
dozen
di
f
ferent
ways
against
the Sicilian
Defense.)
He
doesn't need
to
achieve
a
winning
position
after
the first
dozen
moves.
But
he
doesn't
want to give up
all
hope
for
a slight
opening
ad-
vantage.
Against
each
of
the
major
defenses
to
1
e4
we
have
selected
an
active
line
of
play
which
should
give
White
chances
for
a long-term
initiative
and a solid
middlegame.
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