White to Play.
- Joelnelsonb
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White to Play.
I wonder if anyone here has a decent move in this position. I have some ideas but I'll save my assessment for later.
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Thinking like a go player during a game of chess is like bringing a knife to a gun-fight. Thinking like a chess player during a game of go feels like getting knifed while you're holding a gun...
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schawipp
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Re: White to Play.
First instinct is c4-c5 since it disturbs the black pawn structure (d6 can not easily move because of Rxe5 followed by Rbe1 which would be a great result for w). BTW I would not exchange the bishop for the knight. Since almost all white pawns are on white squares, your bishop works very effective. So far my 5 ct... 
Edit: c4-c5 allows Nd5 but you have Bd2 which controls all relevant black squares.
Edit: c4-c5 allows Nd5 but you have Bd2 which controls all relevant black squares.
- Joelnelsonb
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Re: White to Play.
The problem with C5 is it abandons the defense of D5, freeing up the knight (which I am certainly not looking to trade off).
Thinking like a go player during a game of chess is like bringing a knife to a gun-fight. Thinking like a chess player during a game of go feels like getting knifed while you're holding a gun...
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schawipp
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Re: White to Play.
Yes, but you have two pawns on the c-file. When black plays Nd5 after your c4-c5, you can just play c4 again, and the knight can go back to f6. The move ...Nc3 seems no good option since white can counter Rb3, and the knight would be in an awkward position (Nxa2 -> Ra1 captures the knight right away ...).Joelnelsonb wrote:The problem with C5 is it abandons the defense of D5, freeing up the knight (which I am certainly not looking to trade off).
The strategic goals behind c4-c5 are to (i) get rid of the white double pawn at the c file (bad shape