you said, you do not want avoid it but yet you do not want to study the lines against it! you just want to understand why white sacs the pawn! makes no sense to me but i will give it another shot! white sacs the pawn because the "dynamics" in the position favor him! black must survive the "attack" that is sure to follow.( i am no expert but current theory says that he "can")
Najdorf Poisoned Pawn Move after Qb6?
It's in that 10e5 line, nearly fourty years after Fischer game, that top players have recently started finding new ideas. For a short period of time, posioned pawn even looked busted.
If you don't want to play the PP variation there's plenty of other solid lines available, so I don't see a problem here. I recently read but can't remember where the Najdorf PP is practically a forced draw nowadays if both players (or just White?) know a lot of the theory behind it.
But people tell me one thing is b3 a good option?
I wondered this, since at hobbyist level I'd expect a player to think that was the quickest, safest way to keep b pawn. Didn't find a single example at chessgames.com (http://www.chessgames.com/perl/explorer?node=1859747&move=8&moves=e4.c5.Nf3.d6.d4.cxd4.Nxd4.Nf6.Nc3.a6.Bg5.e6.f4.Qb6&nodes=21720.32033.32034.32069.32070.32071.32072.32073.32074.65251.162533.162523.162524.1859747) so I guess it's another one of those "so obviously bad that no one's tried it" things that I keep running into.
I did an online analyze, and it just suggested
8. b3 Be7
9. Bc4 O-O
And I'm like, okay? I guess I prefer black here but why is this so awful that no one has tried it?
From the diagram above, I see that the one defender of ce has been removed and so if I saw this, perhaps Black plays that sudden and unexpected move (just kidding) of Qb4 and now nearly any move by White save Bd2 is going to put White in some interesting waters. for example, Qd2 sees Nxe4 hitting at the Queen and the Knight is lost minimally. In fact, it seems like any Queen move forces Nxe4 even if White tries to be bold and go for some idea like Bxe7 since the c3 Knight gets picked off by his counterpart with the potential discovery looming and allowing Black to play Re8. I agree I would like Black's position here as well.
Then again, I only looked at the diagram for a few seconds but that b4 weaknes as glaring no matter how or when Black chooses to pick away at it.
(Reply is to TwoMove, still reading v69's helpful note)
Understood. I guess my real question is: Say, I'm black, and some silly blunderbuss does this. I want the thrill of making himher pay for it!
Be7 and O-O don't exactly seem like severe punishment.
Does the hammer come down later? My brief glance at a "Weak squares" article gives me ideas like
... d5, ... Ba3 [or ...e5, takes/takes, ...Bb4/Ba3]
... Nc6, ... Nb4
Good insight as well Dallas. The point underlying that the b4 square is able to be hit at too much by too many pieces to be of any real valueand the dark squars are as weak as if BLack got in Qxb2 with the excpetion that thre is obviously an extra pawn on the board.
Qb4 and now nearly any move by White save Bd2 is going to put White in some interesting waters. for example, Qd2 sees Nxe4 hitting at the Queen and the Knight is lost minimally.
I'm having trouble following this. Bd2 is not a legal move after Qb4. I read "save" as "other than", i.e. "any move other than Bd2 is going to put W..."
I do the value of Qb4, and was going to include it in the "guesses" above, but I feared someone would say that it's more important to develop the N first
Prawn...lovely as it is, I'm not going to be playing it as Black. I need White wins. lol