The English Attack !!

Submitted by DeepNf3 on Fri, 09/28/2007 at 12:58pm.

 

   The English Attack!

 

 Hi chess hustlers!, I am Vishy Anand, I will be in charge of the chess hustler's The English Attack corner, as some of you know I have been playing the English Attack successfuly for several years against top GMs's  several lines of the sicilian Najdorf, and now i would like to introduce to you a training method for you to learn some of this ideas i have been employing, as you know the Najdorf Sicilian is one of the key battlegrounds of modern chess. This opening line occurs in a high proportion of top-level games, and is popular amongst players of all levels. World Champions Fischer and Kasparov are the Najdorf's most famous adherents - both made it their main defence, and scored a high proportion of wins with it, while very rarely losing.

It begins thus:


1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 d6 3. d4 cxd4 4. Nxd4 Nf6 5. Nc3 a6

Black's fifth move, ...a6, aims to deny White the b5 square for his knights and light-colored bishop while maintaining maximum flexibility against White's attack.

Black's plan is usually to start a minority pawn attack on the queenside and put pressure on White's e4 pawn. Often this can be done through playing ...b5, ...Bb7, and putting a knight on c5. White also has to look out for exchange sacrifices by Black on c3 where White usually has a knight posted guarding the important e4 pawn. This exchange sacrifice is a recurring theme in the Sicilian Defence.

The oldest, sharpest response by White is an immediate 6.Bg5, generally countered by 6...e6, followed by 7.f4, hoping to exploit the pin on the knight. The simplest response by Black is 7...Be7, leading to quick castling by both sides. However, Black's most popular choice at the master level is 7...Qb6!?, leading to the extremely complicated Poisoned Pawn Variation (8. Qd2 Qxb2 9. Rb1 (or 9.Nb3) Qa3. Black is up a pawn but somewhat underdeveloped: however, his pieces can quickly become mobile and his position is not easy for White to break. Other well-known replies to 7.f4 include 7...Qc7, championed by Garry Kasparov and Boris Gelfand, 7...Nbd7, the risky 7...Nc6!?, and 7...b5, the ultra-sharp Polugaevsky Variation.


Because of the success of various players with these variations (notably Bobby Fischer and Kasparov), White often plays 6. Be2 and goes for a quieter, more positional game, whereupon Black has the option of transposing into a Scheveningen Variation by playing 6...e6 or opt to stay in the Najdorf by playing 6...e5. 6. Bc4 (the Sozin Variation), 6.g3, and 6. f4 are also respected responses to the Najdorf.

Since the early 1990s, the English Attack (6.Be3 followed by f2-f3, g2-g4, Qd2 and 0-0-0 in some order) has become extremely popular and has been intensively analysed, although 6...Ng4!? has cast somewhat a shadow on its use following Garry Kasparov's sucessful utilization of it.

 

The English Attack (Be3 and f3) became popular as a direct attacking method against the Najdorf in the 1980s, following its successful use by Nunn, Short and Chandler. Since then, it has become established as the most critical line of the Najdorf, with Kasparov and even myself using it to devastating effect at the highest level.

 the following is one of my games in which I employed the English attack against one of the strongest chess players of today GM Boris Gelfand

White: Vishy Anand (2792) Black: Boris Gelfand (2723)

Opening Sicilian Najdorf
Tournament corus 2006, Wijk aan Zee, Round 13 
Date 29/01/2006
ECO Code B90
Result 1-0
1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 d6 3. d4 cxd4 4. Nxd4 Nf6 5. Nc3 a6 6. f3 e5 7. Nb3 Be6 8. Be3 Nbd7 9. Qd2 b5 10. O-O-O Nb6 11. Qf2 Nc4 12. Bxc4 bxc4
last book move
13. Na5 Qd7
13… Qxa5?? 14. Bb6 wins the queen
14. Rd2
Another demonstration of Anand’s home preparation. He deviates from a game played earlier in the B section of this tournament.14. g4 Be7 15. g5 Nh5 16. Nd5 Qa4 17. Nc3 Qd7 18. Nd5 Qa4 19. Qe1 c3 20. Qxc3 Rc8 21. Qd2 Qxa2 22. Qb4 Bxd5 23. exd5 O-O 24. Nc6 Bd8 25. c3 Nf4 26. Bxf4 exf4 27. Rhe1 Bxg5 28. Qxd6 Qa1+ 29. Kc2 Qa4+ 30. Kb1 Bh4 31. Rd4 Qb5 32. Na7 Qc5 33. Nxc8 Qxd6 34. Nxd6 Bxe1 35. Nb7 Bf2 36. Rxf4 Rb8 37. Na5 Kf8 38. Nc6 Bc5 39. Nxb8 Cheparinov - Lahno, Corus B, Wijk aan Zee 2006, 1-0 (39)
14… Be7 15. Rhd1 Rb8
15… O-O
16. Bc5 Qc7 17. Rxd6 Qxa5 18. Rxe6
Demolishes the pawn shield
18… fxe6 19. Bxe7 Rb7
19… Kxe7? 20. Qa7+ +-
20. Bd6 Nd7
Position after 20...Nd7. Anand has sacrificed an exchange to smash Black’s pawn structure and dislocate his kingside development. He has a slight edge here and looks to have sufficient compensation for the exchange.
21. Qh4
Trying to create more weaknesses on the kingside.
21… Qd8 22. Qh5+ g6 23. Qh6 Qf6 24. Ne2
Starting an ambitious manoeuvre Nc3-e2-g1-h3-g5 to ratchet up the pressure on the Black kingside, or even Ng3 to bolster an h-pawn advance.
24… Kf7 25. h4 g5
Gelfand feels forced to weaken his kingside in an effort to stabilise his position and get his pieces developed.
26. hxg5 Qxh6 27. gxh6 Rg8 28. g4 Rg6 29. Rh1
Blacks flurry of activity has allowed him to complete his development. White seems to have gone backwards in terms of activity, but Anand has the position firmly under control. The h6-pawn is a thorn in Black’s position.
29… Rb6 30. Ba3
A retreat that’s only temporary
30… Rf6 31. Rh3 Kg6 32. Kd2
Anand activates his king - its needed to cover the f3-pawn which releases his rook to become active again.
32… Rf7 33. Ke3 Nf6 34. Nc3
The knight has no further prospects on the kingside, so it seeks adventure elsewhere. In particular, along with the White king it covers all the entry points down the d-file.
34… Rd7 35. Rh1 Rc6 36. Na4 Rb7 37. Nc3 Rb8 38. Nd1
Protecting the b2-pawn so that the bishop can move freely again.
38… Ng8
Preventing 39. Be7, as well as threatening to win the h6-pawn.
39. Rh5
At last, the weak e5 pawn is ready to fall. Black is in a semi zugzwang state.
39… Nxh6 40. Rxe5 Nf7 41. Rh5 Rb5 42. Rh1
Job done.
42… e5
This opens up a nice out-post for the White knight.
43. Nc3 Rb7 44. Nd5 Re6 45. Bb4
Rerouting the bishop to a more useful diagonal.
45… Kg7 46. Rh2 Ng5
Black gets a little counterplay by pressing against White’s f3-pawn.
47. Bc3 Kg8 48. Rf2 Rf7 49. Rf1 Re8 50. Ke2
Threatening to nullify the pressure on the f3-pawn with the knight manoeuvre Nd5-e5-f5.
50… Ref8 51. Bxe5 Nxe4
Exploiting the pin down the f-file to demolish White’s pawn structure. The threat is Ng3+
52. Ke3 Nc5 53. f4
White is still the exchange down, but his two extra pawns, still linked, plus his centralised minor pieces, give him a significant edge.
53… Re8 54. Kd4 Nd7 55. Re1 Re6 56. Re2
A crafty move, covering the queenside pawns.
56… Nxe5 57. fxe5 Rg7 58. Nf6+
Holding the position together.
58… Kf7 59. Kxc4 Rg5 60. Kd4 Rb6 61. c4
The rook on e2 is marvellously placed.
61… Ke6 62. b3 Rb8 63. Re4 h6 64. Nd5 Rbg8 65. Nf4+ Ke7
65… Kd7 does not help much 66. e6+ Kc6 67. Nd5 Rxg4 68. e7 Rxe4+ 69. Kxe4 +-
66. e6
Enough is enough for Gelfand. He resigns. An awesome technical performance from Anand.66. e6 Kd6 67. Nd5 +-
1-0
 Did you enjoy it?, I hope you did
 you can learn and play just like i did in the game above, and i will tell you exactely how i learned/specialized in the English attack of the sicilian Najdorf, fisrt thing I did was to gather some usefull information related to the opening, and then I put together a team of chess players who were interested in searching and sharing ideas on the subject, then we agreed on a database containing chess games with the English Attack different lines from which we were going to feed all studies and information needed for us to get to master this particular Opening, in your case would be even easier since you don't have to go out there and put together a team because you are already a team and all players likely to come to this forum have interest in learning this opening, you don't even have to agree or look for a database to study from because I did that for you already, here is the link to the database http://www.queensac.com/chessblog/games/englishattack.htm  , this database contains over 150 carefully selected games on the opening which you can replay at that original page or copy and pate the PGN file that will appear to the right of the game viewer and post the game here to this forums which is what I would recommend so we all can comment and give share opinions on the game and learn from it, I would recommend also that every game you play on this opening be posted to this forum as well so we can discuss it and thats learn from it..
 ok! I hope you enjoyed my advices
 Take care!, I get with you later
 Vishy
 note: once you go to the game database page if you scroll all the way down you will be able to see a link for downloading the complete PGN file for the games
 oh! and I almost forgot to tell you, I am world champion again, check out the news at chessbase.com
Tal, Lautier and Anand; standing , Larsen, Korchnoi, Kasparov, Bessel Kok, Timman and Spassky, this picture might be from Cannes 1989 maybe even from an earlier year
note: understand that the forums (the content in the forums in this club) were posted by me DeepNf3, I am not in any way or form any of the GMs, IMs, or any of the people mentioned in the forums nor I am associated to them and/or to any seller of recommended chess material in any way or form, you should not try to contact me with the intention of buying any chess related material from me, I am not a seller, the forums in this club do not intend false representation in any way or form
the forums, albums, news in this club are just a creative way of presenting chess training ideas and do not intend any false representation of the ones in them mentioned
 DeepNf3
 
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Comments:

by love_romance13 - 14 months ago
India India
Member Since: Aug 2007
Member Points: 113
nice games on that site bt in every game only e4 opening is won d game
by DeepNf3 - 14 months ago
USA, FL United States
Member Since: Aug 2007
Member Points: 1341

 

 yes, the games are all on the english attack, we are trying to start a group study in this forum based on that particular opening

by DeepNf3 - 11 months ago
USA, FL United States
Member Since: Aug 2007
Member Points: 1341

 

 

       This following was a nice English Attack game played by Karjakin at the World cup (if Karjakin is following this line of play....Wink)

 

Karjakin,Sergey (2694) - Alekseev,Evgeny (2716) [B90]
World Cup Khanty-Mansiysk RUS (5.4), 08.12.2007

1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 d6 3.d4 cxd4 4.Nxd4 Nf6 5.Nc3 a6 6.Be3 e5 7.Nb3 Be7 8.f3 Be6 9.Qd2 Nbd7 10.g4 0-0 11.0-0-0 Qc7 12.Kb1 b5 13.g5 Nh5 14.f4 exf4 15.Bxf4 Nxf4 16.Qxf4 Rac8 17.Nd4 Nb6 18.Bd3 Qc5 19.Nf5 Rce8 20.Nxe7+ Rxe7 21.e5! d5 [21...Qxe5 22.Qh4 g6 23.Rhe1 Qg7 24.Ne4] 22.h4 Nc4 23.h5 d4 24.h6 g6? [24...Qxe5 25.Bxh7+ Kxh7 26.hxg7+ Kxg7 27.Qh4 Bf5 28.Qh6+ Kg8 29.Nd5 Bxc2+ 30.Kc1 f6 31.g6] 25.Nd5 Qxd5 26.Bxc4 Qxc4 27.Qf6 1-0

by DeepNf3 - 11 months ago
USA, FL United States
Member Since: Aug 2007
Member Points: 1341

  Analysis by Grandmasters: GM R B Ramesh http://www.cpai.in/analysed_games/ramesh/gm_ramesh.htm

(3) Anand,V (2792) - Morozevich,A (2758) [B90]
WCh Mexico City MEX (11), 25.09.2007

 

1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 d6 3.d4 cxd4 4.Nxd4 Nf6 5.Nc3 a6 6.f3 e5 7.Nb3 Be6 8.Be3 Nbd7 9.g4 Anand has successfully trued 9.Qd2 as well here on earlier occassions 9...Nb6 10.g5 Nh5 11.Qd2 Rc8 12.0-0-0 Be7 13.Rg1 0-0 14.Kb1 Qc7 normally black play this move after the preliminary g6. 15.Qf2 Nc4 16.Bxc4 Bxc4 this move doesnt have a good reputation because of 17. Na4 but Anand goes for another approach here [ 16...Qxc4 1/2-1/2 Svidler,P (2742)-Leko,P (2738)/Dortmund 2006/CBM 114 (23)] 17.Nd5 [ 17.Na4N 1/2-1/2 Leko,P (2741)-Svidler,P (2727)/Dortmund 2004/Inf 91 (33); 17.Nd2 ] 17...Bxd5 18.Rxd5 f5N [ 18...b5 correspondence game 19.Qg2 g6 1/2-1/2 Joao,N (2617)-Bokar,J (2533)/Rochade 5171-Jub15 bd02 2005/CBM 118 (34)] 19.gxf6 Rxf6 20.Qe2 Nf4 [ 20...Rxf3 21.Qxf3 Qxc2+ 22.Ka1+- ] 21.Bxf4 Rxf4 22.Rd3 Qd7 23.Nc1! with a static pawn structure, Anand goes to improve the position of his knight with a beautiful manouver 23...Rcf8 24.a3! Kh8 25.Na2 Qh3?! [ >=25...Bh4 26.Nc3 Qh3 27.Rf1 Rg4!? ( 27...h6 ) ] 26.Rg3 Qh5?! [ 26...Qd7 keeping queenside and g7 under protection] 27.Qg2+/= Rh4 28.h3 Qh6 Now the black Queen is misplaced which Anand exploits on the other flank were it is sorely missed 29.Rb3! b5 30.Nb4 Rh5 31.Qf1! [ 31.Nxa6 Bh4 32.Rg4 Bd8 33.h4 ( 33.Rxb5 Rxh3 ) 33...Bxh4 34.Rxb5 Be7 35.Rb7+/= ] 31...Rh4! [ 31...Bh4 32.Rg1 Bd8 33.Nxa6 Rxh3 34.Qxb5+/- Qe6 35.Qe2 ] 32.Qg2 Rh5 33.Nxa6! the exclamation is for the courage to play for win with 1.5 point lead. 33...Bh4 34.Rg4 Bf6?! [ >=34...Bd8 ] 35.Qe2 Rxh3 36.Rxb5 [ 36.Rg1 Rh2 ] 36...Bd8?! [ >=36...Be7 37.Rb7 ( 37.Rb3 Rhxf3 38.Rxf3 Qh1+ 39.Rg1 Qxf3 40.Qxf3 Rxf3 41.a4~~ ) 37...Qe6 ] 37.Rb8 Qf6 38.Nb4 Rxf3 39.Nd5 Qf7 40.Qa6! h5! 41.Rg2 h4? [ 41...Qd7? 42.Rb7 ; >=41...Qe6! 42.Qa8 Qe8 ] 42.Qxd6+/- Be7 43.Qxe5 Rxb8 44.Qxb8+ Kh7 45.Qc7 Bf8 46.Qxf7 Rxf7 47.Rg4! Rf1+ 48.Ka2 Rh1 49.e5!? [ 49.a4 h3 50.Rh4+ Kg8 51.a5 h2 52.a6 Bc5 53.b4 Ba7 54.b5 g5 55.Rh3 g4 56.Nf6+ ] 49...Bc5 [ 49...h3 50.e6 h2 51.Rh4+ Kg6 52.e7 ] 50.e6 Kh6 51.Rc4 [ 51.b4 ] 51...h3 [ 51...Bd6 52.Rc6! ] 52.Rxc5 h2 53.Ne3 Ra1+ 54.Kxa1 h1Q+ 55.Ka2+- Qe4 56.Re5 1-0

by DeepNf3 - 10 months ago
USA, FL United States
Member Since: Aug 2007
Member Points: 1341

 

 hi everybody!

 I hope you are finding time to enjoy Corus 2008 tournament!

 WC GM Vishy Anand won a very interesting game on the English attack which is the  opening variation of the sicilian defence which we have been following in this forum, this game happened in round 8 today

 

GM Anand (2799) - GM Topalov (2780) [B90]
20.01.2008

1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 d6 3.d4 cxd4 4.Nxd4 Nf6 5.Nc3 a6 6.Be3 e5 7.Nb3 Be6 8.f3 h5 9.Nd5 Bxd5 10.exd5 Nbd7 11.Qd2 g6 12.0–0–0 Nb6 13.Qa5 Bh6 14.Bxh6 Rxh6 15.Kb1 Rc8 16.Qb4 Kf8 17.c4 Kg7 18.g3 Rh8 19.Rc1 Qc7 20.Bh3 Rce8 21.Rhd1 Re7 22.a3 Rd8 23.Nd2 Nbd7 24.Qc3 a5 25.Bxd7 Nxd7 26.f4 Nf6 27.Rf1 b6 28.h3 Qd7 29.f5 Rf8 30.Qe3 e4 31.g4 hxg4 32.hxg4 Re5 33.Rf4 Qd8 34.g5 Nh5 35.f6+ Kg8 36.Rxe4 Rfe8 37.Ka2 a4 38.Rc3 Qc7 39.Qd4 Qc5 40.Qxc5 White wins 1–0

note: the game was fully analyzed and commented by GM Gregory Kaidanov in his game of the day video at the ICC, the video has been posted already to the free video lectures (I highly recommend it)

here is the link: http://www.chessclub.com/chessfm/index.php#videos

 

by ashwath - 5 months ago
bangalore India
Member Since: Apr 2008
Member Points: 143
nice

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