Where do you attack in closed positions when pawn chains point both ways?
Aleksandar Randjelovic (Bad Bishop)

Where do you attack in closed positions when pawn chains point both ways?

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About 30 years ago, when I was at the beginning of my chess career, I was crazy about opening ideas. I loved exploring strange systems and weird-looking positions, trying to understand what was actually going on.

Back then, I would usually spend time going through one of those - deaf and mute - Encyclopedias of Chess Openings (by Chess Informant). That was pretty much my only source for learning openings. Pretty much the definition of how openings shouldn’t be studied!

I stumbled upon the Old Benoni (I didn’t even know there was a difference between the Old Benoni and the Czech Benoni). What caught my attention wasn’t only the unusual name - it was the type of positions it created. The center would get completely locked.

And I loved that.

I felt safe. Like no immediate danger was around. It felt less about being quicker than the opponent and more about preparing your forces, maneuvering, improving your pieces... Almost like both sides were sitting in their own trenches, each preparing their own strategy - free from direct fire.

But what really struck me was this: once the center became blocked, White's best is to play g3.

And I just couldn’t understand it - why should the bishop develop like that? There were two of our pawns sitting on light squares, and in front of them - two of Black’s pawns.

That bishop looked buried alive.

I wondered about this for years. My coach wasn’t particularly interested in discussing openings. He thought there were more important things to study, so I was mostly left figuring things out on my own.

Instead of following the cold and silent advice of the ECO, I trusted my own understanding of positional chess. In similar positions I would play Bd3 instead, reroute to c2 and a4, trying to exchange it for something in the opponent's camp.

Occasionally it would land on e2, and I'd be looking to trade it via the g4-square whenever the opportunity appeared.

It made perfect sense to me. Until I realized I was actually breaking an important strategic principle.

Because even if that bishop is technically the bad bishop, in closed positions we don't spend time trying to get rid of it. It actually helps the player with less space - our opponent.

Closed positions are often misunderstood like this, at least at first.

And one of the biggest mistakes beginners, intermediates, and even club players make is trying to play them using ideas that belong to open positions.

In open centers, activity and speed often matters the most. In closed positions, space suddenly starts playing a much bigger role.

So the key question becomes: Who has more space, and where?

Pawn chains usually give us the answer. It helps - in our mind - to remove all the pieces from the board and only look at the pawns.

In many closed structures, the direction of the pawn chain tells us where we should attack, and where our opponent will likely play.

In the French structure, for example, things are relatively straightforward. White gets more room on the kingside and expands there. Black feels more comfortable on the queenside.

But the Old (or Czech) Benoni confused me for years. Because here we suddenly get something strange: Pawn chains pointing in both directions. White has one chain from c4 to d5, and another from e4 to d5. Black has d6–e5, but also d6–c5.

So suddenly, the usual guideline becomes useless. If pawn chains point toward both flanks... Where should we actually attack? And how the early g3 move by White is connected to that chess logic?

Feel free to leave your thoughts in the comments.

Recently, I recorded a lesson trying to unpack this confusing type of structure and explain what should actually guide our plans (and make us fianchetto the bishop on g2) when the pawn chains seem to point both ways.

If you're curious, here’s the lesson:

How to Play in Closed Positions

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