Hi all I was wondering how this variation is called. I know it's going into a steinitz/smyslov variation but taking a different route instead of playing e6:
Roman Dzindzichashvili recommends it on his roman's lab series. Basically it doesn't want to lock the Queen bishop up and gain some more dynamism by playing c5.
According to chesstempo it's indeed called Kasparov attack but the c5 variation has no name apparently.
Hi all I was wondering how this variation is called. I know it's going into a steinitz/smyslov variation but taking a different route instead of playing e6: