This is called the Alapin Sicilian. There are a few ways for black to meet it.
I think there was a Kasparov-Deep Blue game with the Alapin.
This is called the Alapin Sicilian. There are a few ways for black to meet it.
I think there was a Kasparov-Deep Blue game with the Alapin.
Among grandmasters Sveshnikov regular plays this variant for White.
The Black has 2 main continuations:
2. ... Nf6
2. ... d5
What is black's best response after
1. e4 ... c5 2. c3
The whole point with the Sicilian is to challenge white's center, but how do I prevent 3. d4? It seems like after 2. c3, there's no way to challenge that square anymore. Also, is this a common opening for white? it looks pretty strong (but maybe i'm missing something)
thanks for any help.