Opening Theory...

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Helipacter

Hi,

I've got a query regarding opening theory. I've been keeping tabs on a couple of tournaments recently (via blogs), and the commentators state that the games are still in theory at move No "X", or the opening line has been proved a draw by theory, etc., my question is, how do the commentators keep track of all opening theory? How do they also spot a novelty?

To me, it seems that there are so many opening theories that the bloggers must use websites/books etc to help, I'm just wondering which ones they are?

Any advice would be appreciated, as I'm trying to expand my opening theory knowledge...

kco

They use database of opening.

TheGrobe

I don't think any openings have been proven draws -- they might be drawish, which means they tend to lead to a high proportion of draws at the highest level but a draw is definitely not certain even with best play.

Helipacter
TheGrobe wrote:

I don't think any openings have been proven draws -- they might be drawish, which means they tend to lead to a high proportion of draws at the highest level but a draw is definitely not certain even with best play.


What I'm thinking of are comments like this (from this year's Donostia page):

"Leader Nakamura took a DIY rest day in San Sebastian after running out to an incredible 4.5/5 start. He played a forced drawing line of the Najdorf against one of his two closest pursuers, Ruslan Ponomariov."

The article continues:

(Play can continue if White wants, but there is also a forced repetition they didn’t bother to play out.)

I would like to hope that there's no such thing as a drawing line either, but that doesn't seem to be the way

Here's the game in question:

TheGrobe

I think that at the level you and I play any of those "drawish" openings are quite winnable.  I wouldn't worry too much about the analysis of how these games tend to come out at the top levels of the game.

Helipacter
TheGrobe wrote:

I think that at the level you and I play any of those "drawish" openings are quite winnable.


Ha ha! How very true... I think the chances of me calling a draw 14 moves into a game are incredibly slim...

duganp

I think part of the answer is to use references like Chessbase (http://www.chessbase.com/shop/product.asp?pid=476).  For a mere 350 euros you get millions of games, frequent updates from the latest tournaments, etc.  I don't know when an opening line becomes formally classified as "theory", but perhaps it's when a sufficient number of top-level players have used it successfully.