Nimzowitsch Defence Explained

Openingname:Nimzowitsch Defence
Moves:1.e4 Nc6
Eco:B00
Nameorigin:Aron Nimzowitsch
Parentopening:King's Pawn Game
Chessgid:22922&move=2&moves=e4.Nc6&nodes=21720.22922

The Nimzowitsch Defence (named after Aron Nimzowitsch) is a somewhat uncommon chess opening characterised by the moves:

1. e4 Nc6

This opening is an example of a hypermodern opening in which Black invites White to occupy the of the board at an early stage with pawns.[1] Black's intent is to block or otherwise restrain White's central pawns and, if allowed to do so by inaccurate play by White, eventually undermine the White pawn centre by well-timed pawn advances of their own or by attacking the white pieces defending the centre. World Champion Garry Kasparov and Grandmaster Raymond Keene wrote that it "has never been fully accepted as a dependable opening. Nevertheless it is sound and offers the maverick spirit a great deal of foreign territory to explore."[2]

The Nimzowitsch is included under code B00 in the Encyclopaedia of Chess Openings.

Main line: 2.d4

White takes the initiative in the centre. Black's main continuations are 2...d5 or 2...e5.

2...d5

The line that Aron Nimzowitsch, the originator of the opening, usually preferred. Now White can choose among:

2...e5

A line favoured by the late British grandmaster Tony Miles. White can transpose to the Scotch Game with 3.Nf3, or play 3.d5 Nce7 (with the intentions of 4. -- Ng6 - Black Knight's Tango) (3...Nb8, although perhaps not as bad as it looks, is considered inferior), which gives White only a slight plus score in practice. Another approach is 3.dxe5 Nxe5, when White can seek a quiet advantage with 4.Nf3 or play the more aggressive (but potentially weakening) thrust 4.f4.

2.Nf3

Shown by some databases to be the most common move, 2.Nf3 is often played by White players not eager for a theoretical battle on their opponent's turf.[3]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Schiller, Eric. Eric Schiller. World Champion Openings. March 1997. Cardoza Publishing. 340. 0-940685-69-8.
  2. Garry Kasparov and Raymond Keene, Batsford Chess Openings 2, Collier Books, 1989, p. 228. .
  3. The American International Master Jeremy Silman writes that "most players (even at the grandmaster level) avoid any pre-studied lines by the opponent by simply replying with 2.Nf3". Jeremy Silman, The Reassess Your Chess Workbook: How to Master Chess Imbalances, Siles Press, 2001, p. 383. .
  4. Web site: Shaw vs. Salmensuu, EuTCh (2001), Leon ESP . .
  5. Book: Wisnewski, Christoph . Play 1...Nc6! . . 2007 . 978-1857445220 . 74 .