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#153296 - 03/19/10 09:42 AM
Re: Best defense to 1. P-K4
[Re: Ed Yetman, III]
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King
Registered: 12/02/06
Loc: Southampton, England
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I would say the Caro-Kann and the Center Counter are more closely related, as they both liberate the queen's bishop. The French is more like a cousin, and one with a bad attitude. It says, "I'll take the bad bishop. Let's see what you can do about it, tough guy." It's more defiant than the other two, like a truck stop waitress with a cigarette and a pot of hot coffee held in a menacing way over your head. Like it, Ed! More anthropomorphisms of chess openings please.
_________________________
I blog about Christianity in the 21st century, chess, music, politics and anything else that interests me. Have a read if you're interested too!
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#153297 - 03/19/10 09:47 AM
Re: Best defense to 1. P-K4
[Re: Guy Kerr]
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King
Registered: 12/02/06
Loc: Southampton, England
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Currently answering 1. e4 with 1...c5, preferably the Kan (Paulsen), though I've also studied the Taimanov. More fashionable Sicilians like Najdorf, Scheveningen, Dragon require far too much theory/study for me. The Rauzer is somewhat to my taste, but current statistics (granted, higher-level games than mine) are very bad. This is almost exactly where I am, Guy. In my 4 years of playing chess seriously (not well, but seriously) I've always played the Sicilian. I started with the Najdorf but got too many hammerings so a year or so ago I switched to the Kan / Paulsen. I'm quite liking it - much harder for White to steamroller you but counter-attacking possibilities tend to arise if Black is patient enough.
_________________________
I blog about Christianity in the 21st century, chess, music, politics and anything else that interests me. Have a read if you're interested too!
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#153298 - 03/19/10 09:52 AM
Re: Best defense to 1. P-K4
[Re: South Coast Kevin]
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Ninja
Registered: 12/08/04
Loc: Tucson, Arizona
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The French waitress grabbed the upstart American grandmaster by his tie, fixing his innocent American eyes with her cold Parisian blues. "So," she cooed and snarled with inimitable Gallic charm, "you think you can play the king's pawn against me, like you are Bobby Fischer? I will teach you things you never saw in America." With that she leaned over, her jet black glistening with the lights of the Eiffel tower, and planted one right on his king's pawn. How's that, Kevin? For more, check out www.YetmanBrothers.com
_________________________
Ed Yetman, III YetmanBrothers.com
"I will not be pushed, passed, isolated, blockaded, doubled, undoubled, or promoted!"--The Pawn.
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#153303 - 03/19/10 10:09 AM
Re: Best defense to 1. P-K4
[Re: Ed Yetman, III]
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King
Registered: 12/02/06
Loc: Southampton, England
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The French waitress grabbed the upstart American grandmaster by his tie, fixing his innocent American eyes with her cold Parisian blues. "So," she cooed and snarled with inimitable Gallic charm, "you think you can play the king's pawn against me, like you are Bobby Fischer? I will teach you things you never saw in America." With that she leaned over, her jet black glistening with the lights of the Eiffel tower, and planted one right on his king's pawn. How's that, Kevin? For more, check out www.YetmanBrothers.com Heh heh, thank you Ed. I read the first chapter of the story on your website and just found myself imagining it in a heavy Noo Yoick accent!
_________________________
I blog about Christianity in the 21st century, chess, music, politics and anything else that interests me. Have a read if you're interested too!
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#153681 - 03/29/10 11:08 PM
Re: Best defense to 1. P-K4
[Re: South Coast Kevin]
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Ninja
Registered: 12/08/04
Loc: Tucson, Arizona
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The caramel-brown eyes of the Italian starlet bore into me like seven-horsepower drill press. She'd opened with 1. P-K4 P-K4, 2. N-KB3, and I'd tried 2...N-QB3. When you're playing a dame who is hotter than a steam radiator in January it doesn't pay to try for fool tricks. She brushed back her ebony locks and eyed me up and down like tailor at the mortuary--and not just any mortuary, but the one in Beverly Hills. She reached for her king's bishop and slid him out...3.B-B4.
"We will see," she purred with her Neapolitan accent, "if you are man enough to play the Ulvestad variation."
Edited by Ed Yetman, III (03/29/10 11:09 PM)
_________________________
Ed Yetman, III YetmanBrothers.com
"I will not be pushed, passed, isolated, blockaded, doubled, undoubled, or promoted!"--The Pawn.
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#153776 - 04/02/10 01:52 PM
Re: Best defense to 1. P-K4
[Re: Ed Yetman, III]
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Ninja
Registered: 08/31/04
Loc: Doo-Wah-Diddy, Mississippi
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On that note, I was just looking at this year's Bulwer-Lytton winners, and the ones in the Detective category are pretty darn saucy: She walked into my office on legs as long as one of those long-legged birds that you see in Florida - the pink ones, not the white ones - except that she was standing on both of them, not just one of them, like those birds, the pink ones, and she wasn't wearing pink, but I knew right away that she was trouble, which those birds usually aren't.
The dame sauntered silently into Rocco's office, but she didn't need to speak; the blood-soaked gown hugging her ample curves said it all: "I am a shipping heiress whose second husband was just murdered by Albanian assassins trying to blackmail me for my rare opal collection," or maybe, "Do you know a good dry cleaner?"
Can you believe THIS only got a Dishonorable Mention?? After quickly scrutinizing the two dangerously buff men coming toward her in the dark and wondering whether she could take them both out, P.I. Velma Plusch mentally inventoried her arsenal-two pistols, two stiletto-clad feet, two leather-gloved hands, two each eyes, ears, lips, and breasts-and decided that she could.
The Orc Discussion in the other thread naturally drew me to the Fantasy category: A quest is not to be undertaken lightly--or at all!--pondered Hlothgar, Thrag of the Western Boglands, son of Glothar, nephew of Garthol, known far and wide as Skull Dunker, as he wielded his chesty stallion Hralgoth through the ever-darkening Thlargwood, beyond which, if he survived its horrors and if Hroglath the royal spittle reader spoke true, his destiny awaited--all this though his years numbered but fourteen.
It just kills me that some of these weren't fleshed out into full novels.
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#153778 - 04/02/10 02:34 PM
Re: Best defense to 1. P-K4
[Re: Petrosianic]
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Ninja
Registered: 12/08/04
Loc: Tucson, Arizona
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The hack writer desperately scrutinized the message boards, which unlike real boards have no splinters, searching for a metaphor he could steal or a clever phrase he could swipe, just like taking money off a bum downtown San Francisco--"purloin in the tenderloin" he called it in his more poetic moments, which, like his good chess games, came mercifully few and far between.
_________________________
Ed Yetman, III YetmanBrothers.com
"I will not be pushed, passed, isolated, blockaded, doubled, undoubled, or promoted!"--The Pawn.
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#153782 - 04/02/10 02:55 PM
Re: Best defense to 1. P-K4
[Re: Ed Yetman, III]
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Ninja
Registered: 08/31/04
Loc: Doo-Wah-Diddy, Mississippi
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The one, in Historical Fiction, is tres magnifique: The Cunard "Carinthia" glided through the starry waters of the Bering Sea, 843 passengers aboard, including Harriet Dobbs, resignedly single for over a decade, while a nautical mile due west slunk the K-18 submarine, under the command of lonely Ukrainian Captain First Rank Nikolai Shevchenko: ships that passed in the night (although the second technically a boat).
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