Thursday, August 20, 2009

French Defense, Monte Carlo Exchange Variation

The Monte Carlo Variation

I have posted an article on the Monte Carlo Exchange Variation of the French Defense (1.e4 e6 2.d4 d5 3.exd5 exd5 4.c4), which is an ideal short-cut or low-theory line for those who like a wide-open game with plenty of piece play. There are also several themes and tactical motifs that are easy to learn and that will score you many points over the board and in online blitz. I have also included a bibliography (reproduced below) and welcome additions.

Monte Carlo Variation Bibliography

Baburin, Alexander. "Play on the e-file." Winning Pawn Structures (Batsford 2003): 92-101.
In his contemporary classic on the isolani pawn structure, GM Baburin devotes a chapter mostly to positions where the e-file is unobstructed by pawns. This position can arise from many openings, but especially the Queen's Gambit Accepted (1.d4 d5 2.c4 dxc4 3.e3 e5 4.Bxc4 exd4 5.exd4) or the French Exchange Variation (1.e4 e6 2.d4 d5 3.exd5 exd5 4.c4 dxc4 5.Bxc4). Baburin notes that "pressure along the e-file is particularly unpleasant for Black where it is combined with pressure along the a2-g8 diagonal." An excellent book and a very useful chapter.

Burgess, Graham. 101 Chess Opening Surprises (Gambit 2001): 62.
Offers a brief repertoire with the line 4.c4 Bb4+ 5.Nc3 Ne7, focused around the games of Tal Shaked and biased toward Black.

Glek, Igor. "French Defence, Exchange Variation." New in Chess Yearbook 20 (1991): 39-41.
A balanced treatment of the line with an early White c4, focused on the game Klinger - Glek, Werfen Open 1990, which began 4.Nf3 Nf6 5.c4 Bb4+ 6.Nc3 O-O 7.Be2 Ne4?! 8.Qb3! += and was eventually won by White.

Lane, Gary. "A French Farce." Opening Lanes 46 at ChessCafe.
http://www.chesscafe.com/text/lane46.pdf

Lane, Peter. "Exeter Chess Club: The Queen's Gambit Accepted/Isolated Queen's Pawn." Exeter Chess Club 1998.
http://www.exeterchessclub.org.uk/Openings/qga_iqp.html

Mednis, Edmar. "The Not-so-harmless Exchange Variation of the French Defence." Practical Opening Tips (Cardogan / Everyman 1997): 110-117.
Mednis's book is an excellent treatment of themes in the opening, but this chapter also offers a rather thorough and positive treatment of lines following both 4.c4 Nf6 5.Nc3 c6 (which can also arise via the Slav move order 1.d4 d5 2.c4 c6 3.Nc3 e5 4.e3 exd4 5.exd4 Nf6) and 4.Nf3, which can transpose.

Pedersen, Steffen. French Advance and Other Lines (Gambit 2005): 104-106.
Focuses on the line 1.e4 e6 2.d4 d5 3.exd5 exd5 4.c4 Bb4+ 5.Nc3 Ne7 6.Nf3 Bg4 as illustrated by the games of Miezis as White and Shaked as Black. Pedersen's main line goes 7.Be2 dxc4 8.Bxc4 O-O 9.Be3 Nbc6 10.O-O Nf5 11.Qd3 Nd6 12.Bd5 which has occured in numerous high level games (including at least one of the author's own).

Razuvaev, Yuri. "You were right, Monsieur La Bourdonnais!" Secrets of Opening Preparation. Ed. Mark Dvoretsky and Artur Yusupov. (Olms 2007): 170-180.
A wonderful article that reinforces my favorite theme in these pages: that there is still a lot of opening knowledge to gain from the great players of even the most distant past. Razuvaev considers the line 1.d4 d5 2.c4 dxc4 3.e3 e5!? as contested in the classic LaBourdonnais - McDonnell match -- a line that typically transposes to the Monte Carlo Variation after 4.Bxc4 exd4 5.exd4. Thanks to reader Jose for pointing me to this article, which I had initially overlooked.

Van der Sterren, Paul. "Transposition from the Queens Gambit." New in Chess Yearbook 32 (1994). Considers the line 1.d4 d5 2.c4 dxc4 3.e3 e5 4. Bxc4 (Queens Gambit Accepted or Monte Carlo French) 4...exd4 5.exd4 Nf6 6.Nf3 Be7 7.0-0 0-0 8. h3 Nc6, which is now a Petroff, as in Gelfand - Adams Wijk aan Zee 1994. Thanks to reader Jose for this information.

Watson, John. Play the French, 3rd Edition (Everyman Chess 2003): 71-73.
Focuses on the games of Watson's former student Tal Shaked with the line 4....Bb4+ 5.Nc3 Ne7 -- as he notes, "A move this book helped to bring to attention."

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13 Comments:

Blogger katar said...

This line is also a good antidote to the Skandinavian Icelandic Gambit 1.e4 d5 2.exd Nf6 3.c4 e6 {3...c6 4.d4 is Panov-Botv.} 4.d4.

As for resources, Josh Waitzkin annotates a couple games in this line in the Chessmaster audio tutorials. He plays the line invented by him and Maurice Ashley with Bd3xc4 and Nge2 when black's Bg4 is a mistake due to moves like f3 Bh5, Ng3 Bg6, f4 (threat f5) h6, f5 Bh7, etc. BTW i just posted an opening analysis article at my bloggy blog. :) Cheers.

Thu Aug 20, 08:04:00 AM EDT  
Anonymous Chunky Rook said...

Great! That's exactly the kind of opening I was looking for against the French. And Katar's reference to Waitzkin's annotated games (Waitzkin - Lunna) is spot on.

Fri Aug 21, 09:58:00 AM EDT  
Anonymous Bibs said...

Interesting article. First time to see a whole article on this line. Previously only looked at it for black. Great resource in what overall is a hugely impressive blog.

But: cannot download - the link for PGN download hits an Error404. Hope this can be fixed! :)

Fri Aug 21, 10:15:00 AM EDT  
Blogger Michael Goeller said...

This post has been removed by the author.

Fri Aug 21, 01:59:00 PM EDT  
Blogger Michael Goeller said...

Sorry -- I will fix the link this weekend. The problem is that our server for the club does not serve PGN files, so I post them at my own site:
http://www.rci.rutgers.edu/~goeller/
kenilworth-pgn/fr-ex-c4.pgn

Or click here.

Fri Aug 21, 02:01:00 PM EDT  
Blogger Jose said...

See in Dvoretsky and Yusupov books an article of Razuvaev. Chebanenko in Moldavia teached this line see Bologan book (sorry for my english)
PD: Great Great page!!!!

Sat Aug 22, 09:30:00 AM EDT  
Blogger Jose said...

I remember one article in NIC something like "the most amazing transposition" abaut this line:1.d4 d5 2.c4 dc 3.e3 e5 4. Ac4 (Queens gambit to french??) 4... ed 5.ed Nf6 6.Nf3 Be7 7.0-0 0-0 8. h3 Nc6 (!?) now is a Petroff !!!!! see Gelfand - Adams Wijk aan Zee 1994

Sat Aug 22, 10:04:00 AM EDT  
Blogger Michael Goeller said...

Thanks, Jose! I have added your recommendations to the bibliography on the blog and will soon update the article also. I had not considered transposition from the Petroff, though there are certainly a lot of transpositional possibilities.

Sat Aug 22, 11:40:00 AM EDT  
Blogger Jose said...

Tx Michael
Can I kill your litle Baby?? (haha)
I´m playing the french and I have one simple way to do it!!! The plan is in your bibliography but one must read between lines. Is "just" a plan and =.
PD2: Chevanenko teached the Philidor too, so you must be a Moldavian Player!! (haha)
Again Great page and please keep working !!

Sat Aug 22, 03:56:00 PM EDT  
Blogger Jose said...

Another book Advanse and other Anti-French Variations Lev Psakhis (pag 40-50)

Mon Aug 24, 12:20:00 PM EDT  
Anonymous Latvian Power said...

Maybe the best book is a collection games from Normunds Miezis. He is the expert on this variation.
He plays it with a lot of creativity.

Sat Sep 05, 04:40:00 PM EDT  
Blogger Michael Goeller said...

I would love a book of games from Normunds Miezis -- but does such a book exist? What's its title and where can I buy it... :-)

Sun Sep 06, 07:55:00 AM EDT  
Blogger George Jempty said...

I get the Black side of this, albeit with Nf6 already played, and therefore no possiblity of ...Ne7. if White sidesteps my Budapest 1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 e5 3. e3 exd4 4. exd4 d5 -- just played a game with this tonight at an OTB tourney in Atlanta. I'm a 1.e4 player and have never been wholly satisfied with various systems I've tried as White against the French, but now I'm thinking, since I have to know these lines as Black, may as well start playing them with White and learn them inside out so to speak.

Sat Nov 07, 10:16:00 PM EST  

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