Esta romántica y emocionante apertura recibe el nombre del capitán de barco galés William Davies Evans, que la puso en práctica por vez primera. El Evans (se se plantea con 1.e4 e5 2.Cf3 Cc6 3.Ac4 Ac5 4.b4!?) es un intento de destruir a las negras al estilo de los gambitos directamente desde la apertura. Gigantes como Adolf Andersson y Paul Morphy jugaron gran cantidad de partidas brillantes con el gambito Evans. Se ha mantenido en pie soportando la prueba del tiempo y en la época moderna jugadores como Nigel Short, Garry Kasparov, Baadur Jobava, Hikaru Nakamura o Wei Yi lo han empleado con éxito. Este DVD demostrará que sigue siendo plenamente jugable y una gran manera de poner a prueba y sacudir a las negras desde la jugada 1. Presentando partidas del pasado junto con numerosas ideas nuevas y emocionantes, este DVD le ofrecerá una forma genuina y más excitante de jugar el Giuoco Piano.
• Metraje de vídeo: 4 horas 26 minutos (Inglés)
• Entrenamiento interactivo con comentarios en vídeo a las respuestas
• Base de datos de entrenamiento exclusiva con 50 partidas modelo
• Incluye ChessBase 12 Reader
The Italian Game, which arises after 3...Bc5, is one of the oldest chess openings, already mentioned in the famous 16th century Göttingen manuscript. In the centuries which followed it was the most popular way to open the game and its name came about in honour of the masters of the Italian school, who strove above all for free play for their pieces and complicated combinations.
White has several plans at his disposition in the position in the diagram. One of the most aggressive which leads to open positions with a lot of tactical possibilities is, after 4.c3 Nf6 to seize an early initiative in the centre after 5.d4. The move 5.d4 constitutes an attack on the bishop on c5. Black’s best move is to exchange the pawns with 5...exd4, but after 6.cxd4 White has at his disposition a dangerous mobile pawn duo. Here already Black has to play with great accuracy. Thus the retreat 6...Bb6 would be bad, because it would give White’s central pawns the opportunity to advance. Instead of that, he has to play 6...Bb4+, in order to force White to react to the check. The moderate reply is 7.Bd2 Bxd2+ 8.Nbxd2, but in many open games this allows the important central counter-thrust 8... d5, which breaks up White’s centre and gains a tempo with the attack on the bishop on c4. After 9.exd5 Nxd5 all that is left of the ideal centre d4-e4 is an isolated pawn on d4. However both sides have lots of chances here.
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