Chebanenko's move 4...a6 in the Slav Defence has grown into one of the main systems for Black. It is an extremely flexible and almost universal weapon against the Queen's Gambit.
The Chebanenko Slav is very popular among top players such as Victor Bologan, the author of this book, and Alexey Shirov. Club and internet players like it because it offers Black solidity as well as active counterplay in all lines.
The Chebanenko Slav According to Bologan gives full coverage of all the variations starting with 3.Nf3 Nf6 4.Nc3 a6 and the ultra-modern ideas behind this system.
But this book also pays homage to the colourful inventor of this variation: Vyacheslav Andreevich Chebanenko. This enigmatic teacher was the master brain behind a generation of strong players.
Foreword by Alexey Shirov
We all know chess theory nowadays. Some of us know less, others more. But do we really know the history of chess theory, its development? And, of course, the next question would be - is it important at all? Judging by my personal experience the answer is positive. Many teenagers of today want to know how chess was before they were born.
Our generation (Viorel Bologan is just half a year older than me) have enjoyed all the benefits of 'technical progress' in chess. We were still very young and fresh when the use of databases and analysis engines became the most convenient form of working on chess and the experience we had before prevented us from underestimating the human touch, so the work with new technologies could become especially effective. But I think the nostalgic memories of times when everything was done with the desire to discover new things, when the search for the truth in chess was sometimes absorbing, those memories simply can't be taken away. As well as memories of people who never knew the modern times.
The year 1997 was sad for both Viorel and me. The chess community lost two personalities who had devoted all their life into chess investigation - the Latvian Alvis Vitolinsh and the Moldavian Vyacheslav Chebanenko. I was supposed to write a tribute to my countryman but I haven't done it yet - who knows when I will be able to. Therefore it's important for me to see that Viorel has done so towards his former trainer and spiritual guru. And I should say that the 4...a6 Slav is still only a small part of Chebanenko's contribution to chess, his other system 1.c4 e5 2.Nc3 Bb4 3.Nd5 Be7!? immediately comes to mind as I played it a few weeks ago against Levon Aronian in Morelia 2008 and achieved a better position! His old ideas in the Rossolimo Variation (1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.Bb5 g6 4.Bxc6 dxc6 5.d3 etc.) are very important too, practically the whole modern theory of that system is just the continuation of old Moldavian investigations.
I first heard the name of Chebanenko because of the 4...a6 Slav. A Latvian of my age, Kaspars Ramma (he was a fine positional player in his youth but then suddenly stopped competing), successfully employed it in the second half of the eighties and once he annotated his best effort for the Riga magazine
Shakhmaty or
Sahs, mentioning the author of the opening, of course, and also referring to Viktor Gavrikov's article. When I saw those comments I distrusted everybody involved, as I dogmatically thought that a tempo could not be wasted like this. I still needed to meet Chebanenko and become Viorel's friend to change my opinion!
At the beginning Vyacheslav Chebanenko was like a ghost for me. He never left his hotel room. During some junior competition I even mistook Boris Itkis for him, because Boris was visible with Moldavian youngsters but he was unknown to me, while Chebanenko's name would always be mentioned when one was preparing against the Moldavian players. I got to know Vyacheslav Andreevich personally in 1988 when he was helping Oratovsky in his match versus Kramnik in Moscow and I attended the meeting of Botvinnik with Jeroen Piket at the same time and venue. Of course, the place I first met Chebanenko was his hotel room and we immediately started analysing the Slav with 4...a6 which I tried to 'refute', but in vain.
Vyacheslav Chebanenko would normally try not to let his knowledge be spread outside the Moldavian chess school, but with me he made an exception, perhaps because I was Viorel's friend. He also introduced me to his girl students and one of them was my girlfriend for a short while. I wouldn't mention this if it were not for the fact that later on in some of my games I employed a move that he had taught the girl (6...Bg4 after 1.d4 d5 2.c4 c6 3.Nc3 Nf6 4.cxd5 cxd5 5.Bf4 Nc6 6.e3), so the Moldavian school definitely had a certain impact on my chess.
So, I should say that Vyacheslav Chebanenko was a nice and a quiet man in daily life and a true workaholic in chess research, and one of the most remarkable trainers of his time. He left this world too early but his systems are still alive. Even though he was not a tactician at all, his chess strategy has passed the test of time and technology.
Finally I should thank Viorel Bologan for a tremendous job of unifying the modern discoveries in the 4...a6 system with its historical background. Now the reader has everything he needs to know - the old strategic ideas and the latest concrete nuances. And the fact that sometimes pieces don't get exchanged before move 20 shows how fascinating and complex the opening is.
Play 4...a6 in the Slav! I used to think it was a loss of tempo but it is not!
Alexey Shirov
Tarragona, 16th of March 2008
Content: 009 Foreword by Alexey Shirov
011 Introduction
029 Part I - Various Replies on Move 5
030 Chapter 1: The Exchange 5.cxd5
041 Chapter 2: The Cunning 5.h3
044 Chapter 3: The Uncommon 5.Qc2
048 Chapter 4: Pressure on Black's Pawns: 5.Qb3
060 Chapter 5: Catalan-Style: 5.g3
072 Chapter 6: Developing: 5.Bf4
076 Chapter 7: The Rare 5.Bg5
081 Part II - Inserting 5.a4 e6
082 Chapter 8: Catalan-Style: 6.g3
093 Chapter 9: The Timid 6.e3
097 Chapter 10: Pinning: 6.Bg5
117 Part III -The Insidious 5.Ne5
118 Chapter 11: The Forcing 5...b5
121 Chapter 12: The Main Move: 5...e6
125 Chapter 13: The Exchange 5...dxc4
129 Chapter 14: Chebanenko's Favourite: 5...Nbd7
135 Part IV - The Solid 5.e3
136 Chapter 15: Minor Replies: 6.cxd5, 6.b3
146 Chapter 16: Seizing Space: 6.c5 Various
159 Chapter 17: Seizing Space: 6.c5 Nbd7
165 Part V-The Strategic 5.c5
166 Chapter 18: The Provocation 5...Bg4
170 Chapter 19: The Rare 5...g6
173 Chapter 20: The Sortie 5...Bf5
180 Chapter 21: Flexibility: 5...Nbd7 6.h3
190 Chapter 22: Flexibility: 5...Nbd7 6.Bf4
213 Practical Examples
225 Index of Variations
231 Index of Players
238 New In Chess Code System
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