I'm trying to pick up the King's Gambit, at least for blitz games, and so I've been very slowly working through the 680 page John Shaw book, "The King's Gambit". This picks up from the position after 1. e4 e5 2. f4 exf4 3. Nf3 g5 4. Nc3 (the Quaade, generally the recommended line in the book) Nc6.
I've been trying to expand my chess opening knowledge, hopefully to the point of having a decent/passable understanding of most chess openings. So, for no good reason at all, I was looking at the Bronstein-Larsen variation of the Caro-Kann (I don't play e4, but why not check it out)? I ran across this blog that gives some history to the variation, which makes the claim that black fell on hard times after the game Riemersma-Pietersee, Dieren 1989. I was unable to find that game in any database, but let's take a look: I'm not sure I quite believe that this exact game was the reason why the Bronstein-Larsen "fell into utter disuse". I looked in Chessbase Online, and white is scoring 70% after 11. ...f5, but of the 23 games played from that position white hasn't played 12. Qe2. Not that it matters, obviously white is scoring well from there. In fact, white scores 70% from 8. g3, with 662 games in the database, so probably a better assessm...
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