2/2/2017 – In round twelve of Tata Steel, Magnus Carlsen once more played the Dutch Stonewall, an opening he has returned to more and more often, and played a very precise move order. What is special is that this is cutting edge theory that is also presented in this DVD, released just days before that game. In this treatise on the extremely solid opening, GM Erwin L'Ami shares the results of his deep investigation, including new ideas and special move orders.
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Chess Festival Prague 2025 with analyses by Aravindh, Giri, Gurel, Navara and others. ‘Special’: 27 highly entertaining miniatures. Opening videos by Werle, King and Ris. 10 opening articles with new repertoire ideas and much more.
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Every great player has had an opening or two that seemed to bear their special hallmark. It wasn’t simply that they played it more or less often than others, but somehow these became their special laboratories for experimentation, research, and discovery. For a long time, this truism seemed to elude the current World Champion Magnus Carlsen. Of late, however, one opening has begun to appear more and more often in his games, and hardly one that was being wielded by many of his rivals: the Dutch Stonewall.
In many ways, it is quite fitting that he should choose it, as it is both incredibly solid as well as subject to many ideas and plans that need careful juggling to work around the inherent difficulties in playing and understanding it. Many players who would love to include it in their arsenal avoid it due to the challenges it presents and problems in the mainline for Black. Nevertheless, Dutch GM Erwin L’Ami has made a very thorough study of it and recorded a DVD for those interested. More than this, he also solves the issue in one of the main lines, and does not hesitate to share many of his findings.
In his introductory video, the Dutch grandmaster explains in a very well-prepared presentation (it shows) that the opening is one that is dominated by ideas and maneuvers. For this reason the next set of videos, six in all, focus each on a typical maneuver.
02: Typical Maneuvers - Bd7-e8-h5 03: Typical Ideas - dxc4 followed by c5 04: Typical Ideas - Bxe5 dxe5 05: Typical Ideas - h6 followed by g5 06: Typical Ideas - cxd5 07: Typical Ideas - c4-c5
The bishop on d6 is the pride of Black’s position, but sometimes it can give you dominance over the white squares. It can decrease the strength of the bishop on b2, so it is very difficult, as many of the ideas in the Stonewall, to give a definitive assessment of this move, but there will surely be positions where this Bxe5 is a strong positional decision and there will be positions where it is uncalled for.
After this comes the actual theory on the lines. In the first section, he covers the main lines, notably those served with b3 or Bf4 considered the most challenging ways for White to play, but he later explains he has a way to avoid them entirely without leaving the main paths of theory. The secret lies in the move order.
In round 12 of the Tata Steel tournament, Magnus Carlsen once more brandished his Dutch Stonewall, playing a very specific move order, the very same that is recommended by Erwin L’Ami. This move order had not attracted any particular attention to it, but with both the World Champion playing it and this DVD, which appeared just days before the game was played, recommending it and explaining it in detail, it is clear once more that L’Ami’s promise for a solution as well as other new ideas that have not been played at the board yet, is indeed genuine and shows just how cutting edge this particular DVD is.
Erwin L'Ami discusses the improtance of move order and some traps to avoid
If you want to play an opening in which reams of theory take a backseat to ideas and maneuvers, while keeping all the pieces in the battle, then this work is for you.
Albert SilverBorn in the US, he grew up in Paris, France, and after college moved to Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. He had a peak rating of 2240 FIDE, and was a key designer of Chess Assistant 6. In 2010 he joined the ChessBase family as an editor and writer at ChessBase News. He is also a passionate photographer with work appearing in numerous publications, and the content creator of the YouTube channel, Chess & Tech as well as the author of Typing Tomes, a powerful typing program.
In this course, you’ll learn how to take the initiative against the London and prevent White from comfortably playing their usual system by playing 1.d4 Nf6 2.Bf4 Nh5.
London System Powerbase 2026 is a database and contains in all 11 285 games from Mega 2026 and the Correspondence Database 2026, of which 282 are annotated.
The London System Powerbook 2026 is based on more than 410 000 games or game fragments from different opening moves and ECO codes; what they all have in common is that White plays d4 and Bf4 but does not play c4.
In this course, Grandmaster Elisabeth Pähtz presents the London System, a structured and ambitious approach based on the immediate Bf4, leading to rich and dynamic positions.
Opening videos: Open Spanish (Sipke Ernst) and Classical Sicilian (Nico Zwirs). Endgame Special by Igor Stohl: ‘Short or long side’ – where should the defending king be placed in rook endgames? ‘Lucky bag’ with 35 master analyses.
YOUR EASY ACCESS TO OPENING THEORY: Whether you want to build up a reliable and powerful opening repertoire or find new opening ideas for your existing repertoire, the Opening Encyclopaedia covers the entire opening theory on one product.
The Queen’s Gambit Declined Exchange Variation with 5.Bf4 has a great balance between positional play and sharp pawn pushes; and will be a surprise for your opponents while being easy to learn for you, as the key patterns are familiar.
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