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Old Benoni Style 3.h4 c5 4.d5 d6 5.Nc3 Bg7 6.e4 e6 [E60]
Mihail Marin is known for his excellent and deep opening ideas, so I was immediately drawn to the game Ashwath, R - Marin, M. After 7.Be2 exd5 8.exd5 Marin played the flexible 8...Nbd7:
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and after 9.h5 went for the forcing line 9...Nxh5 10.Bxh5 Bxc3+. Black had a rather dubious position within a few moves, instead, just 10...gxh5 might have been preferable.
White is not forced to play the immediate 9.h5 and in Maghsoodloo, P - Abdusattorov, N he went 9.Bf4 instead:
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This was probably about equal after 9...Ne5, but White ended up winning in the chaos that followed.
Another possibility for Black is 8...h5, ruling out White's h4-h5 once and for all:
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But this gives White the g5 square, and White would have been better in Basso, P - Omorjan, D had he played 11.Bf4.
In Rapport, R - Grandelius, N, Black played 8...0-0, instead, which seems to make perfect sense:
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What surprised me about this game was the realization that White can also adopt a cramping strategy by pushing his h-pawn on to h6.
This strategy was used in Basso, P - Bettalli, F, the game going 8...Qe7 9.Kf1 0-0 10.h5 Nbd7 11.h6!:
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The problem for Black is that when a White bishop arrives on g5, Black will struggle to kick it away.
Benko Style 3.h4 c5 4.d5 b5 [E60]
Having found the Old Benoni treatment unappealing, I looked at the Benko style 4...b5. Wesley So played a high level game in this against Javkkhir Sindarov (So, W - Sindarov, J), revealing in his notes that 6.e3 is an important finesse:
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Instead of Sindarov's 6...axb5, Black should probably play 6...Bg7 as in Dardha, D - Givon, A. This was rather murky throughout and may well represent Black's best way of meeting the Harry.
Finally, I've included a game with 5.h5:
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as this may be the kind of thing White will play at club level. In Brazdzionis, A - Malisauskas, V Black did well with his 8...h5, though White should find a better move than 9.f3.
See you next month! Nigel
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