Chess Opening Theory/1. e4/1...e5/2. Bc4/2...Qe7
Appearance
Bishop's Opening: Sideline 2... Qe7? | |
---|---|
Position in Forsyth-Edwards Notation (FEN) | |
Moves: 1. e4 e5 2. Bc4 Qe7 |
Bishop's Opening - Sideline 2... Qe7?
[edit | edit source]2…Qe7? is another queen move without a variation name, and it contradicts the most basic principles in the opening because the Queen in e7 rules out playing Be7. The move 2... Qe7? is a waste of time that congests the Black's position and allows White to get development space. White will achieve development advantage with the simple development move 3. Nf3.
Theory table
[edit | edit source].
1. e4 e5 2. Bc4 Qe7?
3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Sideline
2... Qe7? |
Nf3
Nf6 |
O-O
Nxe4? |
Re1! | +− | ||||||||||||
...
... |
...
Nc6 |
Nc3
d6 |
h3
Be6 |
Nd5!?
Nxd5?? |
exd5 | +− | ||||||||||
...
... |
...
... |
...
... |
...
... |
...
Qd7 |
Re1
Na5 |
Nxf6+
gxf6 |
Bxe6
Qxe6 |
d4 | ± | |||||||
...
... |
...
... |
...
... |
...
... |
...
... |
...
... |
Nxf6+
gxf6 |
Bxe6
fxe6 |
b4
Nc6 |
b5
Na5?! |
d4! | ± | |||||
...
... |
...
... |
...
... |
...
... |
...
... |
...
... |
...
... |
...
... |
...
... |
...
Ne7 |
c4
Rg8 |
d4
exd4 |
Nxd4
O-O-O |
Kh2
e5 |
Nf3 | ± | |
...
... |
...
... |
...
... |
...
... |
Bb3(!)
Bxb3 |
axb3
Qd7 |
d4
a6 |
Re1 | ± | ||||||||
...
d6 |
d4
Be6 |
d5
Bd7 |
a4
g6 |
Nc3 | ± | |||||||||||
...
... |
...
... |
...
Bc8 |
h3 | ± | ||||||||||||
...
... |
...
... |
...
Bg4 |
h3
Bc8 |
a4 | ± | |||||||||||
...
... |
...
... |
...
... |
...
Bxf3 |
Qxf3
Nd7 |
g4 | ± |
References
[edit | edit source]Bibliography
- Kasparov, Gary & Keene, Raymond (1989, 1994). Batsford Chess Openings 2. ISBN 0-8050-3409-9.
- Lane, Gary (1993). Winning With the Bishop's Opening. ISBN 0-7134-7113-1.
External links
- Harding, Tim (August 1998). The Kibitzer: What Exactly is the Bishop's Opening?. ChessCafe.com.
- Harding, Tim (September 1998). The Kibitzer: The Eternal Appeal Of The Urusov Gambit. ChessCafe.com.
- Harding, Tim (October 1998). The Kibitzer: Is the Urusov Gambit Sound?. ChessCafe.com