I always like to meet 5.b6, I just take it with the queen immediately and it’s fine for black. It’s funny because the only disadvantage for black is that you keep your a-pawn😂
@@MiodragPerunovicOfficial, Benkö is always a positional strategy for black. You exchange down to a rook and bishop endgame being one pawn down…and then just win it😂 White’s best general plan is to exchange bishops and rooks and keep queens and knights.
Looking at some of the computer lines if black plays qb7 instead of qc7- some very sharp lines where white gets a good edge, but must play very precisely otherwise black can get equal, but black also has to play precisely at moments otherwise he is completely lost.
I think you could go Bxa6, they can move the bishop out of the way but that pawn is protected and is a pain in the ass. Furthermore, you could push the a pawn later to connect them, and black can't really fight back since they don't have control of a8
I was wondering why he sugested b6. Ok i can understand to do something more postional In my opinion as i ocasional play benko b6 is not a problem for most. I think the Zaitsev is the best aproach here for tactical players and the most anyoing one for black
As an avid Benko player with black 5.b6 and the main line with 12.a4 are the most painful lines to face
This is positional line and its quite difficult for Black…
I always like to meet 5.b6, I just take it with the queen immediately and it’s fine for black.
It’s funny because the only disadvantage for black is that you keep your a-pawn😂
@@MiodragPerunovicOfficial, Benkö is always a positional strategy for black.
You exchange down to a rook and bishop endgame being one pawn down…and then just win it😂
White’s best general plan is to exchange bishops and rooks and keep queens and knights.
Looking at some of the computer lines if black plays qb7 instead of qc7- some very sharp lines where white gets a good edge, but must play very precisely otherwise black can get equal, but black also has to play precisely at moments otherwise he is completely lost.
Yeah, that’s true
Thanks for your tips!
I always like to meet 5.b6, I just take it with the queen immediately and it’s fine for black.
Fair enough 🤷♂️
The Butcher is back at it!
Great lesson...thanks!
Good stuff Big Mio. I don't face the Benko too often anymore but I feel more ready now. 👍
👍
Muy buenas variantes.gracias MI Perunovic.Saludos.
While many others played this before him, Shirov was the one, who turned it into a fearsome weapon for white.
Good point
The b7 fork at the 6:20 mark still seems unclear. bxc8 would be a terrible blunder if b7 Rc1.
I think you could go Bxa6, they can move the bishop out of the way but that pawn is protected and is a pain in the ass. Furthermore, you could push the a pawn later to connect them, and black can't really fight back since they don't have control of a8
He made a mistake u play b7 before playing Rb1, then there is no Rb8. After Bxb7 Rb1 u win a bishop
Checkmate baby 😍 I just stumbled at your channel really instructive great work
👍
5:50 nece uzeti topom Bxd8 kompjuter kaze jednaka pozicija
Your explanation is very good keep going 👍🏻🤍
at times 6.14 I think b7 for white before Rb1
Hi
Thank U
I like
Benko Gambit
Hate to be that guy but stock fish says Bf4 ( Karpov move against Christianson) is almost +3 for white instead of bd2 which is only .9 at 5’ 40”.
🤭
I was wondering why he sugested b6. Ok i can understand to do something more postional
In my opinion as i ocasional play benko b6 is not a problem for most.
I think the Zaitsev is the best aproach here for tactical players and the most anyoing one for black
Because I suggested that for those who like positional and slower approach, e3 is considered to be the most critical at the moment…
@@MiodragPerunovicOfficial Good
I tought xou would be getting soft on your oponents^^😅
@@alexlehrersh9951 never!
coach..increase the audio level a bit for the upcoming videos...Ratheesh PK, India
👍
Kume , pustas kisu?? 🇷🇸
Uvek! 😘
Declinng the gambit is not crushing it.