Ero sivun ”Shakki/r1bqkbnr;pppppppp;2n5;8;3P4;8;PPP1PPPP;RNBQKBNR w KQkq” versioiden välillä

Wikikirjastosta
Poistettu sisältö Lisätty sisältö
Raimondo (keskustelu | muokkaukset)
p siirsi sivun ”Shakkiaapinen/Peli/1. d4/1...Rc6” uudelle nimelle ”Shakki/r1bqkbnr;pppppppp;2n5;8;3P4;8;PPP1PPPP;RNBQKBNR w KQkq -”
Raimondo (keskustelu | muokkaukset)
Ei muokkausyhteenvetoa
Rivi 38: Rivi 38:


==Kuningatarsotilasavaus==
==Kuningatarsotilasavaus==

===Avaussiirrot===
{{Käännettävä}}
:<code>1. d4 Rc6</code>
The Queen's Knight Defense is a chess opening defined by the opening moves 1.d4 Nc6. The opening was tried by some hypermodern players such as Aron Nimzowitsch and Efim Bogoljubov but the opening has never become very popular. 1...Nc6 is a fairly committal move, blocking the c-pawn, and usually Black will delay playing it until White's setup is clear.

Most games featuring 1.d4 Nc6 transpose to another opening. After 2.e4 the Nimzowitsch Defense arises. After 2.Nf3 d5 a variation of the Queen's Pawn Game can come. After 2.c4 d5 the opening is a Chigorin Defense.

There are some lines which are unique to 1.d4 Nc6, most importantly 2.d5 which chases the knight away, usually to e5. The opening resembles an Alekhine's Defence on the opposite side of the board. In an opening book by Sid Pickard, this variation was called the Bozo-Indian Defense, "Bozo" being a mixture of the prefixes "Nimzo" and "Bogo".

Unless the game transposes to another opening, the Encyclopedia of Chess Openings code for the Queen's Knight Defense is A40.

===Teoriataulu===
{| class="wikitable"
!colspan=8|Pelatut siirrot
|-
|colspan=8|
* 1. d4 Rc6
|-
!colspan=8| Jatkosiirrot
|-
! [[w:Shakkiavaus|Wikipedia:Shakkiavaus]]!! 2 !! 3 !! 4 !! 5 !! 6 !! 7 !!
|-
! align="right" | <Pelin nimi ja linkki Wikipediaan tähän>
| <br />
| <br />
| <br />
| <br />
| <br />
| <br />
| =
|-
! < ja tähän>
| <br />
| <br />
| <br />
| <br />
| <br />
| <br />
| =
|}


===Jatkosiirrot===
===Jatkosiirrot===



{{hidden begin|title=&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<code>2. e4</code> &nbsp;&nbsp; ''jatkot''|toggle=right}}
{{hidden begin|title=&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;<code>2. e4</code> &nbsp;&nbsp; ''jatkot''|toggle=right}}
Rivi 69: Rivi 105:
{{hidden end}}
{{hidden end}}


===Analyysi===
===Aiheesta muualla===
{{Wikipedia|Shakkiavaus|Shakkiavaus}}
*[[w:Suljetut pelit|Suljetut_pelit]]
*[[w:Suljetut pelit|Suljetut_pelit]]
*[[w:en:Queen's Knight Defense|Queen's Knight Defense]]; A40
*[[w:en:Queen's Knight Defense|Queen's Knight Defense]]; A40
* [http://www.chesslab.com/PositionSearch.html Avaa selain], pelaa peli kuvan peliasemaa vastaavaan tilanteeseen ja paina "start search"
{{Käännettävä}}
The Queen's Knight Defense is a chess opening defined by the opening moves 1.d4 Nc6. The opening was tried by some hypermodern players such as Aron Nimzowitsch and Efim Bogoljubov but the opening has never become very popular. 1...Nc6 is a fairly committal move, blocking the c-pawn, and usually Black will delay playing it until White's setup is clear.

Most games featuring 1.d4 Nc6 transpose to another opening. After 2.e4 the Nimzowitsch Defense arises. After 2.Nf3 d5 a variation of the Queen's Pawn Game can come. After 2.c4 d5 the opening is a Chigorin Defense.

There are some lines which are unique to 1.d4 Nc6, most importantly 2.d5 which chases the knight away, usually to e5. The opening resembles an Alekhine's Defence on the opposite side of the board. In an opening book by Sid Pickard, this variation was called the Bozo-Indian Defense, "Bozo" being a mixture of the prefixes "Nimzo" and "Bogo".

Unless the game transposes to another opening, the Encyclopedia of Chess Openings code for the Queen's Knight Defense is A40.

===Aiheesta muualla===
{{Wikipedia|Shakkiavaus|Shakkiavaus}}
* [http://www.chesslab.com/PositionSearch.html Avaa selain], pelaa peli kuvan peliasemaa vastaavaan tilanteeseen ja paina "start search"


{{Malline:Shakkiaapinen}}

Versio 16. marraskuuta 2008 kello 08.02

Shakki/r1bqkbnr;pppppppp;2n5;8;3P4;8;PPP1PPPP;RNBQKBNR w KQkq -

<<

>>

FEN: r1bqkbnr/pppppppp/2n5/8/3P4/8/PPP1PPPP/RNBQKBNR w KQkq -
ECO: A40
Opening explorer

Kuningatarsotilasavaus

Tämä teksti on tuotu vieraskielisestä lähteestä ja sen käännös on keskeneräinen.
Voit auttaa Wikikirjastoa tekemällä käännöksen loppuun.

The Queen's Knight Defense is a chess opening defined by the opening moves 1.d4 Nc6. The opening was tried by some hypermodern players such as Aron Nimzowitsch and Efim Bogoljubov but the opening has never become very popular. 1...Nc6 is a fairly committal move, blocking the c-pawn, and usually Black will delay playing it until White's setup is clear.

Most games featuring 1.d4 Nc6 transpose to another opening. After 2.e4 the Nimzowitsch Defense arises. After 2.Nf3 d5 a variation of the Queen's Pawn Game can come. After 2.c4 d5 the opening is a Chigorin Defense.

There are some lines which are unique to 1.d4 Nc6, most importantly 2.d5 which chases the knight away, usually to e5. The opening resembles an Alekhine's Defence on the opposite side of the board. In an opening book by Sid Pickard, this variation was called the Bozo-Indian Defense, "Bozo" being a mixture of the prefixes "Nimzo" and "Bogo".

Unless the game transposes to another opening, the Encyclopedia of Chess Openings code for the Queen's Knight Defense is A40.

Teoriataulu

Pelatut siirrot
  • 1. d4 Rc6
Jatkosiirrot
Wikipedia:Shakkiavaus 2 3 4 5 6 7
<Pelin nimi ja linkki Wikipediaan tähän>





=
< ja tähän>





=

Jatkosiirrot

Aiheesta muualla

Wikipedia
Wikipedia
Wikipedia-tietosanakirjassa on artikkeli aiheesta: