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The Qa5-Qb6 Maneuver: Jobava’s Fresh Take on the French Advance
For decades, the Advance Variation has been a fortress White uses to avoid the theoretical labyrinths of the French Defense. Black’s most common responses—5…Qb6 and 5…Bd7—require memorizing countless sidelines and nuances. But what if there was a different approach? GM Baadur Jobava and GM Pier Luigi Basso present French Defense – Practical Solution against the Advance Variation, a course built around the intriguing 5…Nge7, followed by the paradoxical queen maneuver 7…Qa5 and 8…Qb6. This isn’t about memorization—it’s about understanding a coherent system that leverages piece coordination over theoretical depth.
What Makes This Course Unique
The 5…Nge7 system challenges the Advance Variation’s rigid pawn structure with dynamic piece play rather than immediate pawn breaks. The course’s centerpiece is the counter-intuitive 7…Qa5, placing the queen on what appears to be an awkward square. Yet this move exploits a critical detail: the pin on White’s c3-pawn. After White’s natural 8.Bd2, Black continues with 8…Qb6, simultaneously targeting b2 and maintaining pressure on d4. Even elite specialists like GM Matthias Bluebaum have embraced this approach, recognizing its practical value in cutting through endless theory while preserving the French’s strategic richness.
Jobava and Basso don’t simply present moves—they reveal the logic behind them. Why does 5…Nge7 work where other moves require encyclopedic knowledge? How does the Qa5-Qb6 maneuver transform tactical vulnerabilities into positional advantages? The course demonstrates how understanding key patterns—like 6.dxc5 Ng6, attacking both e5 and c5 simultaneously, or 6.Be2 Nf5 with Black already seizing the initiative—makes the Advance Variation manageable without drowning in variations.
Technical Structure and Content
The course delivers comprehensive coverage through a structured, multi-layered learning system:
- 12 Chapters covering all White’s meaningful tries after 5…Nge7
- 30 test positions to verify understanding and pattern recognition
- Basso’s 15-minute video overview introducing the repertoire’s key concepts
- 2 hours and 21 minutes of video instruction breaking down critical lines and plans
- Memory Booster feature for efficient retention
- To Go Version of every chapter for quick study
- Multilingual PGN availability (English, German, French, Spanish)
Variation Map
Chapter 1: 8.dxc5 (White accepts the doubled pawn)
Chapter 2: 8.Bd3 Nxd4! (Black’s tactical blow)
Chapter 3: 8.Bd2 Qb6 (The main theoretical battleground)
Chapter 4: 8.a3 and other 8th move sidelines
Chapter 5: 7.Bd3 cxd4 8.cxd4 Nb4 (exploiting White’s piece placement)
Chapter 6: 7.Be2 (White’s second most common approach)
Chapter 7: 6.dxc5 Ng6 (the double attack pattern)
Chapter 8: 6.Bd3 (White’s most common developing move)
Chapter 9: 6.Be2 Nf5! (Black seizes the initiative)
Chapter 10: 6.a3 f6!? (a novelty prepared specifically for this setup)
Chapter 11: 6.Bb5 and other minor 6th move sidelines
Chapter 12: 4.Nf3 and other 4th move alternatives
Jobava and Basso have developed a productive partnership, previously collaborating on Scandinavian Defense for Black – The Revolutionized 3…Qd6 and The Albin Countergambit – A Revolutionary Approach for Black. Their combined approach balances Jobava’s creative, practical style with Basso’s systematic theoretical organization.
Stop Memorizing, Start Understanding
The Advance Variation doesn’t have to mean endless preparation. This course offers a practical weapon that reduces your theoretical burden while maintaining the French Defense’s strategic complexity. Whether you’re tired of memorizing White’s countless possibilities or simply want a fresh approach that emphasizes understanding over concrete learning, the 5…Nge7 system provides exactly that—a coherent, playable solution backed by top-level practice.
Curriculum
- 1 Section
- 13 Lessons
- Lifetime
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- French Defense - Practical Solution against the Advance Variation GM Pier Luigi BassoThe 5...Nge7 system challenges the Advance Variation's rigid pawn structure with dynamic piece play rather than immediate pawn breaks. The course's centerpiece is the counter-intuitive 7...Qa5, placing the queen on what appears to be an awkward square. Yet this move exploits a critical detail: the pin on White's c3-pawn. After White's natural 8.Bd2, Black continues with 8...Qb6, simultaneously targeting b2 and maintaining pressure on d4. Even elite specialists like GM Matthias Bluebaum have embraced this approach, recognizing its practical value in cutting through endless theory while preserving the French's strategic richness.13
