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Curriculum
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- 13 Lessons
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- Jobava's Benoni Defense - Fight the Anti-Benoni SystemsThe Benoni player's dilemma is well-known: you prepare sharp tactical lines after 1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 c5 3.d5, only to face 2.Nf3, 2.Bf4, or the slow positional grind of White's fianchetto setup. Suddenly, your preparation seems irrelevant. But what if the Benoni's essence—dynamic play, creative counterplay, and fighting chess—could be maintained regardless of White's move order? This is the philosophy behind Jobava's Benoni Defense - Fight the Anti-Benoni Systems by GM Baadur Jobava and IM Dragos Ceres, the continuation of their successful Jobava's Ambitious Benoni Defense - Part 1.13
- 1.1Chapter 1: Main line with 10.Nd2 after 1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 c5 3.d5 g6 4.Nc3 d6 5.g3 Bg7 6.Bg2 O-O 7.Nf3 e6 8.O-O exd5 9.cxd5 Re8
- 1.2Chapter 2: White’s 10.Bf4 setup
- 1.3Chapter 3: 10.Re1 and other sidelines
- 1.4Chapter 4: 3.c4
- 1.5Chapter 5: 3.c3 and sidelines
- 1.6Chapter 6: 3.e3 (solid approach)
- 1.7Chapter 7: 4.a4 b4 (early wing expansion)
- 1.8Chapter 8: 4.Bg5 g6 (Jobava’s main recommendation)
- 1.9Chapter 9: 4.e4 (important gambit line)
- 1.10Chapter 10: 4.c4
- 1.11Chapter 11: 2.Bf4 c5 (London System)
- 1.12Chapters 12: 2.Bg5 c5 (Trompowsky Attack)
- 1.13Chapters 13: 2.Bg5 c5 (Trompowsky Attack)
