Malcolm Pein on…The Ponziani Opening

·

Chessable Blog
Table of Contents

Malcolm Pein takes time out from tournament coverage to focus on the unusual Ponziani Opening in today’s Daily Telegraph chess column. Its rarity makes it an ideal surprise weapon.

Malcolm Pein on…The Ponziani Opening

The Ponziani Opening, 1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.c3, has enjoyed a renaissance as a tricky, easy-to-learn alternative to the Ruy Lopez or Giuoco Piano. If you have the time to learn it, 3…d5 is a decent reply, but there are lots of complex lines. I recommend a sacrificial counter in which any attempt by White to diverge gives him nothing.

A. Pridorozhni – J. Sindarov
Voronezh Open 2018

1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 Nc6 3.c3 Nf6 4.d4 (4.Bd3 d5 or 4.d3 d5 with a Philidor reversed are fine for Black) 4…Nxe4 5.d5 (5.Qe2 d5 or if 5.Bd3 d5) 5…Bc5! 

The Ponziani Opening

6.dxc6 (White gets sucked in, after 6.Be3 Bxe3 7.fxe3 Ne7 8.Nxe5 0–0 the position speaks for itself) 6…Bxf2+ 7.Ke2 Bb6! (Better than 7…bxc6 8.Nbd2) 8.Qd5 (8.cxd7+ Bxd7 threatening Bb5+ is ruinous for White after 9.Be3 Bxe3 10.Kxe3 Qf6 threatening Qf4+, Qb6+ and 0–0–0 and if 8.cxb7 Bxb7 9.Qc2 Qf6 10.Nbd2 Nf2 11.Rg1 e4 yields a huge attack) 8…Nf2 9.Rg1 (After 9.Qxe5+ Kf8 10.Rg1 f6! 11.Qd5 Qe7+ 12.Kd2 dxc6 Black wins 11.Qf4 is today’s puzzle, below) 9…0–0

The Ponziani Opening

10.Bg5 (10.cxb7 Bxb7 11.Qxb7 Qf6 intending e5-e4 is the critical line but I would rather be Black) 10…bxc6 11.Bxd8 (11.Qxe5 f6) 11…cxd5 (Black has all eight pawns remaining and romped to victory) 12.Bh4 Ba6+ 13.Ke1 Bxf1 14.Bxf2 Ba6 15.Bxb6 axb6 16.Kf2 (16.Nxe5 Rae8) 16…e4 17.Nd4 f5 18.g3 c5 19.Ne2 g5 20.h4 h6 21.Na3 Kf7 22.hxg5 hxg5 23.Rh1 Rh8 24.Rag1 Kf6 25.Ke3 Ke5 0-1 A pawn avalanche after Bxe2 and e5–e4 follows.

Test Your Strength

Black to Play

How does Black, to play, seize the advantage?

Highlight the space below this line to reveal the answer.

11…g5!! 12.Nxg5 dxc6! 12.Be3 Nd3.

Was this helpful? Share it with a friend :)

4.9 with 3.65K user reviews

Check them on individual course pages