🏆 Shortlisted for Best Opening Course
& Course of the Year 2021 🏆
What If You Had A World Chess Champion's Blueprint
To Skyrocket Your Score Against 1.d4?
It took Grandmaster Surya Shekhar Ganguly 14 years to uncover the best secrets to beating 1.d4 at the highest level.
But now you can do it easily. With his move-by-move blueprint, you save valuable preparation time, neutralize the opponent's pet lines, and post impressive victories against the queen's pawn game.GM Ganguly has prepared and refined the openings of
five-time World Chess Champion Vishy Anand for
more than a decade.
He had 12-hour analysis marathons in Bonn, Germany...battled the defense department's supercomputer in Sofia, Bulgaria...and scaled almost 4,000 miles en route to Moscow, Russia...
Because when the champ trusts you to give him
that coveted opening edge, you better be ready to deliver wherever the match takes place.
After three successful title defenses, there's no doubt that GM Ganguly
delivered in spades.
Today, he brings you the laser-accurate analysis and crystal clear instruction he's known for. So you can...
Play The Dynamic Nimzo-Indian
And Blow 1.d4 Off The Board
Like A World Champion
Lifetime Repertoires: Nimzo & Semi-Tarrasch Part One meets the classic 1.d4 with dynamic, "never before seen" strategies.
All of which came from Vishy's trusted
Anti-Computer Guy.
You see...in Team Anand...they NEVER settle for "novelties" that chess engines find in minutes. Everyone's gonna catch up to those, and you can't win championships when you're all
figured out.
Winning matches for the crown demand novelties that fly under the radar of even the strongest chess engines. And...
When it comes to uncovering ground-breaking ideas that machines and grandmasters miss, GM Ganguly is Team Anand's go-to guy.
Anyway, only a dozen or so of Surya's opening surprises appear on the board. The rest stay hidden in secure databases, waiting to be played. But...
We've convinced GM Ganguly to build a course out of his life's work...paving the way for
Lifetime Repertoires: Nimzo & Semi-Tarrasch Part One.
The first part of the series takes on the queen's pawn game with the
sound yet
aggressive Nimzo-Indian Defense.
After
1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 e6 3.Nc3 Bb4, you gain a lead in development...while your flexible pawn structure supplies you with...
An Arsenal Of Center-Busting Strategies
With GM Ganguly to guide your every step, you're ready to uncork championship-caliber moves, including:
🧠 A pawn sacrifice against the Kmoch Variation. White must accept the "gift"...after which, you get a near-
decisive attack on the exposed enemy king.
(Best part? This variation with 4.f3 is a favorite among sub-2000 players. So if you play in the club or online, count on getting to play this fun idea often.)
🧠 The "Iron King" maneuver versus the Leningrad Variation. With a shuffle of the king, you turn the enemy bishop's into tall pawns, while you
get all the time in the world to build up your position.
🧠 A stunning queen sacrifice against the Classical Variation, which freezes the enemy kingside and gives you an attack that almost
plays itself!
🧠 A prophylactic pawn push against the Rubinstein Variation. With a
bulletproof center, you can press for the win without fear of counterplay.
And many more!
On the other hand, GM Ganguly also simplifies your lines when it makes sense.
Case in point:
Surya "solves" the dangerous Kasparov Variation with smart transpositions to other systems.
Against the Trompowsky, London, Veresov, and other cagey sidelines, the
universal setup - with 1...Nf6, 2...d5, and 3...c5 - takes care of them in one fell swoop.
This streamlined approach saves you valuable preparation time against rare but dangerous sidelines.
PLUS, GM Ganguly also serves you with
117 brain-stimulating puzzles and
249 (!) reference games. So you can revisit the point-grabbing tactics and strategies inside the course...until you
can't get them wrong.
Winning in chess becomes easier when you have championship-caliber openings to clinch the point with...and that's exactly what you're getting here.
Sign Up For Lifetime Repertoires:
Nimzo & Semi-Tarrasch Part One Today!