Sharp. Novel. Game-changing.
Up your Sicilian Game
With the Advice of not one
But TWO Dragon Specialists!
If you are an ambitious player willing to go all-in for a win with Black, then you need an opening that unbalances the game and lures your opponent into the Dragon’s den. And few will serve you as well against 1.e4 as the Dragon Sicilian.
What sets the Dragon variation apart: instead of “defending the weak d6-pawn” like in most Sicilians, Black’s roaring dark-squared bishop sits on the long diagonal breathing fire across the board. The Dragon leads to variations so sharp and spectacular, it couldn’t bear a more fitting name.
And if you want to take it up, you can't do better than following the advice of two life-long specialists.
Chessable fan-favorite authors,
Grandmaster Simon Williams (a.k.a. the GingerGM) and Spanish
International Master David Martínez (a.k.a. Divis) are both faithful Dragon players. No surprise, since they both practice swashbuckling, adrenaline-oriented chess.
In this course, they are teaming up to bring you a novel and dynamic concept that will boost your Black Game: The novel ...Bh6 idea in the Dragon.
Nip White’s Attack in the bud
While yours roars ahead
If you’ve heard of the Dragon, then you must have heard of the Yugoslav Attack. It’s probably the setup keeping everybody from playing the Dragon as their main line.
Now imagine coming into your next game with a virtually unknown idea, designed to
stop the Yugoslav Attack in its tracks. A variation with almost no theory, and every chance for you to take over the initiative and steamroll your opponents before they realize what hit them.
It sounds like a Godsend, but that’s what two esteemed Chessable authors can accomplish when working together.
And now, the one and only GingerGM adds the coup de grâce, condensing the magic into an easy-to-swallow pill to supercharge your Dragon understanding and ease your play into victory, as he’s done in all his previous courses.
Score your best wins yet
with The Dragon Sicilian: Wing Attack
After
1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 d6 3.d4 cxd4 4.Nxd4 Nf6 5.Nc3 g6, you have the Dragon Sicilian, and
6.Be3 Nc6 7.f3 h5!? starts the Wing Attack.
The idea is to stop White’s kingside pawn storm, but there’s more than meets the eye… The Dragon Bishop can go to h6 sometimes, disrupting White’s attacking setup. Some others, the peculiar 6...Nc6 move order comes in handy even outside the Yugoslav Attack.
But the course is worth much more than just a
complete repertoire against the Open Sicilian. You will also learn:
🐉
Common tactical shots that prevent quick losses and produce outstanding wins!
🐉
Typical Dragon ideas you can learn from heart and blitz out on autopilot.
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Essential middlegame plans to make the most out of your every piece according to the pawn structure.
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New-found engine maneuvers to maximize your MVP Bishop’s attacking and defending effect.
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Insider tricks to detect and exploit imprecise move orders by White.
And much more!
So start today, squeeze the juice out of top analysis explained by a top presenter!