Lifetime Repertoires – Krykun’s 1.e4 Part 2 by IM Yuriy Krykun
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Reviews (10)
Description
Understand and Conquer the Toughest Defenses against 1.e4
International Master Yuriy Krykun finishes his complete 1.e4 repertoire in style!
After dismantling 1.e4 e5 and those tricky sidelines in Part 1, he’s back to show you how to outplay the big guns in Part 2, giving you a complete repertoire for White that will last you a lifetime.
And true to his word, he’s kept the variation count short and explanations detailed (refer to the 195K+ word count!). The point? To improve your overall chess by helping you understand the game – not just memorizing strings of opening moves.
It’s the same thorough approach that brought IM Krykun rave reviews in Part 1 and his other courses, and that he’s taken to the next level in this Lifetime Repertoire.
The French, Sicilian and Caro Explained – and Contained
So what’s in store for the remaining big 3 defenses to 1.e4?
Much like Part 1, you’ll be restricting your opponent at every turn through space grabs, structural advantages, and smart piece trades. Here’s a peek how:
♜ Paralyze the Sicilian with the Maroczy Bind and Rossolimo.You’ll lock down 2…d6 and 2…e6 with the famous Maroczy Bind (e4-c4 pawn structure) – notorious for ending the wild, tactical dreams of the Sicilian player. Against 2…Nc6, you’ll play the ever-reliable Rossolimo (3.Bb5) to wreck your opponent’s structure and create your own targets for attack
♜ Cramp the Caro-Kann with the Advance Variation (3.e5). Enjoy watching your opponent’s pieces trip over each other for meaningful squares – while your pieces have room to rule the board. IM Krykun’s interesting 4.c4 against 3…Bf5 brings an interesting positional twist to this tried-and-true way of battling the Caro
♜ Fight the French with the most challenging move: 3.Nc3. You may have to learn a little more than a boring Exchange Variation – but this is a Lifetime Repertoire after all! Learn to pose the maximum challenge to the Winawer, Classical, and Rubinstein Variations with rare lines and smart new plans
Perhaps the best part of this repertoire is that it has something for everybody. Improving players will appreciate the dedicated structure and ideas chapters explaining the guiding strategic points for each opening. Plus, you’ll get 30 superbly annotated model games to show you the plans executed in real-life games from start to finish.
And for the advanced players, the cutting-edge novelties IM Krykun has picked out in each opening are going to bring you many interesting ideas and opening surprises to use on your opponents. They reaffirm why IM Krykun’s courses are some of the most inventive on Chessable.
So if you’re ready to win after 1.e4, don’t just memorize moves – understand and conquer with ideas. Get Part 2 of Lifetime Repertoires: Krykun’s 1.e4 today.
Reviews (10)
10 reviews for Lifetime Repertoires – Krykun’s 1.e4 Part 2 by IM Yuriy Krykun
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Owen (verified owner) –
Really good course
Steven William (verified owner) –
he would cover all possible silly reactions that could derail my well-thought opening, and how to deal with them
Zohar (verified owner) –
he gives you basic principles that just works 90% of the situations – it sounded silly to me at first, but then it became a daily prayer
Joi Hua Ta (verified owner) –
I’m still a fairly new adult learner and have looked at all the major courses and finally feel like I have an option that makes sense for my level and available time.
Kim Jin Un (verified owner) –
I’ve only reviewed all the black lines but I am liking the author’s approach of adding exercises after each chapter to make sure you are looking at the positions themselves rather than just routinely memorizing the lines without absorbing the content of his commentary.
Jackson (verified owner) –
The ideas taught in this course helped me defend against a brutal attack in my last tournament. I was able to secure the half-point once I defused the attack.
Charles (verified owner) –
Now that I don’t need to invest much energy in the opening phase, I can concentrate on improving my middle and endgame play.
Samuel (verified owner) –
Even above beginner level, knowing the first ten moves is usually sufficient, and the variations in this course average nine moves.
Liam (verified owner) –
I think many of these reviewers forget what it was like to be a beginner, or a casual player.
William (verified owner) –
I bought this course with video few weeks ago (thanks to @JRHat for recommending it to me).