The Beginner’s Black Repertoire Andras Toth Chessable
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Introduction (1 variation)
Quickstarter (11 variations, 12.1 avg. trainable depth)
1) King’s Gambit (16 variations, 10.6 avg. trainable depth)
1.1) King’s Gambit – Model Games (2 variations)
2) Danish Gambit (10 variations, 10.1 avg. trainable depth)
2.1) Danish Gambit – Model Games (1 variation)
3) Center Game (8 variations, 11.1 avg. trainable depth)
3.1) Center Game – Model Games (1 variation)
4) Bishop’s Opening (17 variations, 10.1 avg. trainable depth)
4.1) Bishop’s Opening – Model Games (1 variation)
5) Vienna (21 variations, 14.6 avg. trainable depth)
5.1) Vienna – Model Games (2 variations)
6) Ponziani (9 variations, 13.3 avg. trainable depth)
6.1) Ponziani – Model Games (1 variation)
7) The Scotch Game (17 variations, 11.9 avg. trainable depth)
7.1) The Scotch Game – Model Games (2 variations)
8) The Scotch Gambit (10 variations, 12.5 avg. trainable depth)
8.1) The Scotch Gambit – Model Games (1 variation)
9) Two Knights (32 variations, 13.8 avg. trainable depth)
9.1) Two Knights – Model Games (3 variations)
10) The Four Knights Scotch (12 variations, 12.5 avg. trainable depth)
10.1) The Four Knights Scotch – Model Games (2 variations)
11) Four Knights Spanish (14 variations, 10.6 avg. trainable depth)
11.1) Four Knights Spanish – Model Games (2 variations)
12) Ruy Lopez Schliemann (21 variations, 13.3 avg. trainable depth)
12.1) Ruy Lopez Schliemann – Model Games (3 variations)
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Description
Turn Defense into Offense – without Endless Memorization
He brought you a complete repertoire for White with The Club Player’s 1.e4 Repertoire and The Club Player’s 1.d4 Repertoire.
Now, International Master Andras Toth is back to teach you how to start pushing the black pieces with a bang.
First on the agenda: 1.e4. The king’s pawn opening is the most popular first move in chess, and IM Toth shows you how to systematically shred it with this counterattacking repertoire for Black.
And he keeps true to the winning formula that earned his other courses rave reviews:
✅ Cut down on memorization by understanding the ideas of each opening, not just the moves
✅ Keep things simple yet spicy
✅ Prepare you to confidentally face not just any opening, but any middlegame with detailed explanations and annotated model games
Double King Pawn Destruction
With so many good options to fight 1.e4, why did IM Toth opt for 1.e4 e5?
Not only is it the most theoretically sound response to 1.e4, it paves the way for rich, interesting positions you’ll have fun with – and that’ll teach you to become a better chess player.
Here’s a preview of how you’ll be crushing it in the king pawn games:
♚ Rock the Ruy Lopez with the Jaenisch Gambit. With 3…f5, you’ll avoid the complex theory of the Spanish Game and set yourself up for a practical fight where you have the initiative. If your opponent grabs too many pawns, they’re toast!
♚ Tie the Scotch Game up with the Mieses Variation (3…Nf6). You’ll put your opponent in so many pins, one wrong move will be their last!
♚ Keep the Italian Game players on their toes with the Two Knights Defense (3…Nf6). Learn why castling quickly could be White’s deadly mistake, and how to take the wind out of the Fried Liver Attack (4.Ng5).
♚ And more. King’s Gambit, Vienna Game, Ponziani Opening – if it’s a major 1.e4 opening, you’ll be covered!
A Principled Instructor Shows You the Way
IM Andras Toth continues to show off the skills that made him 2021 Author of the Year. Not only is he crystal clear and engaging in his explanations, he chooses only lines he believes in – no cutting corners. That means lines that stick to the chess principles of central control, development, and king safety.
His goal was to develop a simple yet strong repertoire you can grow with – even up to the 2000 FIDE rating level and beyond.
So if you’re ready to start the game off right with the black pieces, The Club Player’s Black Repertoire: 1.e4 e5 is the course for you – get it today and start fearlessly counterattacking 1.e4.
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