Tuesday, 24 March 2026

Thoughts On Bad Wörishofen II

I HAD four blacks in the Bad Wörishofen seniors.
One of those games began with 1.e4, but the other three were closed games, with rounds two and four seeing White play the Colle-Zukertort.
I was also expecting a Colle-Zukertort in round eight as a search in ChessBase's 2026 Mega database seemed to indicate that it was my opponent's favourite opening, but he varied with a New London (1.d4 and 2.Bf4, without an early  Nf3).
So why this sudden upsurge in interest in an opening named after players who died in 1932 (Edgard Colle) and 1888 (Johannes Zukertort)?
One possibility is that there has been a new book or online course devoted to the opening, and I later noticed the bookstall at Bad Wörishofen had a copy of Richard Palliser's The Killer Colle-Zukertort System.
This was published last year, described as an updated version of a a 2022 Chessable course.
Somewhat strangely, I cannot find the book on Amazon, but it is available from Chess & Bridge
One feature of the Colle-Zukertort is that White usually sets up the same way more-or-less whatever Black plays.
Round two after White's fifth move
Round four after White's fifth move
One point of this presumably is that White rarely has to get involved in a deep theoretical argument - it really is an ideas opening.
And a lot of the basic ideas are explained in some detail on the internet, eg at thechessworld and at chess.com.
The latter article is 15 years old, but ideas change slowly in long-established opening systems.
I expect to see a few more examples in my coming games as, if my limited experience at Bad Wörishofen is any guide, it appeals to a wide range of players - my round-two opponent was rated 2031, my round-four opponent 1671.

6 comments:

  1. There are some tries against the Colle-Zuckertort which attempt to steer the position in a different direction. One is to head for a reversed Queens Gambit Tartakower variation. This can be introduced by 1. d4 d5 2. Nf3 Nf6 3, e3 and now either 3. .. Bg4 or 3. .. c5. Black would follow up with the other of Bg4/c5 but then .. Nf6, .. e6, .. Nc6, . and possibly cxd4 folowed by .. Bd6 and .. 0-0,

    After 1. d4 d5 2. Nf3 Nf6 3, e3, 3. .. g6 is possible aiming for a Grunfeld.

    A player confident in the Kings Indian would play 1. d4 Nf6 2. Nf3 g6 and if then 3. e3 combined with b3 and Bb2 borrow ideas from the Kings Indian Attack by aiming for e7-e6-e4

    A player liking Queens Indians and Hedghogs could just use the move order 1. d4 Nf6 2.Nf3 b6

    I don't know to what extent the books on this system go into these possible Black tries but there would be a number of transpositional possibiluties to be aware of.

    RdC

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I think really Black can set up more or less at will, eg I have been happy using a Pseudo-Chigorin system with ...Nc6 and ...Bg4, trying to get in a quick ...e5. Meanwhile Colle-Zukertort players also set up more or less how they want ...

      Delete
  2. According to the sample from C&B the book is published by "London Chess Centre Publishing" which might explain why it is not on Amazon. The longest chapter at 56 pages is titled "Main line ...Nc6 &...Bd6"
    JoeS

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Oh dear - I might have to buy it!

      Delete
    2. There is also a book by Pavlovic (Thinkers Publishing) which came out in 2025. Typical, you could die waiting for a book to come out and then two "killer" books are published!

      Delete
    3. Aaah - that might be another reason for a sudden upsurge in interest. A similar thing happened in 1998 when books on the Accelerated Dragon came out by Donaldson & Silman and by Nielsen & Carsten

      Delete