In many games when I've played the Sicilian (maybe even 1/3 or so) my opponent plays 2.Bc4
Is this often encountered by others & also how would the more experienced 1...c5 players counter it?
After
1.e4...c5
2.Bc4
I normally play 2...Nf6 forcing 3.Nc3 then follow with 3...e6 opening lines & threatening to build a strong center
Any comments?
Originally posted by SquelchbelchYeah, it's gay. 😛
In many games when I've played the Sicilian (maybe even 1/3 or so) my opponent plays 2.Bc4
Is this often encountered by others & also how would the more experienced 1...c5 players counter it?
After
1.e4...c5
2.Bc4
I normally play 2...Nf6 forcing 3.Nc3 then follow with 3...e6 opening lines & threatening to build a strong center
[fen]rnbqkb1r/pp1p1ppp/4pn2/2p5/2B1P3/2N5/PPPP1PPP/R1BQK1NR w KQkq - 0 4[/fen]
Any comments?
I like the e6 idea, I generally play that too and get in an early d5.
What's your plan after 4.e5?
I see this crap all the time. The best way to play is to play for ..d5 of course, making Bc4 look stupid, but you have to watch out for e5, since if he gets it in, it's hard to play ..d5. I generally play ..Nc6 first, and sometimes ..d6, then ..Be7, ..0-0, and then play for ..d5 once everything is under control. But sometimes you can just get it in without having to play all the preparatory moves, and that is the funniest thing ever, because you know the guy on the other side of the board feels pretty dumb. 😀
sicillian, none of us here play at a master level. therefore it is safe to say that Bc4 is a descent move and none of us will lose becasue we played it. we are far more likley to lose becasue of a tactical oversight, not becasue a Bishop move on move 2! i know from playing lots of smith-morra gambits that the B usually ends up on c4 before black plays e6. the B enjoys a nice life either here or at b3 with lots of latent sac ideas on e6.
and yes e6 is a very slow move here. if you missed the simple tactic ..Nxe4, you better brush up on "The juniors guide to tactics"