I can put my hand on my heart and say I do not know any
theory at all about the Grunfeld.
I know the spirit of the opening (attack and undermine d4)
and that is all.
I can recall one note from Euwe saying the white fianchetto is harmless
against the Grunfeld.
So after 5.g3 I played 5...d5 and laid into the d-pawn.
I then went for traps and I think if White does not play 17.Ka4 then
all I have is a good position, nothing more.
Once I found the Rook lift 19...Rd6 I knew I was going to pick up
a piece. (I love Rook lifts).
I then skittled through the game and towards the end I missed a mate
(22...Be6+) seeing only winning the unprotected piece.
No excuse for that.
If I was a 1.d4 player i would play an anti-Grunfeld line. It's easy
for Black to find the moves once you know the theme of the opening.
I'd play the Grunfeld more often but I love the KID & Benoni/Benko.
You will have fun with the Budpest, if you get to play it.
"1.d4 2.Nf3 is the antidote to all gambits." - Kasparov.
The good news is you can then enter a KID without worrying about
any of the f3 or f4 variations.
I was just going to post one but my opponent refused with 1. Nf3. These move order issues annoyed me in my main opening, the Nimzo (although in this case it's just different, not really worse) and now they annoy me in the Grunfeld. 🙁 I might post one later.
BTW: I'm aware that Black can try for a Grunfeld anyway, but it is is a worse position.
Yeah it's risky to play for a Grunfeld after 1. Nf3. For instance:
1. Nf3 Nf6 2. c4 g6 3. Nc3 d5 4. cxd5 Nxd5 5. Qa4+ (or 4. Qa4+)
There is a lot of analysis by Khalifman in the series Opening for White According to Anand that suggests that White is really only playing for two results. That said, who knows how you'd fair at our level.
Originally posted by !~TONY~!small edit.
Yeah it's risky to play for a Grunfeld after 1. Nf3. For instance:
1. Nf3 Nf6 2. c4 g6 3. Nc3 d5 4. cxd5 Nxd5 5. Qa4+ (or 4. Qa4+)
There is a lot of analysis by Khalifman in the series Opening for White According to Anand that suggests that White is really only playing for two results. That said, who knows how you'd fair at our level.
Opening for White According to Kramnik for 1.Nf3.
Opening for White According to Anand for 1.e4.