TransWikia.com

Why is Bd6 better than Be7, Bc5 and Bb4?

Chess Asked by Shreyash Talpade on October 5, 2021

[FEN "r1bqkb1r/p4ppp/2p2n2/3p4/8/2N5/PPP1BPPP/R1BQK2R b KQkq - 1 9"]

Be7 protects knight from getting pinned, Bc5 pins the pawn on f2 after Whites, castles, and Bb4 pins the knight.

Whats logic behind Bd6? (It also can’t be a battery in future via Qc7 because of 1… Kh1 2. Bxh2 g3, and the bishop will be trapped.)

5 Answers

Part of the problem with Bc5 is that they can respond with Na4, which threatens the bishop and grabs the tempo. Be7 isn't great because its range is inhibited by the knight and it impedes the kingside rook's power on the e file after you castle. Bd6 is nice because it is protected by the pawns, the bishop can be retreated to b8 or c7 while still controlling either of the second longest diagonals. I'm a 1500 rated player, so take that into account.

Correct answer by Joshua Morris on October 5, 2021

  1. when the pawns are on c6 and d5 that means that your dark bishop is your best bishop
  2. after c6 and d5 the dark square around them are weak and the bishop takes control of those square.
  3. the bishop on e7 is not controling alot of square on c5 and b4 it can get kicked around with a3 b4 or Na4. I am 2100 take that into account.

Answered by Sivert on October 5, 2021

Bd6 has two big advantages that haven't been mentioned. The first is that it protects the b8 square for your rook. Your rook naturally belongs on the half-open file, and White really wants to play Bf4 to keep you from doing that. (You can put your bishop on d6 later if that happens, but you've wasted a tempo and exchanging bishops makes it easier for the white knight to establish itself at c5.) The second is that, later in the game, e5 will likely be a very powerful square for the bishop. (Or sooner, if White tries Bg5.)

Answered by Alexander Woo on October 5, 2021

Bd6 is the most active square. No, there's not an immediate threat but it does attack h2 which could turn into something later.

Be7 is too passive. It's not smart to "protect against pins" that haven't even happened yet. There's lots of unpin combinations that actually lead to the pinning side being worse. Also, white can't really capitalize on a pin since the knight can't come to e4 or d5. Lastly, the bishop on e7 blocks the open e-file which could turn into a strong attack if white doesn't castle quickly.

Bc5 isn't that bad but after white castles the bishop isn't doing much.

Bb4 doesn't do much either. Normally you would play Bb4 to control the e4 square but white isn't threatening anything there. You could double the c-pawns but that doesn't really do anything. White will just play c4 at some point and end up with a slightly better position because of the 2 bishops.

Answered by Savage47 on October 5, 2021

e7 is a very passive square for the bishop. Since White is expected to castle on the kingside, there is no reason not to prefer ...Bd6 over ...Be7. The pin on the f6 knight is not too much of a problem precisely because a ..Bc7, ..Qd6 continuation is always on the table.

...Bb4 has a similar problem as ...Be7 because after 0-0 the bishop is doing nothing on b4 (exchanging it for the knight would not be a great idea)

This leaves us with the options ...Bd6 and ...Bc5. I don't have a clear idea of which one is better but ...Bd6 seems more natural to me for an attack on h2. I guess ...Bd6 allows Black to push the central pawns if needed, but leaving them on c6 and d5 is probably best. I don't think the pin on the f2 pawn is that relevant as White will probably never try to play f4 in this position. Anyway I wouldn't say ...Bc5 is an inferior move.

Answered by David on October 5, 2021

Add your own answers!

Ask a Question

Get help from others!

© 2024 TransWikia.com. All rights reserved. Sites we Love: PCI Database, UKBizDB, Menu Kuliner, Sharing RPP