Opening Repertoire- ...c6- Playing The Caro-kann And Slav As Black Cyrus Lakdawala.epub Review
The result? You study one set of pawn breaks, one set of piece maneuvers, and one set of endgame themes—for two different first moves by White. Lakdawala divides the repertoire into three clear sections:
In his latest release, Opening Repertoire: ...c6 – Playing the Caro-Kann and Slav as Black , Grandmaster Cyrus Lakdawala does something rarely attempted: he builds a complete, unified Black repertoire around a single thematic pawn structure—the ...c6 triangle. Lakdawala, known for his humorous, no-nonsense writing style and deep practical understanding, argues that most club players don’t need 500 pages of forcing lines. They need understanding . The result
The Unified ...c6 Repertoire: Why Lakdawala’s New Book Merges the Caro-Kann and Slav Lakdawala, known for his humorous, no-nonsense writing style
By adopting 1...c6 against everything (except 1.e4, where you play the Caro-Kann proper), Black steers the game into familiar waters. Against 1.d4, after 1...c6 2.c4 d5, you have a Slav. Against 1.e4, you have a Caro-Kann. Against the English (1.c4), you transpose back to Slav-like setups. Against 1
Two defenses, one move order. GM Cyrus Lakdawala reveals a practical, low-theory repertoire for Black based on the humble c6 pawn. For decades, club players have faced a dilemma. Do you play the solid Caro-Kann against 1.e4 (1...c6) and the resilient Slav against 1.d4 (1...c6)? It feels like learning two different worlds. But what if they are the same world?
★★★★½ (4.5/5) One half-star deducted only because Lakdawala makes too many “karate” analogies. But the chess is gold. Available now in ePUB and print. Cyrus Lakdawala – Opening Repertoire: ...c6 – Playing the Caro-Kann and Slav as Black. 352 pages. Thinkers Publishing, 2025 (est.).
But for 95% of games below master level, Opening Repertoire: ...c6 is a practical weapon. You will reach playable middlegames. You will understand your pawn structure. And you will save hundreds of hours of memorization.