Carlsbad Structure 3…Be7: Key Ideas and Repertoire for Black
The Move That Changes Everything
There is a small paradox at the heart of the Queen's Gambit Declined. For decades, Black's automatic response — 3…Nf6 — has shaped an enormous body of theory, one that White players study intensively. The bishop on g5 became a weapon, a defining feature of countless grandmaster battles. Yet there is a quieter move — 3…Be7 — that sidesteps all of that. It doesn't invite the pin. It doesn't offer the standard trade-offs. It shifts the entire character of the game, and, as GM Alexey Dreev notes in the course introduction, most White players give it little or no attention at all.
That asymmetry is the point.
Why 3…Be7?
After 1.d4 d5 2.c4 e6 3.Nc3 Be7, Black makes a deliberate structural choice: by developing the bishop before the knight, the move prevents White from playing Bg5. This forces White's dark-squared bishop to f4 after the standard 4.cxd5 exd5 5.Bf4. The typical Black plan of …Bd6 loses its appeal — it already cost a tempo — and instead Black orients around 5…c6 and …Bf5, building from a stable foundation. The positions that follow are dynamic, double-edged, and, critically, underexplored.
The Mainline: 5.Bf4 c6 6.e3 Bf5 7.g4
The most critical line runs 5.Bf4 c6 6.e3 Bf5 7.g4 Be6!, a move that gives back a tempo in exchange for concrete counterplay against White's expanded pawn structure. After 8.h4 Nd7, the course reaches its sharpest territory: 9.g5 h6! and 9.h5 Nh6! both lead to fighting positions where both sides can play for a win. The 3…Be7 system is not a drawing weapon — it is a fighting choice.
Variation Map
1.d4 d5 2.c4 e6 3.Nc3 Be7 4.cxd5 exd5
- 5.Qc2 Nc6! → Chapter 1
- 5.Nf3 (less ambitious) → Chapter 3
- 5.Bf4 c6 (main line)
- 6.Qc2 (stops Bf5) → Chapter 2
- 6.e3 Bf5
- 7.h4 (Vachier-Lagrave's tricky move) → Chapter 13
- 7.f3 (Bluebaum's favourite) → Chapters 14–15
- 7.Nge2 (White aims for Ng3) → Chapters 10–12
- 7.g4 Be6! (main line — Black creates counterplay)
- 8.h3 (solid) → Chapter 8
- 8.Qb3 & alternatives → Chapter 4
- 8.Bd3 (Jobava, Abdusattorov) → Chapter 9
- 8.h4 Nd7 (main line continues)
- 8…Bxh4 (playable but passive) → Chapter 5
- 9.h5 Nh6! (Carlsen, Nakamura) → Chapter 6
- 9.g5 h6! (So, Nepomniachtchi — sharpest lines) → Chapter 7
The Authors
GM Alexey Dreev is a former World Championship Candidate and one of the most respected opening theoreticians of his generation. GM Pier Luigi Basso is an Italian grandmaster known for his precise analytical approach and prolific work as a chess author. The two have previously collaborated on a full Black repertoire against 1.e4 — the Caro-Kann According to Dreev series. With this course, their focus shifts to 1.d4, providing a complete, structured answer to the Carlsbad structure.
Premium Course Structure
This is a Modern Chess Premium course, built as a complete training system rather than a collection of files:
- 15 deeply structured theoretical chapters
- 30 test positions
- 5 training positions
- Memory Booster for long-term recall of key ideas and move orders
- To-Go Version of every chapter for fast preparation
- Video instruction explaining ideas and plans, not just moves
- Multilingual PGNs available in English, German, French, and Spanish
Start Playing 3…Be7
If you play 1.d4 d5 regularly as Black and are looking for a serious alternative to the well-trodden 3…Nf6 lines, this course offers a complete system built on sound positional and dynamic principles. The positions are rich, the ideas are concrete, and the preparation gap on White's side is real. If you want something dynamic against the Carlsbad, 3…Be7 is worth a serious look.



