When IM Kushager Krishnater set out to create the second installment of his Open Sicilian repertoire, he made a deliberate choice: avoid the mainline theoretical highways where preparation battles are won and lost at move 25. Instead, his approach treats the Sicilian as a strategic battleground where understanding trumps memorization.
Against both 2...e6 and 2...Nc6, Krishnater recommends lines that are fresh, relatively unexplored, and designed to steer opponents away from their home preparation. The philosophy is consistent throughout: choose the move that creates normal Sicilian structures rather than entering forcing variations that reward the player with the stronger engine.
Sequence: Open Sicilian According to Krishnater »
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The Open Sicilian has always been chess's ultimate proving ground. While theory sprawls endlessly across hundreds of sub-variations, elite preparation has increasingly favored a different approach: flexible, pressure-oriented systems that force opponents into uncomfortable territory early. Rather than memorizing 25 moves deep into established main lines, the modern trend is toward fresh move orders and sideline deviations that retain all the objective punch while amplifying practical discomfort.
IM Kushager Krishnater builds his repertoire on precisely this philosophy. His complete Open Sicilian system after 1.e4 c5 2.Nf3 promises maximum practical pressure without sacrificing theoretical soundness.
Sequence: Open Sicilian According to Krishnater »
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