(November 12th, 2013, 10:59)Jkaen Wrote: Ok I think his move was questionable, but how do I take advantage of that? How do I develop, or what square should I be looking to attack?
Jkaen, I am sure you can figure that out for yourself. Why would White play f3? The only thing that makes a little bit of sense is to support a possible e4 advance.
So that means you should keep as much control of e4 as possible by playing moves like d5 and Nf6.
One possible game in my database went:
(3157034) Marzolo,Cyril (2409) - Bricard,Emmanuel (2450) [A80]
Mulhouse GM Mulhouse (1), 30.06.2004
1.d4 f5 2.f3 d5 3.e4 dxe4 4.Nc3 e5 5.dxe5 Qxd1+ 6.Kxd1 Be6 7.fxe4 Nc6 8.Nf3 0–0–0+ 9.Bd3 fxe4 10.Nxe4 h6 11.Bd2 Nge7 12.Re1 g5 13.Kc1 Bg7 14.Nc5 Bd5 15.Bc3 Rhf8 16.Be2 Ng6 17.Nd4 Nxd4 18.Bxd4 Rf4 19.Be3 Rh4 20.Rd1 Nxe5 21.Bg1 Rd6 22.g3 Rb4 23.c3
½–½
And since you sometime suffer a bit from overestimating your position let me mention that White has no real chance for an advantage with f3, but that does not mean you are winning.