exigentsky wrote on 07/30/08 at 03:45:49:
That's good advice. Still, I hope that it won't take me more than six months to add e4. OTB play is not at the same standard as CC and I do have some rudimentary knowledge of e4 already. The more difficult decision will be whether to stick with d4 or switch to e4? I know some people say that there is no need to pick at all, but this must seriously compromise one's ability to be a true expert in a particular opening.
I disagree with the latter part.
Firstly even if you pick a first move you wont become a true expert. Experts tend to be on the black side below 2300. Ie someone playing the French as black can become an expert in that opening, but playing 1.e4 wont make you an expert in any line as you dont meet them enough. Even if say half your 1.e4 games end up in an open sicilian, you will still meet Najdorfs, Dragons, Sveshnis and all kinds of other lines. In general black tends to choose the type of pawn structure, while white only has limited choices in which lines to play.
Secondly a broad knowledge serves me (I am talking about myself as I tend to know myself a little better than most) better than "expert" knowledge in the opening. With very few exceptions a decent looking move in the opening is not going to get your game killed. On the other hand it will allow you to apply other ideas, which is especially valuable in the early middlegame.
Lastly expert knowledge is overrated. Spassky got creamed by Fischer and Karpov when they varied their openings in their matches. Kasparov was/is an expert in the Tarrasch and Grunfeld, yet he got into big trouble against Karpov with it, while Kramnik showed that his expert knowledge of the Spanish wont win you games.