Keano wrote on 03/08/14 at 03:00:16:
I'd be with your trainer on "My System". Best avoided. All that over-protection of e5, and if Black doesn't play ...f6 what?
A slight joke, but a lot of stuff in "My System" should be taken with a health warning.
My System is probably better studied when you're already a reasonably strong player (at least 1800?), so that you can take some of the stuff with a grain of salt, or at least an open mind. But I think it's a wonderfully instructive book, so long as you don't get it too early in your education and become obsessed with it, trying always to play according to "system."
Many players have claimed that it was the last book they studied before making the leap to Master (Dvoretsky comes to mind, who then recommended it to many of his Candidate Master students, with which it had the same effect). I actually had a similar experience; the last two books I read cover-to-cover before becoming a Master were Averbakh's little
Essential Chess Endings (I felt I needed a refresher on the basics that I hadn't looked at in years), and
My System. I also did a lot of other calculation/decision making/dynamics training at the time as well, though. I was using Beim's
How to Play Dynamic Chess to work through solitaire-style (I spent 2-3 hours per game on average I think), which was very good for calculation practice, dynamic play, sacrifices, all that stuff.
I think that it's very interesting to get Nimzovich's perspective on positional play when you're already a fairly good player. Weaker, "impressionable" players should probably shy away from it for a while.
Incidentally, I started noticing a lot of
My System stuff in games around the local club. I watched a promising junior player (rated about 1900) get completely outplayed on the White side of a Philidor when his senior opponent completely "old-manned" him to death: created a maneuvering game, played ...d6 and ...f6 (the "sawing action" or whatever it's called), etc. It all seemed to go perfectly according to Nimzovich, and the poor 1900-player had no idea what was happening.
In that same tournament I also played this game:
Which while unexceptional, definitely "felt" like
My System to me when I played it. I felt like I knew exactly what to do with that central pawn structure--the whole game was very easy for me, in a way it might not have been before (even if I would still have found the same moves, they call came much easier this time). There were many other games around the same time that I felt came easily after having read Nimzovich.
So I can certainly recommend
My System highly, but perhaps would wait until you're rated at least 1800 and feeling "stuck."