Willempie wrote on 07/04/09 at 20:08:40:
Not really. His basis was the QGD and Ruy as black, but he definately experimented with other lines when he wanted (eg he has a surprising amount of Taimanov sicilians before he became wch). He also changed his repertoire for matches, where he would prepare specific lines aimed at his opponent's weaknesses (eg the CK against Spassky).
For Karpov it was primarily NID/Willempie8/Catalan. The QGD became a more prominent fixture later (all you have to do is check the frequency the opening occurred in) against 3. Nf3.
Neither one ever quit being a fixture in his repertoire, either.
He was a GM before he was world champion. For the life of me I don't understand why people are thinking these massive changes occurred
before GM.
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I think it all depends on the way you work with openings.
The idea in any chosen opening should be to create the most problems for the opponent - this means not ducking out repeatedly into harmless variations due to lackluster preparation, which will
always occur if your repertoire includes two very large options, and you're not an experienced master yet (ie: having both the NID and Semi-Slav in a repertoire as black is certainly pointless for the non-master).
Especially for the improving player that needs to beat higher rateds in order to advance - if you half-ass the opening against a master because you want a "diverse repertoire" you are not only going to get beaten, but it will be quickly. If you have thorough knowledge of your openings this isn't going to happen.
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I know (as in saw them at tournaments) quite some former youth players who varied their openings a lot (or rather they didnt have a repertoire at all, they played openings based on their interest at that moment). Eg a chap like Stellwagen didnt only play the French, he played quite a few sicilians as well.
The likelihood that his repertoire was spread out evenly, and not having any one choice appear dominantly in his repertoire is far-fetched to say the least, particularly at a level below master.
Quote:There's quite a difference between having a very diverse repertoire and not having a fixed repertoire at all.
The difference when it comes time to actually play the game is marginal. Whether it isn't fixed, or very diverse, my point holds true. Unless, of course, this individual in question has a computer-esque memory.
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I am of the opinion that having a fixed and consistent repertoire while developing does more harm than good in most cases. Most dont know which lines are good for them and have no idea on what basis to choose.
There's plenty of material and other informed players to help gauge what is good/bad.
And when you're experienced in an opening you gain the ability to discern good lines from bad, this is part is specializing in something.
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You dont let 12-year-olds decide what they want to do in uni, they first must get a proper preparation and self-knowledge. Selecting openings before having a deep "chess education" is imo similarly wrong.
Completely absurd comparison. If one has a guide, then selecting quality openings from the very beginning is very possible.
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It really depends. If you use your games and thus your openings as a means to get better (by really analysing your own games), I think playing very diverse openings gets you different middle games and endgames, giving you far more ammo to improve.
Ie if you play 10 games in the Ruy as black with the Zaitsev in a relative short period or you play 10 different openings I think you will benefit more from a deep analysis of the latter and learn more.
Not if you end up playing bad lines due to poor preparation. The latter experience is useless in that case because the value of the rest of the game from the mistake onward is poor.
If you end up playing 10 games in the Zaitsev, and you're able to prepare because you've chosen that as your opening, the qualtiy of play is going to turn out higher because the experience is concentrated, making the likelihood of choosing correct moves higher.
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Lastly I think most players below 2200 level dont know their openings very well and it wont matter what you play against them, before move 10 both will be out of book.
There's a number of sub-2200 players that can play on a master level in certain variations due to their experience in the line.
You give that same player concentrated variations in more lines under their control due to a pre-determined repertoire and they're going to play more strongly in a greater number of variations.
On the other hand - if you remove the capacity of the individual to get concentrated experience in given variations then not only are they not going to play the opening as well, they're certainly not going to beat the people that have more experience in something they do run into.
Why do you think even top-flight GMs are running from Radjabov's KID at the moment (Van Wely being the exception, who has a fairly narrow repertoire against the KID himself)?
I apologise up front if I seem to ignore certain points you make. I dont have much time to type in deep response at the moment, though my intention is to answer each point.
First Karpov made extensive use of the QGD in teh early days, usually when his opponent allowed a nimzo, though he played the nimzo as well. Furthermore it is a bit misleading to focus on those lines as he faced 1.e4 in about 60% of his games as black and there he played various Ruy lines (even a Schlieman), some Frenchies and some others (also Petrov). And that was all in the 60s.
Second you seem to think that you need deep knowledge of the openings you play in order to beat better players. I entirely disagree. The first time I beat a 2200+ player was with a sicilian line I never play as white and it wasnt a c3-sicilian, but a real main line Schevy/Najdorf. The trick for me was that instead of learning the whole Be2/Be3 complex I studied a game between Ljubo and Ulfje. Same goes for other lines. If you play a main line most moves that seem good to a 1800 player are certainly not bad. The advantage for yourself being that you came up with the moves yourself and see why another move may have been better, iso "Oh damn 11..g6 was the book move".
Third you seem to base your argument on memorisation/familiasation: If you play the same lines over and over you will be better acquainted with the possibilities and thus play them better. There are imo 3 problems with this:
1. You miss out on different types of game, narrowing you potential in the long run. You wont get really better if you dont improve on different type of positions.
2. I personally think the line of reasoning is wrong. If you play the same lines you wont get deeper understanding, you will make the exact same mistakes only later in the game.
3. People get bored (you alluded to that in an earlier post). Therefore a change is often needed in the lines.
Fourth you seem to suggest that picking a repertoire that fits you and helps you in the long run is easy. I think most developing players even with Kasparov as their coach will have real trouble with this.
Fifth (just a slight tease). I dont see people running away from the KID when they face Radjabov. I saw Kasparov running away from the KID when he faced Krammers (as he had done before with the Tarrasch and Grunfeld against Karpov). What I do see is the top players who dont vary early enough get stuck despite their talents (Van Wely being a prime example)