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Very Hot Topic (More than 25 Replies) Openings for adult class players (Read 182621 times)
ReneDescartes
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Re: Openings for adult class players
Reply #213 - 12/05/10 at 03:55:18
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Markovich wrote on 12/03/10 at 14:23:04:
In general I think that style is a limiting notion

Style is a limiting notion, agreed, but in adults it is also a conscious, or deep unconscious, response to their self-knowledge. Of course, tactics are king, and I am not arguing that stultifying openings are not terrible for your development; but all things in moderation. I am often shocked by how differently human beings manage to do what is apparently the same thing, in many fields.  Really, when you're looking at another person, it's a different planet in there.  If Timman said he sees certain moves when he has the initative, but misses them when he doesn't, but Lasker could not have said the same, I don't see why such distinctions should not also be found in class players, and why they shouldn't be able to adjust their openings accordingly. A glance at the statistics on a database search for players under 1800 provides reassurance that this is not too damaging.  There is a difference between telling a child who can't find knight forks not to play the Stonewall and telling an adult 1800 player that he should not play the Sicilian.  But then I tend to see chess more on the model of art than of mathematics. While technique is certainly a paramount concern among artists, there the idea that style is only for the advanced is absurd on its face. 

Secondly, I think we forget that while in retrospect progress from a given rating level to our own seems like something we could have anticipated, to the person trying to improve it is not clear if he will ever be able to reach a given level or not. Should an adult rated 1700 or 1900, depending on where we place the threshold, abstain from enjoying much of the intellectual content of the game in the hope of improving their results against group x of opponents from 0.36 to 0.50?! But then many people would die before they had ever enjoyed the positional content of chess. All our floundering around probably looks silly to a super-GM, and the only reason the world champions' play does not look ridiculous to someone is that in the land of the blind the one-eyed man is king.

I suppose a principle I would endorse for adult class players instead of "only play open games," is "only think about plans which you have a reasonable chance of carrying off and which would meaningfully increase your chance to win the game at your level"--and, as a corollary, "do not play openings that commit you to plans that are too subtle to use." 

But even that is a little brutal.  It reminds me of the fellow who said "my idea of beauty in chess is a one next to my name."  Granted it looks ridiculous to me to see a player trying to play a minority attack if he has little chance of bringing a one-pawn advantage to fruition without dropping a piece.  But if that player does not overvalue pawn weaknesses, and if he yet succeed at  winning the c-pawn (even if he drops a piece before winning), that's something in itself to him, even if the game looks silly to me. And I pause when I reflect that I would certainly advise that same player to try to control the center, even if he often dropped pieces after winning the center, because it is a good foundation for the future and because playing correctly is of value in itself.
« Last Edit: 12/05/10 at 22:48:52 by ReneDescartes »  
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MNb
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Re: Openings for adult class players
Reply #212 - 12/03/10 at 21:54:24
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katar wrote on 12/03/10 at 20:55:22:
White vs. Sicilian : Smith Morra gambit

Waste of time. Black has 15 or more defences available, which means a lot of work for White. That's neither simple nor efficient.
I would rather recommend some offbeat Open Sicilians like the Loewenfish against the Dragon and a Sozin/English Attack mixture against the Najdorf and the Classical d6/Nc6.

At U1800 level Black also should have something ready against stuff like 1.d4 d5 2.c4 e6 3.Nc3 (3.Nf3) c5 4.e3/4.Nf3.
  

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Re: Openings for adult class players
Reply #211 - 12/03/10 at 21:36:36
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How To Beat Your Son would have been more appropriate.
  
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Re: Openings for adult class players
Reply #210 - 12/03/10 at 16:16:14
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Markovich wrote on 12/03/10 at 14:23:04:

There was a scholastic coach around here who used some sort of four-by-four pawn game as a supposed vehicle for teaching chess, and who used to talk all the time about how he loved to see "their little faces light up."  God, I so badly wanted to punch that guy in the nose.  But his players never did anything.


I would think that might be the same one who had something he termed the "matrix system."  I got the impression that many "chess parents" were quite taken with his ridiculous schtick.
  
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Keano
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Re: Openings for adult class players
Reply #209 - 12/03/10 at 14:54:35
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Good discussion here. For me the big advantage young players have over adults is their complete lack of fear, they are not damaged by years of accumulating "experience" which often just leaves most of us damaged goods when it calls for a bit of adventurous bravery over the board. As Lasker said he spent most of his career trying to forget what he had already learnt. Just wish I could do the same.
  
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Markovich
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Re: Openings for adult class players
Reply #208 - 12/03/10 at 14:23:04
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I don't know about Dvoretsky's distinctions.  They perhaps are useful for coaching strong (2200+) players, something that I myself do not have sufficient chess strength to do.  

When it comes to players at lower levels, I'll stand by everything that I have said.  It's true that "open" systems don't necessarily produce open positions, but in general they facilitate this much better than "semi-open" or "closed systems."

I don't consider myself qualified to coach anyone much above 2100, or perhaps even above 2000; but on that basis, I simply would not have a student who didn't play 1...e5 against 1.e4.  My coaching practice has been entirely with children, and never once did I worry about the "style" of any player, only about how well they solved tactics exercises, strove for piece activity, and found tactics at the board.  

In general I think that style is a limiting notion, and if imposed by a coach, contains the very real danger of impeding the development of the student.

My opinion is that while there are many differences between adults and children, essentially none of them are relevant to learning how to play this game (kids learn faster, of course).  My approach with children always was just to look them in the eye and talk to them exactly as if they were as capable of intellection as I, only possessing less experience and knowledge.  The very worst teachers of children are the ones who condescend to them, confusing ignorance with intellectual simplicity.

There was a scholastic coach around here who used some sort of four-by-four pawn game as a supposed vehicle for teaching chess, and who used to talk all the time about how he loved to see "their little faces light up."  God, I so badly wanted to punch that guy in the nose.  But his players never did anything.
  

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BPaulsen
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Re: Openings for adult class players
Reply #207 - 12/03/10 at 11:07:26
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MNb wrote on 12/03/10 at 10:23:26:
ReneDescartes wrote on 12/03/10 at 03:15:22:
among positional players Karpov was intuitive while  Rubinstein was analytic.

Karpov was also an excellent tactician. That might have something to do with working on his skills as well - which provides an extra argument for the doctrine that amateurs who want to improve should incorporate some sharp tactical openings in their repertoire. Note in this context that both Spassky and Jussupow at some stage in their career got this kind of instruction. As a consequence the first, albeit a positional player by nature, became an expert of the KG.


With the demands on elite-level play it's necessary to be well rounded. Variations in "style" are less noticeable at you go higher up, I've noticed.

Obviously a WC like Spassky, or Karpov, will be tactically able.

I do know what Dvoretsky is talking about in regards to intuitive versus analytical. I am a heavily intuitive player, hence why I do extraordinary amounts of analysis - I have to, otherwise I don't have the discipline to minimize flaws in my plans.
  

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MNb
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Re: Openings for adult class players
Reply #206 - 12/03/10 at 10:23:26
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ReneDescartes wrote on 12/03/10 at 03:15:22:
among positional players Karpov was intuitive while  Rubinstein was analytic.

Karpov was also an excellent tactician. That might have something to do with working on his skills as well - which provides an extra argument for the doctrine that amateurs who want to improve should incorporate some sharp tactical openings in their repertoire. Note in this context that both Spassky and Jussupow at some stage in their career got this kind of instruction. As a consequence the first, albeit a positional player by nature, became an expert of the KG.
  

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ReneDescartes
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Re: Openings for adult class players
Reply #205 - 12/03/10 at 03:15:22
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Markovich wrote on 12/02/10 at 21:03:41:
Granted, if someone is trying to improve his game, it's a great advantage to be a kid, because kids learn so much faster.  But I can think of no reason why an adult who wants to improve should do otherwise than a kid should do, given the same level of strength.

Dvoretsky (in Secrets of Chess Tactics) divides players into intuitive and logical/analytic types. Intuitive players have a quick grasp of important tactical and/or positional features; analytic players have the ability to work things out systematically, devising logical schemes. Dvoretsky's axis is  independent (conceptually, not statistically) of the traditional positional/tactical axis. According to Dvoretsky, Tal was intuitive while Korchnoi and Polugaevsky were analytic; among positional players Karpov was intuitive while Rubinstein was analytic.

My impression, which I do not want to set forth as  fact, is that players who learned at a later age tend to have a more analytic style in Dvoretsky's sense than players who learned early (Capablanca and Karpov learned at age four, and Tal at eight; Botvinnik at 12, Korchnoi at 14 and Rubinstein, as is well known, at 16. . Adult students I think tend toward the analytic side of Dvoretsky's axis.

If this impression is correct then I believe that certain openings that exercise "architectural" and logical skill, though not necessarily of a super-refined kind, and where piece placements can seem counterintuitive, may be more suitable for adults than for children at a certain (intermediate) rating level. The French comes to mind. The list of famous French players is, I think,  rather slanted toward the analytic side. Perhaps this helps explain Stigma's personal experience with improving faster in semiopen games than in open ones.

I offer this idea simply to give an idea of what a reason of the sort Markovich was wondering about might look like in practice, not to argue too hard for it as fact, for I am all too aware that I have no evidence. 

Markovich wrote on 09/30/09 at 20:11:35:
Also I don't think you can get around the, to me, obvious fact that open positions are fundamental.  This is in the nature of chess, and doesn't change from student to student.

Well, open positions are fundamental, in the same sense that endgames are--if by that we mean that closed positions eventually become open, while the reverse is not true. But the open games are not the same as open positions, and the above argument cuts both ways, as it shows that any opening will afford practice in open positions.

Similarly regarding the analogy between open games and algebra: I would suggest that it is tactics as such, not open games, that actually play the role of algebra, in other words that constitute an essential substratum of everything advanced; and that once again open games are here standing proxy for more general phenomena.


« Last Edit: 12/03/10 at 11:14:38 by ReneDescartes »  
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Markovich
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Re: Openings for adult class players
Reply #204 - 12/02/10 at 21:03:41
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Straggler wrote on 12/02/10 at 19:34:39:
Markovich wrote on 11/06/09 at 14:59:01:
Straggler wrote on 11/05/09 at 19:46:03:
If we patzers ought to be playing open positions, but ought also to play 1...e5, does this mean that we should play something like the Open Lopez, the Schliemann or the Petroff rather than the main line Lopez?

Yes, or the Archangel in one of its variants.

How about the Marshall, using Pavlovic as a guide? I'm slightly puzzled by Silman's review, where he says that "players under 1800 should go with the more positional lines, which are easy to learn and both safe and instructive". I'm around 1800 and rather fancy the Marshall, whereas I would be completely lost in the more positional lines.

(Sorry for the extremely belated response: it's taken me all this time to accept that 1...e5 really is the way to go.)


In the first place, I'm glad you decided to start playing 1...e5.  Only, don't give up in case you have some bad initial results, but just buckle down and prepare harder.  

Who am I to contradict the Great Silman, but I think he's wrong, at least in recommending "more positional" lines.  I think that highly tactical lines are best for improving anyone's chess below 2100 or so.  I've gone on and on, in this forum, about why improving players should strive for sharp, open chess.  Ad nauseam, many would say, but I'll continue to say it when I'm asked.

Silman can say, "All that study!" but A, that's chess, and B, if you study at all, you're likely to know more about any given position than your opponent, especially at the class level.  Prefer less study?  Take up parcheesi.

The main drawback to specializing in the Marshall is that you'll very rarely have a chance to play it.  It occurs only at the 8th move, and there are many ways for White to deviate on the 4th through 7th.  Just studying the Marshall will improve your game, of course, but you might want to look at other, earlier, adventurous tries for Black.  E.g. Classical, Archangel or Open.  My principle recommendation would be the "Berlin Classical," 3...Nf6 4.O-O Bc5.  In a great many cases at the 1800 level and even higher, White will just play d3, after which Black can claim that the Italian bishop is better than the Spanish one.   5.Nxe5 is the main theoretical challenge, and you must prepare something against it, but I doubt that you'll see it a great deal at your level.

Still you could try giving the Marshall a go; I'd be interested to see what happens.  Only I would suggest preparing for White's earlier deviations at least as much as for the Marshall proper.  In any case, good principles should go a long way in a system like the Marshall, so you may not really need to do a ton of preparation.

But what is an "adult" class player, someone who isn't trying to improve?  Maybe in that case he should just play whatever he likes.  Granted, if someone is trying to improve his game, it's a great advantage to be a kid, because kids learn so much faster.  But I can think of no reason why an adult who wants to improve should do otherwise than a kid should do, given the same level of strength.
  

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Straggler
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Re: Openings for adult class players
Reply #203 - 12/02/10 at 19:34:39
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Markovich wrote on 11/06/09 at 14:59:01:
Straggler wrote on 11/05/09 at 19:46:03:
If we patzers ought to be playing open positions, but ought also to play 1...e5, does this mean that we should play something like the Open Lopez, the Schliemann or the Petroff rather than the main line Lopez?

Yes, or the Archangel in one of its variants.

How about the Marshall, using Pavlovic as a guide? I'm slightly puzzled by Silman's review, where he says that "players under 1800 should go with the more positional lines, which are easy to learn and both safe and instructive". I'm around 1800 and rather fancy the Marshall, whereas I would be completely lost in the more positional lines.

(Sorry for the extremely belated response: it's taken me all this time to accept that 1...e5 really is the way to go.)
  
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Re: Openings for adult class players
Reply #202 - 11/25/10 at 16:35:39
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Nice that he goes for the most critical stuff against the Fritz-Ulvestadt. Also nice choice against the Caro-Kann. I have no idea how good it is. Finally nice that he covers 4.Be3 c6 5.h3 Bg7 6.f4 against the Pirc. I am less sure about 4.h3 Bg7 5.g4. I remember that according Vigus the Archbishop Attack is more dangerous if Black has played ...c6 already. Moreover I wonder then why not 4.h3 c6 5.g4 as well.
Certainly not nice is 6.cxd5 in the Queen's Gambit without mentioning 6...Nxd5 and 5...h6. Possibly I have to be more patient.
Still I recommend everybody to pick the cherries.
  

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Re: Openings for adult class players
Reply #201 - 11/25/10 at 11:31:59
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Hi All,

I thought I better post something before I get culled by Tony Kosten as he has threatened to do so in order to reach that magical 300 members  Grin (see the other thread http://www.chesspub.com/cgi-bin/yabb2/YaBB.pl?num=1290523139)

But seriously, I spent quite some time looking for an appropriate thread to make this post on opening repertoire as I did not want to start a new one (there are already too many). Came across this one and remembered this is a really nice thread. So I thought I will resurrect it. (I was actually looking for TN's two threads on constructing opening repertoires but could not locate it!)

In any event, just came across this website where a Bulgarian IM has posted his opening White repertoire with "extensive" analysis online free to download: see here http://online-chess.eu/. (Scroll down and download the .cbv file (click on "chess analysis"))  I am probably not qualified to look at this and make a pronouncement.

However, GM Dejan Bojkov has blogged about this  (here: http://dejanbojkov.blogspot.com/2010/11/bulgarian-international-master-kalin.htm...) and that was where I actually came across this.

BTW, GM Bojkov's blog is really good with excellent  annotations to selected games.

So, ChessPubbers, have a look and let the discussion commence ......
  

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Re: Openings for adult class players
Reply #200 - 11/13/09 at 09:06:23
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Pertti Saariluoma and his article in "Memory And Cognition, 1985" was what I remembered. Thanks for the links. I will read the two papers today.  Smiley
  

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Re: Openings for adult class players
Reply #199 - 11/13/09 at 04:37:50
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@Jupp

Very interesting. I realize that I need to refresh my knowledge on the psychology behind the different theories of chess skill. Could the scandinavian you mention be Finnish researcher and FM Pertti Saariluoma? A couple of relatively recent papers from him I found on the web:

http://control.hut.fi/hyotyniemi/publications/99_pelit.pdf

http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/download?doi=10.1.1.18.5701&rep=rep1&type=p...

Particularly the first one (from 1999) refers to whether positions are typical or not as a factor influencing chunk size and recall differently on different skill levels.
  

Improvement begins at the edge of your comfort zone. -Jonathan Rowson
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