theRomantic wrote on 12/30/09 at 06:35:35:
Is it worth playing openings you hate, or score very poorly with, in order to improve your chess?
I started out playing the Open Games and Tarrasch as Black with this in mind, and later expanded it to the Open Sicilian, Nc3 vs French/Caro, 4 Pawns vs Alekhine, and Austrian vs Modern/Pirc as White. I've played this whole repertoire for about two years now, spending little time studying the openings.
I've been a bit frustrated with my performance lately and so I did some analysis. It didn't take long to find the major problems: I score 27% in the Tarrasch, and about 35% against the French and Caro. I also score about 40% in the Sicilian Maroczy Bind as White. Everything else is at least respectable.
I do have a mind to keep playing mainline French, as I think it's important to learn how to play pawn chains. And I can appreciate the point of learning the Tarrasch. But I'm starting to question how much benefit I'm really deriving from some of these repertoire choices. If the focal point of my chess career was a tournament six months from now, I'd switch to the Grunfeld/KID and play 2.b3 vs the French, no question. These just fit my personality better (I like to attack) and I think are much more practical. I would strongly consider ditching the Maroczy Bind as well.
My goal is to get to 2000 ICC, I've been plateauing at 1500-1600 for a while now.
I'll let you in on a little secret. Internet blitz and bullet ratings are meaningless outside of the particular Internet chess server. Also, ICC ratings tend to oscillate dramatically (especially during a long session of blitz/bullet), and is not a reliable indicator of playing strength at tournaments. It is much more productive and satisfying to try to improve your OTB rating for standard time controls.
If you still want to set a goal to break the 2000 rating on ICC, then you only need to do three things:
a) Learn how to play very fast, especially being able to premove without blundering anything. It's no use being up material for nothing if you lose on time.
b) Ignore all opening theory and become a deadly chess tactician. The vast majority of blitz games are decided by either tactics or time, and both are linked to each other.
c) You need a thick skin; don't get depressed or angry when you lose, and don't become cocky when you win.
As for your openings, if you want to improve your standard chess, play main line openings. It will make you a better player in the long run. I'll provide one example of a 1.e4 repertoire you could use:
Sicilian: Open Sicilian, English Attack setup vs. most variations. It's theoretical but if you know White's key plans and motifs, especially in attacking on the kingside, you'll score well in practice. Against the Kan, play 5.Nc3 and 6.Bd3, and 9.Bf6 gf6 10.Nd5 and the Nxb5 sacrifice against the Sveshnikov.
Open Games: Play the Scotch Game, and study some of Kasparov's games to get a good idea of White's key plans.
French: Play 3.Nd2 and meet 3...c5 with 4.ed5 Qd5 5.Ngf3 cd4 6.Bc4 Qd6 7.Qe2 and 3...Nf6 4.e5 Nfd7 5.c3 c5 6.Bd3 Nc6 7.Ne2. Don't worry about Tzermiadianos's repertoire book, you won't need to know the theory in so much detail.
Pirc/Modern: Play the Austrian Attack or Be3/Qd2/f3.
Alekhine: 2.e5 Nd5 3.d4 d6 4.c4 Nb6 5.f4. Not because it's best, but because it is the most aggressive.
Scandinavian: 2.ed5 Qd5 3.Nc3/d4/Nf3/Bc4 and 2...Nf6 3.Nf3 Nd5 4.d4 and Be2/0-0/c4.
Other moves: If you start worrying about 1...Nc6, 1...b6 etc then your repertoire must be in good stead!
Quote:So what do you think in general? Does a student benefit from playing openings like the Maroczy Bind, mainline French as White as a relative beginner? Is playing these openings the most effective way to gain the sophistication in order to play them well? Or is it more efficient to play openings that one intuitively understands and slowly graduate up to more sophisticated openings.
The student benefits the most from playing the openings they like and are comfortable with. You will play much better in a slightly worse position you understand well than in a slightly better position where you have no idea of what to play. However, don't use this as an excuse for playing the BDG, Elephant Gambit, Sicilian Wing Gambit or other dodgy gambits.
Quote:I'm 30. I'd say my ICC rating is generally around 1600 and I feel like I'm giving up about 100 rating points playing the repertoire that I am. I don't think that 2000 ICC is such an unrealistic goal over a period of a few years.
If you trained mostly on tactics for the next year, using Chess Tactics Server, CT-ART and other available products, you would break 2000 ICC sooner than you think.
Quote:Yeah I could definitely use some help understanding the Tarrasch. I like to play gambits and I like to attack, and actually looking through my games I identified that as a bit of a weakness -- if there's a kingside attack I play very well, if there isn't I don't play well at all -- usually I just attack anyway and it fails. In the Tarrasch I have a real hard time putting together an attack, it feels like my pieces are bogged down defending d5. In particular I don't understand the point of "freeing" Bc8 if it just ends up acting as a pawn on e6. I feel like I need some initiative on the kingside in order to justify the weakness on d5, otherwise I'm just stuck defending.
Play through Kasparov's games from the 1980s in this opening to get a feel for where the pieces belong and when Black should either attack or defend. Also, the bishop usually goes on g4 rather than e6, and remember to play ...Nc6 before ...Nf6 to prevent a powerful 6.Bg5!.