I would also like to add my 0.02$. All purely subjective, of course.
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?
a) Hate? Definitely not! If you hate an opening make sure you don't (have to) play it. It's very important to get positions you feel comfortable with. Even a slight disadvantage is no problem if you get a variation you are fond of and you know you handle well.
b) You score poorly with? Hard to say. IMHO there are enough alternatives. Just play something else.
Quote: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.
First of all, you say you are an aggressive player. The Maroczy is purely positional. Get rid of it ASAP.
I see 3 options for the rest:
1) Pragmatism. Replace all low performance main lines by decent sidelines leading to positions you like. For example the exchange CK or a carefully chosen 3.Nd2 sideline against the FR. This will both drastically reduce the workload, reduce the risk and get you out of the opening with a playable position. Then expand your opening repertoire from there.
2) Find your openings for the next 10 years and switch now. This one is self-explaining. Move away from everything you don't like or you don't want to stick to. Identify the openings you are most comfortable with, buy a
Starting Out (or equivalent) book for each. Work through them, play a lot of games and look the variations up later. Your short term results will probably suffer until you understand the new openings. After that you'll be more happy than ever before.
3) Combine both. Fix a couple of problems, replace an opening or two and make sure to narrow the repertoire down until you understand everything reasonably well. Then expand from there.
As already said by others, the most important thing for people below 2000 is tactics. The solution here is trivial: Just get a good book explaining tactics. Then register at one of the free tactics training sites and burn through 10-20 random puzzles per day.
GM Rowson writes (either in The 7 Deadly Chess Sins or on Chess for Zebras) that often the main problem for players trying and failing to improve is not knowledge but implementation. Following that it's probably a good idea to focus on stuff you can actually use, and then practice it to get familiar with it. So you should consider narrowing your repertoire down.