I am rated about 2000, but I am not a normal 2000 player, I have won some tournaments already, there are some other 2000 players who just build up themselves with c4 g3, and don't do anything than waiting for their opponent, this might be enough to get to 2000 by drawing against higher rated players, but this won't win you tournaments ... I also drew an IM already and recently performed 2400 performance in a blitz tournament ... but tbh. currently I don't have so much time to play ...
you say open positions are fundamental? I completely agree, but the spanish and QGD are actually more closed than open positions, and the french can very well be an open position, when you just play 3. ... dxe4, and the sicilian with e6 is open anyway,
the nimzo is open, the modern benoni is open, and well against c4 ... c4 often remains closed, when played by weaker players, but when c4 remains closed, black is already equal, if white wants to have something in c4 he must play d4 at some point and you can just exchange your c5 pawn against it ...
and the hedgedog (misspelled it as eagle previously

, because I know the opening as "Igel", the names sound just so similar) is very well playable ... and btw in contrary what chess literature says 1.c4 2. g3 does not deny the hedgedog, black can just play nc6 and still play b6 Bb7, it's perfectly playable ...
btw, markovich, you always recommend the tarrasch,
I can't recommend it, the position is open yes, but you just end up defending your isolated d5 pawn, and when you lose that pawn you are just one pawn down in the endgame ... if white knows his stuff, you'll get down in this opening and can not hope for much than a draw ...
the spanish ressembles maybe the czech benoni a bit, but definately not the other benonis. Since the pawn remains on e5, it ressembles more an old indian opening ...
1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. Bb5 a6 4. Ba4 Nf6 5. O-O Be7 6. Re1 b5 7. Bb3 d6 8. c3
O-O 9. h3 Na5 (9... Nb8 10. d4 Nbd7 11. Nbd2 Bb7 12. Bc2 Re8 13. Nf1 Bf8 14.
Ng3 g6 15. a4 c5 16. d5 c4 17. Bg5 h6 18. Be3 Nc5 19. Qd2 h5 20. Bg5 Be7 21.
Ra3 Rb8 22. Rea1 Bc8 23. axb5 axb5 24. Ra7) 10. Bc2 c5 11. d4 Qc7 12. Nbd2 Nc6
13. d5 Nd8 14. a4 Rb8 15. axb5 axb5 16. b4 c4 17. Nf1 Ne8 18. N3h2 f5 *
don't know why people are so stupid and recommend e5 to beginners ...
open positions yes ... e5 spanish, d5 Queen's Gambit NO
Markovich wrote on 03/20/11 at 02:04:40:
battleangel, you don't say how strong you are or what your goals are. However, I submit that if you can't play open positions very well, changing your systems isn't going to help. The problem is in you, not your systems.
You have some things to say about systems that seem quite strange to me. There are many affinities between the Closed Spanish and the Benoni, but I've never seen it compared to the King's Indian. Never would I recommend that an improving player take up either the Closed Spanish or the QGD in one of its Orthodox (3...Nf6) forms. What I do say is that open positions are fundamental and that it's a grave mistake to think you can run away from them by taking up the French or the Stonewall. There are no systems that can insulate you from having to play chess well, and nothing is more basic to that than piece play in open positions.