Uhohspaghettio wrote on 06/30/11 at 19:48:18:
Willempie wrote on 06/30/11 at 17:40:32:
I dunno, it would seem that studying the middle game via this route severely limits the broader middle game understanding as it is more difficult to "swith".
How is analyzing openings and reading what others say on them actually
inferior to studying some randomish position yourself and coming to conclusions as you fancy, perhaps assisted with Houdini (which isn't by yourself anyway)? Have you ever heard of the saying "don't re-invent the wheel"? There is a reason why Anand performs better than Philidor did and it's not because Philidor didn't bother to study his own games.
Don't put words in my mouth, please. Where do I say I just study some random positions?
I do study openings, just not as a repertoire. I usually study a line when a certain game triggered my interest or sometimes a piece of analysis in here.
With repertoires I have seen too many players (myself included) fall into the same pitfalls:
-Overstudying lines before daring to play them
-Using a simplified repertoire and thus getting into problems when the middle game (or opening) is different. That is what often happens when people use a one-book repertoire as white (often advance French, advance CK, c3 sicilian etc).
-Using lines that just dont work for them, as a result of other lines in their repertoire or of economising the repertoire (see above) or of having a certain book.
-Basing a repertoire on a style which they dont have.
I could go on a little, but this usually applies to people who work on a repertoire and are below 2000 elo. I used to have a "one book" repertoire (Italian, Closed sicilian etc), but I noticed that at some point this wasnt working for me anymore. So I decided to change my repertoire (1.e4 main lines). That did help, but only a little. So I decided to just stop with it and play whatever fancies me at that moment. Since then results have only gone up. Whether that is due to not having a repertoire or because I play mostly main lines (Cox had convinced me

) is open to debate.
Quote:
Kasparov said Nakamura's latest ICC blitz opening forays were "a waste of time", so that is what Kasparov thinks of your "terra incognito". But I'm not saying it's a bad idea to do that sometimes, just that it's good to have and understand a repertoire.
I dont know, he did win Hoogovens didnt he?
Edited: Moderator's Note: Edited to remove an ad hominem attack in the original quote. ~SF July 1, 2011.