LostTactic wrote on 10/24/11 at 02:50:38:
I think that once I reach the extent of my opening theory in my next game, I'm going to make sure I spend at least 2 /3mins thinking per move, as some of the blunders I think happened because I didn't spend enough time calculating.
No, it's a matter of seeing the threat, not a calculation problem. See Heisman's favourite topic "Is it Safe?".
Solution: When you've decided on a move, stop thinking for a few seconds. Make it a ritual, look somewhere else ... out of the window ... it doesn't matter. Then focus on the board again and check if your opponent has a simple refutation for your move. Look at all captures and checks, then the simple threads like forks and double attacks. If you don't find anything, trust your calculation and play the move.
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I did have an ambition to try and learn 3 openings vs d4/e4 and a system vs c4, however, that was a stupid idea.
Congratulations. You are right. Get back to this when you're FM.
Quote: I'm just going to try and learn 1 opening very well against each. Most likely the French vs e4, NID/14 vs d4 and Botvinik Symmetrial English vs c4. I do have a bit of knowledge on the Semi-Slav, so I'll probably still use this until I feel confident enough to play the NID/14 otb.
All respectable openings in line with what you explained.
But there's something I don't quite understand. You're playing the Semi-Slav. That's a wild opening with which black fights for the initiative. Why didn't you choose the Classical Slave (4. - dxc4) ? That's exactly the opening you're looking for. Rock solid, boring, positional, and if white wants a sharp game he has to take huge risks.
The Slav can even be played against English and Reti (precise move orders are important though if white refrains from playing routine moves). This means it cuts down on the amount of theory quite a bit. The motifs even overlap with French dxe4 lines, although the perfect companion would be either Caro-Kann or Scandinavian with Qd5.
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With regards to HeismanI watched a couple video's earlier and found them quite useful, they're quite long though, so will probably take me a month or more to get through them all.
You can save time by starting with the articles on ChessCafe. Read them from new to old. Heisman cross-references his older columns.
Quote:Thanks for the advice.
You're welcome