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I assure you - I will never play the Tarrasch again. If I remember correctly, it was advice from the old Russian school that said if you lose with an opening 3 times in a row, you should abandon it, because it will always have a negative connotation in your mind. I gave the Tarrasch more chances than that. I think my record with it in USCF tourney games was something like 1 win, 1 draw, and 9 losses or something outrageous like that. Maybe it was one or two more draws than that, but I remember that it was only one win in 10+ games, and the win was a tough fight against a kid rated 400 below me. That ship has sailed. I play e4 as white, including several wild gambits, for open, tactical games. As black, I've gone back and forth between e5 and e6 as my main response to 1. e4 over the years, and I'm happy with that. Lately, I've been contemplating trying other responses to e4, mostly to learn more about them so I can face them better as white. The Caro Kann in particular has given me trouble as white, so I figured I'd learn a lot about it if I played it as black, and I'd be able to handle it better. That's actually why I started playing the French as black years ago, and that went from being the opening I hated seeing the most as white to my favorite opening to play against as white. Actually, it was my black response to d4 that prompted this thread. I've been playing the Classical Dutch for the most part against 1. c4 and 1. d4 for a while now, with decent results. I'm just wondering if my lack of knowledge of more common openings might be hurting my overall development as a player. Should I try playing the Queen's Gambit Declined for a while, just because I don't know what it's all about? Or some Indian openings? I don't even know what the Indian openings are, other than that they all start with 1. d4 Nf6. I've heard names like Nimzo-Indian, Queen's Indian, King's Indian, etc, but I have no idea which is which. Is that a bad thing for a 1700 level player?
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