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Agree that the OP should just play the Open Sicilian. Some early f2-f4 lines might be recommended, a la Beating the Sicilian 3 some years ago. Against the French, why not some of the more aggressive but sound gambits? For instance, there is the "universal Gambit," or "Korchnoi Gambit" I think it's called in the Tarrasch. With 3.Nc3 you can play 3...Bb4 4.a3 Bxc3+ 5.bc de 6.Qg4 (more or less sound), and against 3...Nf6 4.Bg5 Be7 5.e5 Nfd7 6.h4. The "Monte Carlo Exchange" is just nothing for White; at best, White gets a slightly inferior version of the Queen's Gambit Accepted with 3.e3 e5. Against the Caro I'd suggest the Advance with 4.Nc3 and throwing the Kingside pawns at Black's light-squared Bishop (see John Nunn's games, for instance). Or perhaps the classical 3.Nc3 de 4.Nxe4 Bf5 5.Ng3 Bg6, and choose one of the lines that combine Bc4, N1e2-f4, and h2-h4. Black is OK in those but he really needs to know exactly what to do or could end up dead in a dozen moves, and the various move orders make things somewhat tricky for the second player. Even if Black plays everything correctly the game is just equal; White isn't down material or anything. You know what I would recommend, really? Pick the aggressive lines that were popular by top GMs 20 years ago. The vast majority of the time those lines are still sound and they have excellent surprise value. Top GMs moved on because they were well-investigated, but down below IM level these lines can score extremely well. And you're still playing good chess! Normally it's just "well-worked out chess," but the well-worked out part doesn't often trickle down to the amateur level. How many amateurs have hundreds of back issues of Informator? You aren't going to surprise anyone with the 150 Attack these days, for instance--I'd try something else. See what everyone at your club plays, and then choose something else! That's what I'd recommend. But make sure they're sound lines with high pedigrees, whether or not they're popular any more. I'm sure that the aggressive lines that Kasparov, Ivanchuk, Shirov, Anand, Gelfand, Short, Bareev, and Timman (some of the top-10 players in July of 1992, for instance), are not "unsound." Moving a little further down the list, you could find what players like Knaak, Gurevich, Sokolov, Nunn, Vaganian, Epishin, Dreev, Piket, Ljubojevic, Portisch, Kengis, etc. were playing back then--all top 50 players in the world. Those players were not playing junk; pick the aggressive lines from their games and bring them back into practice!
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