Hello everyone,
I've been thinking of returning to chess after a long break. My strength is probably somewhere between 1900 and 2000 national ELO. I did some tactics and my mind still solves them pretty fast but one thing that bothers (and has always bothered) my inner perfectionism are the openings.
Let me explain a bit. I used to play low theory stuff before, like London, Colle Zukertot with white and some 1...d6 systems with black. Most boring was 1.e4 d6 2.d4 Nf6 3.Nc3 e5 - I liked the endgame but gave away too many draws vs lower rated. Also 4.Nf3 Nbd7 and it's a solid line for black but I still don't really enjoy playing it. Vs 1.d4 I played some ...d6 stuff with Bf5 (Janowski Indian), but this is not really sound vs anyone stronger.
So I was planning to re-build my opening repertoire. I think toying around with London, Trompowsky, Colle Zukertot is fine for my level (isn't it?), because there are so many options there. I MIGHT learn some proper Queens Gambit etc. in the future, but it will take time. Anyway, my biggest problem are my black openings. I do have some that I'd like to learn, but the amount of theory when I open the book(s) just drives me crazy. I start going through every single line, memorizing it, even though I am FULLY aware that most of my opponents would be out of book long ago. I just can't help myself and after this torture I usually get fed up with chess even though it's only temporarily. But it's a circle that keeps repeating.
So what I'm looking for here is some advice, can even be psychological one.
I'd like to learn 2 respected openings against 1.e4 and 2 vs 1.d4. I still wish them to be low on theory.
So my ideas were: vs 1.e4 Sicilian Taimanov AND Petroff. I hate giving too many options to my opponent so 2...Nc6 is definitely off. And Petroff can definitely generate winning chances under a 2000 level (at least that was true some 8 years ago).
Vs. 1.d4 I was thinking Nimzo+QID (or Bogo-Indian instead of QID), and still not sure about the 2nd one. I think Nimzo/QID complex is very rich itself and I can play different continuations in most of the lines in order to surprise my prepared opponents. So maybe I shouldn't yet worry about the 2nd opening here.
So to sum it up: I need your recommendation on how to start studying all of this without burning out. And maybe even some different opening recommendations. I like open positions, lots of mobility and space and preferably as low theory as possible while still being in a sound territory.
I am 26 if that helps.
P.S. Is Fundamental Chess Openings good choice for me? I have it and it seems good to get some basic grasp on the openings but I can't help myself until I have expanded it all to infinity with the help of Houdini's book or books on a particular opening...