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Normal Topic Thoughts on the Older Kaufman book? (Read 4158 times)
RoleyPoley
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Re: Thoughts on the Older Kaufman book?
Reply #8 - 12/05/16 at 10:43:46
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I thought the Kaufman books were considered very good books - good opening selection and analysis - but didnt give much explanation...
  

"As Mikhail Tal would say ' Let's have a bit of hooliganism! '"

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JEH
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Re: Thoughts on the Older Kaufman book?
Reply #7 - 12/04/16 at 09:13:26
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I had been giving some thought recently to my old repertoire books and what I'd do to take them forward, i.e. fill gaps, update with other books etc.

I found about a couple of dozen of e4 based ones in my book collection! I actually think Kaufman's first repertoire book is the best one. 

It's the only one to recommend the Ruy Lopez, which is pretty ambitious. However I've heard commented by players on my tournament circuit that they don't like to play against the exchange and so avoid a6. The nice thing about the Lopez is once you've got the ones without a6 covered, you've got a choice of the Exchange, the Mainline, the Qe2 systems, the d3 systems, the d4 systems to confound Black with.

As for the Sicilian, most often recommended is a one stop shop solution like the Alapin, the Grand Prix or the Closed Sicilian. Those are fine, but the "Rossolimo & Friends" approach is a nice middle ground between those and the Open Sicilian. You've got the books by Jones and Kornev to expand on that.

I think the rest of the recomendations are great and can be built on.

Against e4, you can't go wrong with chosing e5! The Berlin is a great choice if you are OK with defending endings. Cox's book covers the strategy for this ending excellently. I expect though you will won't get it very often.

As for d5, you can't got wrong with chosing d5! The Semi-slav is an excellent opening, but very complex and therefore much work required, and you have to be ready for the Marshall gambit. Personally, I would prefer a Cambridge Springs here which sits well in the Semi-Slav/Orthodox QGD repertoire. Pancyzk and Ilczuk's book and Andrew Martin's DVD could bridge to this.




  

Those who want to go by my perverse footsteps play such pawn structure with fuzzy atypical still strategic orientations

Clowns to the left of me, jokers to the right, stuck in the middlegame with you
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Re: Thoughts on the Older Kaufman book?
Reply #6 - 12/02/16 at 21:00:13
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Yes definitely. Its good.
  
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Re: Thoughts on the Older Kaufman book?
Reply #5 - 12/02/16 at 19:56:42
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I think that it's a great book, considering the amount of material that it covers it's an exceptional value.   

You can change the repertoire as you improve and grow out of it naturally, that's not any more of a problem than with any other opening book.
  
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Re: Thoughts on the Older Kaufman book?
Reply #4 - 12/02/16 at 19:36:12
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For me that book was very effective. Lots of people dislike repertoire books but from my point of view, for an amateur with limited study time, they are almost essential. When are most of us going to get an IM or GM to build a repertoire with us ? Use it as the base, learn with the lines. If there is anything you really don't like, then as you suggest with the QGD Lasker, use something you know.
  
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Re: Thoughts on the Older Kaufman book?
Reply #3 - 12/02/16 at 18:37:50
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At 1500? That book is fine. Most opening books are fine. Openings aren't what win or lose games at that level, at my level (upper 1800s), or even up to 2000 or 2100. Tactics - gross errors and minor tactics - are what determine games. So if you feel comfortable with Kaufman's choices, go with them and then focus on tactics and classic games collections!
  
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Re: Thoughts on the Older Kaufman book?
Reply #2 - 12/02/16 at 17:26:20
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The old Kaufman book is OK with a bit of work on it, but I think you'd be better off building on your current repertoire a component at a time, rather than switching the whole thing to an old book. 

I think what you currently have is fine, but if you really feel the need to change it, pick the one component only (e.g. White vs Sicilian) that you are least happy with or performing the worst with, and just build on that with study/practice.

Plus do lots of tactics practice if you really want to improve!

  

Those who want to go by my perverse footsteps play such pawn structure with fuzzy atypical still strategic orientations

Clowns to the left of me, jokers to the right, stuck in the middlegame with you
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Re: Thoughts on the Older Kaufman book?
Reply #1 - 12/02/16 at 16:52:10
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To add, I didn't want the newer Kaufman book because I wanted to stick with 1. e4 and because the Grunfeld scares the living daylights out of me!!!
  
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Thoughts on the Older Kaufman book?
12/02/16 at 16:51:07
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Hey,


The Chess Advantage in Black and White, is it still relevant?

I'm a club player (1500).  I'd like to improve a bit, but I'm older and I don't have any delusions of making it past 2100 or so.

My strengths are in simple positions and in the endgame (most of my chess education is through study of Capablanca).  My weakness is messy positions (the Grunfeld exchange is basically the worst-case scenario).

I'd like a repertoire that favors my strengths, and minimizes my weaknesses.  Additionally, the environment in which I play has a lot of youngsters who are very good at tactics but not so great at endings, and the time controls are usually G/60.

Right now, with very little opening study, I play as white: Italian game, tarrasch french, panov-botvinnik, closed sicilian.

As black: stenitz defense to ruy lopez and QGD laskers.

I recently tried Sam Collins A Simple Opening Repertoire for White but I did not mesh well with the IQP.


I was wondering if you guys thought the older Kaufman book (The Chess Advantage in Black and White) would be a good fit for me?  I am very happy with my defense to 1. d4, so I would be skipping over that part of the book, but using everything else.

Basically, replacing the 1. e4 e5 bit of my reperitore on both sides, white with the Ruy Exchange, and black with the Berlin.  And then against the Sicilian with Rossolimo/Moscow and this weird b3 line vs e6.

And then getting my opening knowledge a good bit deeper (it's very shallow, right now!)


Is this a good fit for me?  My main concern is that the focus on the Exchange/Berlin in the open games may be detrimental to my chess development as it sidesteps the rich middle games that the ruy lopez is known for, does this sound like a valid concern?

Will it be difficult to get the full point against lower rated players who are playing for a draw, with these lines?

Is this a repertoire that can grow with me?  Would I feel limited if I were playing this at 2000?


Thanks!
  
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