grandpatzer wrote on 04/12/18 at 14:18:27:
Bancrates wrote on 04/11/18 at 22:24:24:
Maybe we should collectively publish a book - "Antidotes to the Bogey Openings" a la Experts on the Sicilian.
That would be an interesting book, but on what basis shall we establish what these "Bogey Openings" are? I guess we should try to find some bogey openings that are common to most players, but that's not easy...
Yes, it would be hard to write such a book. The above posts show that for some players it's stable pawn structures that drive them crazy, while for other players it's just the reverse, just as I'm sure for some it's positions that are too bland and for others positions that are too violent.
Even worse, the whole idea of the bogey opening is that
the known theory yields a poor record for the given player. So such a book could not simply reproduce the best theory against the given openings!
That fact suggests that our problems with a bogey opening lie not in the opening, but in our general chess skills. Perhaps we are too hesitant in fast-play situations, or too reckless. Perhaps we try to force matters in one spot when maneuvering against two weaknesses would eventually crack the opponent under our static advantage. Perhaps we don't ask whether pawn breaks really give more activity to our opponent than to us. Maybe we never understood the process of creating and attacking queenside weaknesses by advancing the a-pawn, so that we can't pull it off when we need to and don't understand when our opponent is about to clobber us.
That in turn would mean that the best things to do against bogey openings are, first, to look over one's own games in them with a good teacher to see what weak skills or misconceptions the resulting middlegames and endgames expose, then practice those skills, and, second, to examine a bunch of master games by specialists in those openings to see how White and Black win when they win.
I also wonder if the issue is psychological - we are perhaps told, and believe, the opening played by our opponeny may not be good and as a result place extra pressure on ourselves to find the winning lines instead of just playing the position ?