Improve with repertoire selection? (Openings)
? I am a Canadian player of around 2000 strength. I have been so for some
? time. I have been frustrated so for some time. I keep flipping openings
? frequently and getting nowhere quickly. After yet another mediocre
? performance at a tournament, I asked a FIDE master bits of advice for me
? to improve (In addition of course to this wonderful site! ). This was
? his reply:
?
? 1) Study the opening well and postions arising from it. He said you should
? know some endgame stuff but it doesnt really help to learn how to defend an
? endgame one pawn down if you get blown away in the middlegame by some
? opening theory 20 moves deep that your opponent knows well.
?
? 2) Pick openings that suit your style. To dtermine your style, look at
? well annotated games of GREAT masters (GMS of course). Tactical
? dragons like Tal,Shirov or positional boa constrictors like
? Karpov,Petrosain, Andersson or somewhere inbetween! Looking at modern GMs
? also give you more up to date theory as well. I like Capablanca but all
? they played back then was a lot of Queen's Gambit and such. Not much
? theory back then on the Sicilian Sveshnikov!
?
? 3) Once you've got a player with whose style you like, chances are you
? will like the opening choices they made too. Hence you can copy their
? repertoire because they have done all the work for you! There seems to be
? logic in his advice. Well what do you think? Any takers?
Hi juggernaut
As a relative beginner to this game the advice you got sounds reasonable to me. I think one of the most daunting aspects of the game for people at my level is just what constitutes a 'good' opening. I think from my own limited experience I would say 'One that you're comfortable playing.' I use Chessbase 9 and it's an awesome program for opening study as you can really get in depth reports from the program which allows you to study and analyze just about every variation (once you get the hang of the method )I love the style of people like Morphy, Fischer and Kasparov, but I'm aspiring to great talents way beyond my aspirations, and then some! I don't know your preferences, but Judit Polgar has played some great, exciting chess in recent times and has a repetoire that someone of your talent may well enjoy looking at. Any other advice or opinions would be welcome.
Complete thread:
- Guidelines - Moderator, 2005-04-04, 16:24
(Openings)
- Improve with repertoire selection? - juggernaut, 2005-04-05, 00:23
- Improve with repertoire selection? - Parsdeclined, 2005-04-15, 20:39
- Improve with repertoire selection? - Southpaw, 2005-05-03, 17:58
- Improve with repertoire selection? - juggernaut, 2005-05-07, 21:12
- Improve with repertoire selection? - Southpaw, 2005-05-10, 18:40
- Improve with repertoire selection? - juggernaut, 2005-05-11, 00:52
- Improve with repertoire selection? - juggernaut, 2005-05-11, 00:52
- Improve with repertoire selection? - Southpaw, 2005-05-10, 18:40
- Improve with repertoire selection? - juggernaut, 2005-05-07, 21:12
- Improve with repertoire selection? - Southpaw, 2005-05-03, 17:58
- Improve with repertoire selection? - Parsdeclined, 2005-04-15, 20:39
- Improve with repertoire selection? - juggernaut, 2005-04-05, 00:23