The students I'm talking about have graduated from 1.e4 e5 systems and are looking at some Sicilian structures and some semi open games. Here are some typical positions to consider:
However, a question that arises to me is whether it is more important to play and study a diverse series of openings, or whether it is more important to deeply study a few openings. From a repertoire point of view, top players have tried both methods successfully, but for lesser players it is usually easier to play or learn a small repertoire which may expand over time. For kids, it is surely important to get them to examine as many types of position as possible, but at what stage should we be directing them to deeply study a repertoire?
Of course, getting the kids to work on their tactical, technical and positional understanding is vitally important, but opening choices are a fundamental question for all of us.
So I put the question to all readers of this blog: do you think opening diversification of specific opening knowledge is more important for an improving young player? And when, or if, does it change from one to one to the other?
I think you can understand more subtle themes in a known context by deeply looking at one opening.
ReplyDeleteHowever no one opening holds all the themes relevant in a chess education.
Also- kids repertoires aren't fixed, they'll change 10 times before they settle. So as long as the focus is on educating on themes, I don't think it matters too much whether it's varied or the same opening, provided the messages are getting through.
As a parent I would look forward to seeing my kids learn the basics of chess until they know some strategies on how to win games. I think constant practice can make a difference. The openings are a helpful factor that one should know about in order to excel in chess.
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Lovely post thanks for share
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