
Denys Nevozhai
Road Back to 2300
Ratings aren't what they used to be.Recently I resumed my 341-part series "Road to 2-Dan on Shogi Wars" but still have occasionally been playing blitz chess and practicing Puzzle Streak. I overhauled my openings, instead playing (maybe I should prepare a bingo card, and play even more):
- Alekhine Defense
- Trompowsky Attack
- Wing Gambit (response to Sicilian Defense)
I'm still getting worse middlegame positions, but opponents are unfamiliar with these pawn structures, and also with these endgames. I am playing with goals:
- Look at what the opponent is planning (don't get mated or lose pieces)
- Activate pieces on open lines
- Be willing to trade into any endgame which isn't dead lost
So... what sets apart 2300 players from lower-rated players? It's a matter of being consistently good with:
- Following general principles (activate your pieces!)
- Time management (including being willing to spend time when it matters)
- Endgame knowledge/skill (don't chalk up a win before the opponent resigns)
- Subverting expectations (seeing and disrupting the opponent's plan; only worry about pawns during endgames)
In practice, what does this look like?
I don't care what Stockfish says; 6... c5? is a critical strategic error, although thankfully not fatal this time!
To get a rating above 2300, I need to start playing real openings. Openings that I should practice at slower time controls than 3+2, so I can properly learn them.
Image credit: Denys Nevozhai
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