Denys Nevozhai
Road to 2300
To get better results than the average player, do what they aren't doing.Recently I took a break from my 338-part series "Road to 1-Dan on Shogi Wars" and decided to refocus my efforts on chess. Tired of losing and drawing in familiar fashion, I overhauled my openings, instead playing (maybe I should prepare a bingo card):
- Alekhine Defense
- Budapest Gambit
- Elephant Gambit
- Indian Defense
- Ruy Lopez - Berlin Defense, Rio Gambit Accepted
- Trompowsky Attack
Sure, in most of these I would get worse middlegame positions, but opponents were unfamiliar with these pawn structures. After playing Puzzle Streak hundreds of times, next I played with 3 goals:
- Don't get checkmated or clearly lost positions (pay careful attention to opponents' threats).
- Activate pieces on open lines.
- Be willing to trade into a favorable endgame.
In practice, what does this look like?
So... what's the difference between a 2200, 2300, and 2400 player? It's a matter of being consistently good with:
- Opening knowledge/skill
- Following general principles
- Tactical vision
- 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)
What does coffeehouse chess (setting traps) look like?
Honestly, I don't know how these games happened, but a win is a win! But seriously, I should study some real openings if someday I want a master title...
Image credit: Denys Nevozhai