Background:
My dad, uncle, two cousins and a couple of their kids all play chess so playing is somewhat of a family thing.
I really liked chess when I was a kid but got kicked out of the chess class at school when I was 6 or something for talking during "silent game time" or w/e.
Didn't play again until HS. My dad started studying a bit then and we went to the Las Vegas National Open each year. I also started a chess club my junior/senior year. Everyone was awful (I maybe lost 1 blitz game?). The only match I brokered vs. a local public HS we won but I lost my game (I missed a mate in 1 with an easy win, so embarrassing).
In college I played much more sporadically but my senior year when I was club president we won the Midwest amateur team tournament by running super hot (board 1, 3 and me on 4 didn't lose a game, board 2 didn't win a game but who cared, lol) and then lost in the semis months later to a team from Caltech (it was literally scheduled during our finals).
My rating peak was 1801 in 2004 right before I basically quit and started playing poker instead.
I didn't play again until 2010, where I played for a couple months and in the National Open with my family.
Current Status
Haven't played at all since 2010 seriously or casually. Barely played since ~2005. USCF rating is 1778. I am 34.
I'm planning to play in the Las Vegas National Open this year which takes place in June mainly because lots of my family will be there. So, I'd like to use that as a focal point for getting back into chess.
Ideally I don't repeat 2010 where I just play for a couple months then quit again for 5 years. Having a log in Health & Fitness has helped me stick to lifting so I'm hoping this log can help me stick to chess!
Goals:
Short-term: Prepare for the National Open which is ~3 months from now. Not sure I should have a performance goal there. It should probably be "have fun." But having the most fun for me often means grinding smallish advantages then offering a draw (ugh) then watching other people play.
Long-term: Some sort of ratings goal? I honestly don't know what other kind of long-term goal to have tbh. I guess 2000+ USCF?
Approach
Right now it will be focused on the short-term until after June:
1) Refamiliarize myself with my past opening repertoire. I want a workable system for June and can re-evaluate afterwards if I need to.
- White: Colle-Zukertort
- Black vs. e4: Accelerated Dragon
- Black vs. d4: King's Indian Defense or Modern Benoni. Probably should just stick to KID which is what I actually used to play but never learned properly.
2) Play some games.
- Blitz to get in opening reps (although iirc I always saw different OTB responses than I experienced in online blitz)
- Longer format games online and possibly OTB at some point.
3) Tactics. One thing I have done the past year is done some chesstempo tactics stuff. My rating is ~1900–1925 the last few weeks fwiw.
4) Pick a middlegame or endgame book to study from. I feel I should choose between these for the short-term and not try to do both. Here are books I own from which to possibly focus (you can see most are from ~2004/2005 right before I quit, lololol):
Secrets of Modern Chess Strategy (John Watson)
Chess Strategy in Action (John Watson)
Dvoretsky's Endgame Manual (Dvoretsky)
Victor Bologan: Selected games 1985–2004 (Victor Bologan)
The Most Instructive Games of Chess Ever Played (Irving Chernev)
The Art of Attack in Chess (Vladimir Vukovic)
I thought I had a book on the Benoni (Watson) and Modern Chess Strategy (Pachman) but maybe they are at my parent's house.
Psychology
This could also be titled "How to make sure I have fun." Also probably the most important part of this entire log.
Historically I definitely like chess, often I love chess. Given my background, though, it seems I may simply love seeing my rating go up.
As soon as it got more difficult, playing in rated tournaments became a lot less "fun." I've also always had a bad habit of offering premature draws even though endgames used to be my strength. This often would happen later in multi-day tournaments so I'm sure is partially a stamina thing (I very rarely had quick wins or losses).
Playing rated tournaments or any rated games imo is similar to taking the SAT or midterm/final, it takes a lot out of the player. This is the largest reason I don't really play chess. It's tough pill to swallow after a stressful day of work or to dedicate a normally relaxing weekend on long, grueling games.
I don't really know what to do about this but to "push through it" lol. But it seems I will just quit again if I try that.
Initial questions
1) What is a reasonable amount of time to schedule each week considering I'm going from basically zero chess to some amount of chess? Maybe three hour long sessions a week?
2) How should I split up my time overall? Perhaps 15% tactics, 15% openings, 25% playing, 25% middlegame or endgame studying?
3) Any psychological tips? I am pretty sure my own hangups are extremely common,
.
4) Should I get a coach? I always wanted one when I was younger but my parents and I couldn't ever really find one. I like the idea of John Bartholomew via chess.com b/c he also lives locally. Also when he was younger Sean Nagle had to step in for him at the Chess Renaissance festival b/c I was grinding him down,
. I have no clue how much coaches do or should cost.
Cliffs
USCF "B" player. Wants to live the dream of being an expert. Played barely any chess in the last 10 years. Is he up to the challenge?
Last edited by The Yugoslavian; 03-15-2015 at 12:43 PM.