How do I get to 2000 USCF?

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Avatar of anotherchessplayer1

Hi, I am a sophomore in hs hoping to be 2000+ by the end of junior year. I have been playing chess since kindergarten and stopped in 5th grade with an 870 rating. This past summer I have been practicing a lot on chess.com. I went to my first tourney since 5th gradr about 2 weeks ago and my rating went up to 1077 and I performed at 1211. I want to how and what I need to study in order to become 2000+. I've noticed that my opening repertoire is horrible however my tactics are decent. what shall I do?

Avatar of anotherchessplayer1

sorry for the multiple posts... I submitted this from the app on my phone. must be a glitch

Avatar of Till_98

Hello anotherchessplayer, many people ask this questions, here my answer to it:

How to get a good tournament player?

There are 3 main pillars of a successfull training program:

1.Tournament games(Otb games)

You need to participate in chess tournaments to preserve your playing strength and to test the skills you have acquired with your homely analysis. Of course there are no obbjections to playing some relatively "weak" tournaments, but to many of them will at the very most increase your Ego, not your playing strength.How often and how much you should play is contingent on your amount of time and your own preferences. An ideal cycle would be: 1 tournament, followed by 6/8 weeks rest, analysis of your played games and continued training. For most players 50 tournament games in a year are enough, but as I said, you have your own preferences so only play as much as you like and as much as you can analyse afterwards. It can sometimes happen that you played too many games and get tired, so you miss easy tactics. When that happens you should make a pause of chess for at least 2 weeks.

2.Analysis of the played games

Playing alone wont impove your game as much as possible. Everybody of us knows players who play and play in various clubs but never get better. They are stuck at one level because they only play chess but never learn anything from their mistakes. Its the same with swimming: When you never take steps to improve you will never make any progress and stuck at the same level where you learned swimming(probably as a kid).A good and thorough analysis of your games will prompt you to conclusions and eventually to an overhaul of your chosen opening lines. Middlegame-strategies and tactical possibilities will emerge. You should also consider psychological factors: Did you feel less then sterling during the game? How did your feelings change during the game?  Do also think of other factors like time pressure and mental and physical tiredness as reasons for bad moves. A good analysis does not only reveal your (decisive) mistakes but improves also your analytical abilities. Take as much time for your game until you found important improvements and cleared all your questions. You should have a better understanding of the opening you played and of the plans that were availible in the middlegame.Of course I can help you as a stronger player with your analysis, but you should also give it a try for some of your games(whether online or OTB).

3.Homely training program 

Unfortunately theres for no one, who wants to get a good chess player, an replacement for hard work. A good trainings program could be like the following one with 3 parts: openings, endgame and "chess learning".

a) openings

:Every chessgame starts with the opening so its important to reach a reasonable position for the coming middlegame.But the study study of openings does not mean to memorize thousands of opening lines. That might even be contraproductive. Its much more important to understand the main ideas and plans behind an opening line.  When you pick an opening you should first try to understand the ideas behind, look at many annotated master games about it and then learn some of the most important lines. You should also try to have middlegame plans in your opening line and not play without plan when the theory has finished. At your level you could also think about playing easy systems with white, for example the kingsindian attack after e4 or the colle-zukertort-system after d4. About both of this opening systems chessbase-dvds are availible on the chessbase shop, they are really imformative and good. When you like I can also help you with finding the right openings for you and with improving the lines you paly right now. John watson made some reallky good books about openings, I would recommend you his series " mastering the chess openings", which is very helpfull for every ambitious player.

b)the endgame

The endgame isnt important for every chess player because you doesnt reach it so often. That might be because most games finish after the middlegame or opening. The main importance of the endgame is that there are so few pieces on the board and by understanding the endgame you understand how this pieces work together and where they are exspecially strong. For example in the basic bishop and knight versus king endgame: You learn in which corner the king has to be(which might be useful for mating nets and when you wanna go into an endgame) and you learn how you have to coordinate the knight and the bishop that they dont let the king escape and how they work perfectly together. The same with basic pawn endgames: Often you can be able to keep lines closed with simple pawn moves so the opponents king cant get into your camp. You also learn about pawn structures and you might see in a middlegame position whether the endgame would be good or bad for you now .

c) chess learning 

with chess learning I mean to improve your general knowledge about chess. You can easilily achieve that by reading games collection books where a strong master comments on his games and wins and show you how deep he was thinking during a game. A very good book is the book "understanding chess-move" by John Nunn.

Cheers, Till

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still alive?

Avatar of yureesystem

Looking at two of your games, your tactics is very weak and you blunder a lot. Get a good tactical book ,a great book is Logical Chess Move by Move by Chernev, this book help me a lot when I was 1162 uscf and Silman Endgame book and some opening studies (MCO Modern Chess Opening), no junk opening. If you do this you will improve and within a year your rating can be 1500 to 1700 uscf. I started chess at seventeen in my chess club and was rated at 1162; I was determine to become a better player and study hard and within a year and the half I was 1800 uscf and when I reach twenty I became an expert and first expert rating was 2019 uscf and my highest was 2110 uscf.

 I been expert for ten years and I just starting to understand chess a more and it takes time to develop into a good player.

 

My advice in the opening is play solid, if your opponent plays 1.e4 respond 1...e5 and your plays 1.d4 and respond 1...d5.

The Queen's Gambit Declined is very solid defense and easy to learn.

Opening is important but you must keep it simple and don't go into a lot theoretical opening line.
 
I will like to add go over Paul Morphy's games, you must be a good attacker and your rating will rapidly climb up. I also like to add being low rated is a good thing, every opponent you beat your rating will go up and even draws; you can easily gain fifty to hundred points beating  your high rated opponents in five to six round chess club tournament. When I play in a chess club, mine gain is ten and maybe twenty points; climbing to higher level is harder to achieve and I need to win all my game against 1800-1999 uscf and experts in a chess club.