MANY TEACHERS MASTERS OF DECEIT
By ANDY SOLTIS

September 2, 2007 — CHESS CHESS teachers are masters of the maxim. For everyone trying to play better, they offer age-old bits of wisdom. Among them:

“To improve, you first must study the endgame. It’s the most important part of the game.”

“The key to the middlegame is learning the art of long-range planning and strategy.”

“To play the opening well is a matter of 100 percent understanding and zero percent memorization. Never memorize.”

The trouble with these pious pronouncements is none are true.

Why? First, virtually the only games that are decided by endgame skill are those played by masters.

On the rare occasions when 1200-rated players reach the ending, one of them is usually a rook ahead. Learning the differences between the Lucena and Philidor positions in rook endgames, for example, is of little value.

Second, most games played below the 1800 level are won and lost by tactics, not strategy or planning. Leaning more about tactical patterns is of much greater benefit to the student.

And depending on which opening you want to play, memorization can be very valuable. Masters memorize all the time – then tell you not to do it.

Source: NY Post

I certainly do not agree with the view of GM Soltis and so do many other grandmasters and / or top-level chess teachers. Because too many chess coaches are teaching the wrong way, many young players end up paying the price later on. Studying tactics is a must. I have always recommended that. But not giving equal importance to endgame is a big mistake. I also do not teach my students including my own sons to memorize openings. I teach them to understand the principles of chess opening. What do you think? Do you agree with GM Soltis?

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