Avatar of Anastasia Zanan

Anastasia Zanan WFM

accce4ka Since 2020 (Inactive) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟
64.4%- 30.1%- 5.5%
Bullet 2064
49W 10L 2D
Blitz 2133
111W 76L 13D
Rapid 2067
26W 2L 1D
Daily 884
2W 0L 0D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Hi Anastasia!

Great job keeping an active tournament schedule and scoring several strong wins. I’ve reviewed your two most recent games (win vs Bala-Afiada and loss vs ace_mar) together with surrounding results. Below is targeted feedback arranged by phase of the game, followed by a concrete training plan.

What you already do well

  • Dynamic opening play with White. Your French (9.Qd2 Qxb2 10.Rb1 … 14.Nc7+) and Sicilian B56 win show you’re comfortable sacrificing tempi for initiative and you calculate tactics quickly.
  • Conversion technique. In the Bala-Afiada endgame you calmly marched the king, collected pawns and queened (45.c6 & 53.b8=Q). Good technique under 60 seconds on the clock.
  • Resourcefulness in messy positions. Several recent wins were rescued from objectively sharp or even worse middlegames — a valuable blitz skill.

Recurring problems

  • Pawn grabbing with Black that loosens the position.
    • In the London loss you played 14…Bxd4 (grabbing) and soon couldn’t cover d6/c5 squares.
    • In multiple Grünfeld games the risky 11…Qxb2 motif appears. It often works, but when it fails it fails spectacularly.
  • Dark-square weaknesses after …g6 set-ups. Against the London you placed pawns on g6, e5 and a bishop on g7 but never challenged Nd6/Nb5 ideas. A similar theme occurred in the Najdorf loss (h-pawn rush & Qg7#). Critical fragment:
  • Coordination vs. Knights on strong outposts. Knights on d6 / c7 / b5 often dominated your bishops. You generally react with pawn pushes (…e5, …f5, …f6) that create new holes.
  • Occasional time imbalance. You spend ~30-40 s on early moves then blitz critical moments. Aim for a steadier pace.

Opening recommendations

  • Against 1.d4/London systems
    − Try the line 1…d5 2.Bf4 c5 3.e3 Nc6! 4.Nf3 Qb6, keeping the pawn structure symmetrical and pieces active.
    − Alternatively add a solid Queen’s Gambit or Slav; the resulting structures punish early Bf4.
  • Refine your …Qxb2 repertoire by building exact engine-checked files so you know the forcing refutations and the safe bail-outs.
  • Sideline a back-up vs. 1.e4 where you do not castle short so early; the quick …O-O combined with …Qf6-…Qxg3 in the Scotch cost valuable tempi.

Middlegame & Calculation drills

  • Daily 15-minute “Prophylaxis check”: position the pieces so every opponent move has at least one answer.
    Ask “What is the threat?” before every move during practice games.
  • Dark-square bishop vs. knight exercises (search for Good Knight vs Bad Bishop). Focus on preventing outposts.
  • End every session with 3 defensive puzzles where your side is slightly worse. Your attacking instincts are good; balancing them with defense will lift your ceiling.

Endgame direction

Your conversion skills are a strength. To make them automatic:

  • Study rook + pawn vs rook setups once a week.
  • Add Queen vs Rook practice; you handled it well vs Bala but there were faster mates.

Progress tracker

Let’s visualise your results as you adopt the plan:

 

Targets for the next 30 days

  1. Play at least 25 blitz games without taking pawns with the queen before move 12.
  2. Solve 150 mixed tactics; annotate any puzzle you fail where the opponent’s knight dominates.
  3. Upload three training games vs 2300+ to me with comments; we’ll add engine checks and refine your files.
  4. Reach + 25.

I’m confident these adjustments will tighten your defense and turn close games against 2500-level opponents into points. Keep up the fighting spirit and see you at the next coaching session!


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