Avatar of Amelia Hernandez

Amelia Hernandez WFM

amelia91 Valencia Since 2011 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟♟
55.7%- 40.5%- 3.7%
Bullet 2001
1720W 1331L 54D
Blitz 2222
3560W 2572L 294D
Rapid 2254
129W 36L 13D
Daily 1194
12W 3L 0D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Hi Amelia!

Great job keeping your Rapid rating close to 2000 (2281 (2023-08-01)). Your recent games show steady progress, a healthy fighting spirit, and an interesting opening repertoire built around the London System and the Sicilian.

What you are already doing well

  • Early initiative: You frequently gain time with forcing moves such as 8.Qxd8+ in your latest win (

    ).
  • Rook activity: In multiple victories you doubled rooks on the 7th rank or along open files (e.g. 15.Rd5! and 16.Rhd1). That awareness is a big mid-game asset.
  • Calculating tactics: You spot ideas like 10.Nb5! and 11.Nd6+ or 17.Nxe7+ followed by 20…Bd4+ as Black. Your tactical eye converts advantages convincingly when the clock allows.

Main growth areas

  • Clock management: Four of your last seven losses were on time, often from winning or equal positions (vs. bata_bg, templar knight, etc.). Getting into critical positions with < 10 seconds left forces blunders or flagging.
  • End-game technique: When games simplify (e.g. the rook endgame against professorkemper on 03 Jun) your conversion speed drops. Spending opening minutes more efficiently will leave precious time for technical endings.
  • Pawn-break timing: Losses in the London often come after over-extending with g- and h-pawns (15.g4?! vs. theblindman1980). Choosing the right moment for an attack vs. improving pieces first will cut down on counter-play.

Practice plan for the next month

  1. Clock discipline drill: Play 10 games of 3 + 2 focusing on staying above 60 % of your time by move 20. If you drop below, force yourself to make the next move instantly to rebuild the buffer.
  2. Rook-and-pawn endings: Solve 5 end-game studies per day from a database or app. Pay special attention to active rook versus passive rook and the “cut-off king” principle.
  3. Structured London repertoire: Add the classical 7.Nbd2 and 8.c3 setups to handle …c5 and …Nh5 ideas more safely. Review two GM model games each week.
  4. Quiet move spotting: During tactics sessions set a 30-second “think before move” rule once per puzzle to train yourself to look for non-forcing resources, e.g., improvement moves, zugzwang (zugzwang).

When to study vs. play

Right now you are competitive in practical games, but a 70 % play / 30 % study split will help patch the end-game and time-trouble leaks. Build a mini-routine:

  • Warm-up: 2 tactical puzzles (5 min).
  • 1 rapid game (15 min + 10 s) applying the time-use targets.
  • Immediate review with engine and coach notes (10 min).
  • Every second day swap the game for 30 min end-game study.

Your performance snapshots

Use the charts below once a week to ensure you are moving in the right direction.

01234567891011121314151617181920212223100%0%Hour of Day
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun100%0%Day of Week

Final encouragement

You already beat strong 1900+ players on both sides of the board. By tightening your time usage and polishing technical endings you are poised to break 2100 soon. Keep the fighting spirit—and remember, technique + time converts advantages into points!


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