Coach Chesswick
Quick summary
Nice work — you converted a clean win recently and you have clear strengths in openings you play often. The big 1‑month rating drop (-464) looks like short‑term volatility (likely time trouble / tilt). The 3‑ and 6‑month trends are positive, so focus on fixing immediate causes (time management + session control) while keeping your long‑term habits that produced growth.
What you did well
- Conversion: you turned a middlegame edge into a winning rook endgame in your recent win — good technical sense under pressure.
- Opening strength: you get consistently good results with systems like the Nimzo‑Larsen / flank lines — keep using those reliable setups. (Nimzo-Larsen Attack)
- Tactics & initiative: you create and exploit tactical chances; you often force favourable simplifications.
- Practical instincts: you choose plans that lead to clear targets rather than vague maneuvers — that helps in blitz.
Highest‑impact fixes
- Time management in Blitz: several games ended on the clock (both wins and losses). Make a hard rule to simplify when below a threshold (e.g., 10s) to avoid flagging in winning positions. (Blitz)
- Session tilt control: the big short‑term drop suggests tilt runs. Stop after 2 losses or 6 games and take a short break.
- Avoid risky novelty in blitz: stick to practiced lines in your repertoire rather than experimenting mid‑session.
- Late‑game simplifications: when ahead, trade into clearer winning endgames earlier if the clock is low.
Illustrative moments (from recent games)
- Win vs nawaf_hs — you converted steadily and finished a rook endgame accurately. Replay that game to spot the move where you simplified and removed counterplay.
- Loss vs Narutzki — ended on time in a complex middlegame. Practice the habit: if the position is complicated and the clock is low, trade pieces or choose safe prophylactic moves.
- Games vs liviu78rom — some results were decided by time/disconnect/abandonment. Check pre‑session setup (connection, distractions) to prevent avoidable losses.
Concrete next steps (this week)
- Time‑management drill: 3 sessions of 10 blitz games with the rule — if you fall below 10 seconds, simplify on your next move. Focus on keeping decisions simple and safe under pressure.
- Tactics: 20 minutes daily of fast puzzles (prioritise forks, pins, discovered attacks) and review mistakes.
- Endgames: 3 short drills on rook endgames (basic Lucena/Philidor ideas) — 15–20 minutes total.
- Opening consolidation: pick 2 systems you play most (keep Nimzo‑Larsen as primary) and study typical plans and one safe sideline for each.
- Post‑session review: annotate the last 3 losses and write one root cause for each (time, tactic, opening, tilt). Fix one cause next session.
Practical blitz rules to apply immediately
- Play the opening fast and principled: develop, secure king safety, fight for the centre — don’t invent on move 2–6.
- Clock advantage = complexity; material/positional advantage = simplification.
- When low on time: remove queens or major pieces if it reduces complication and keeps your advantage.
- Use premoves only on forced recaptures or when you’re certain — avoid speculative premoves in tactical positions.
- Stop the session after 2 straight losses or 6 games — a 5‑minute reset prevents tilt cascades.
7‑day micro plan
- Days 1–2: Time drill + 20m tactics each day + review last 3 losses.
- Days 3–4: Opening study (2 systems) + 2 blitz sessions applying the "simplify under 10s" rule.
- Days 5–7: Rook endgame practice + annotate one full win and one full loss to extract repeatable lessons.
Final note
Your long history shows you can climb back and produce high peaks. The immediate goal is stabilisation: eliminate clock losses and manage tilt. Do the short drills for a week, and you should see your blitz consistency and rating recover.