Avatar of Jay Walker

Jay Walker FM

Bayernbk Since 2014 (Inactive) Chess.com ♟♟
60.1%- 31.3%- 8.6%
Rapid 2200 3W 0L 0D
Blitz 2694 907W 571L 204D
Bullet 2665 1960W 925L 209D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Hi Jay, here’s some constructive feedback based on your recent blitz games.

1. What you’re already doing well

  • Dynamic piece play vs. Caro-Kann/Scandinavian – In several wins you quickly seized the initiative with 4.Ne5, f4–f5 ideas and timely piece sacrifices. Your feel for open positions and tactical shots is a clear asset.
  • Transition to favourable endgames – Games such as your win vs. GeorgiosSouleidis show patience: you simplified into a rook-and-pawn ending that was technically winning.
  • Confidence in pawn storms – Advances like h4–h5/hxg6 or g4–g5 often unbalance the position and give you attacking chances. When you have the clock under control, these pushes are well calculated.

2. Growth opportunities

  • Time management – 5 of your last 7 losses came from flagging or playing ultra-fast moves in the final 10 seconds. You’re frequently ahead on the board but behind on the clock.
    • Recommendation: make a conscious “10-second pledge.” If you drop below 0:10, stop calculating deeply and play the safest increment-friendly move.
    • Drill: play 3-minute games with a 2-second increment to reinforce this habit.
  • Handling the Alapin (c3) Sicilian as White – In the loss vs. WisdomGame you struggled to create winning chances after early queen trades, and Black equalised effortlessly.
    • Re-examine move 12 Nd2?! and the exchange of queens on move 15. Consider 12.Be3 or 12.dxe5 followed by Bf4 to keep queens and pressure.
  • Over-extension in pawn majorities – In a few defeats you advanced queenside pawns (e.g. game vs. Never_walk_alone: a5, c6, b5) too far without piece support, creating weak squares behind them.
    • Rule of thumb: advance a pawn chain only when at least two pieces can occupy the squares it leaves.
  • Endgame conversion vs. stubborn defence – The loss vs. INZLF (Modern Defence) illustrates letting a favourable bishop vs. knight endgame slip after 28…Rb6!
    • Study “technical” rook-endgames (e.g. Lucena & Philidor) 10 minutes a day; they arise constantly from your Caro-Kann structures.

3. Concrete study plan (next two weeks)

  1. Opening tune-up
    • Update your Alapin file: play through 10 model games where White keeps queens and presses (e.g. Grischuk, Dubov).
    • Add a surprise weapon vs. 1…e6 (French); consider the King’s Indian Attack setup – it suits your pawn-storm style.
  2. Tactics under time pressure
    • Solve 20 puzzles/day on “rush” or “survival” mode with a 30-second limit each; emphasise pattern recognition over deep calc.
  3. Endgame mini-workouts
    • 5 positions/day from Dvoretsky’s Endgame Manual: play vs. engine at +5 seconds increment until you convert.

4. Illustrative snippet

Below is the critical moment from your recent win where you exploited Black’s back-rank weaknesses. Replay it once and visualise alternative defences for Black.

5. Your performance trends

Keep an eye on when you’re playing your best chess:

01567891011121314151617181920212223100%0%Hour of Day
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun100%0%Day of Week

6. Motivational snapshot

Your 2714 (2022-01-11) proves you belong in the high-2600 blitz bracket. Ironing out the time-trouble losses alone could net +50-70 Elo.

Final note

Stay confident in your attacking instincts, but pair them with disciplined clock control and a smoother endgame technique. Small tweaks – big rating gains!

Good luck and enjoy your games! – Coach


Report a Problem