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bigbongoluvr

Since 2021 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟
51.1%- 46.5%- 2.4%
Rapid 1284
471W 427L 22D
Daily 384
1W 2L 0D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Hi bigbongoluvr đź‘‹

You have put together a nice collection of wins lately—congratulations on your current ! Your most recent victory against nelson0504 shows good tactical alertness and the courage to play dynamically in the Modern Defense.

What’s already working

  • Activity out of the opening. Whether you’re using the Modern as Black or aggressive pawn storms as White, you rarely leave pieces passive for long.
  • Tactical eye. Shots like 18…Bxh3!! in the win versus Nelson demonstrate that you look for forcing moves. Keep sharpening this skill with daily puzzle sets.
  • Practical fighting spirit. Several of your wins were secured from equal or slightly worse positions because you kept the game complicated and gave your opponents decisions to make.

Key areas to improve next

  1. Consistent opening plans.
    • You handle the early moves of the Modern Defense comfortably, but positions after ...Nh5 and ...Re8 sometimes drift because a clear middlegame plan is missing.
    • As White, you struggled in the Scandinavian (see the loss to lytienbao14). After 3.Nc3 Qe5+ your pieces came out slowly and Black soon took over.
    Action: Build a short “blue-print” for each favourite opening (which centre pawn breaks you want, which minor piece trades help you, typical king-side vs queen-side plans).
  2. Pawn pushes vs. king safety.
    Frequent early moves like h4 /h5 or g4 grab space but can weaken your own king. The Caro-Kann loss to atercogito shows how loose pawns became targets in the long endgame.
    Action: Before advancing a wing pawn, ask “Can my king still reach safety in two moves?” and “What dark-square or light-square holes am I creating?”.
  3. Handling early queen sorties.
    In the Scandinavian game White wasted tempi chasing the queen. Remember the rule of thumb: if your opponent’s queen comes out early, develop with tempo—don’t keep moving the same piece.
    Example line:
    .
    Action: Review 3–4 model games where White calmly gains space while the queen steps back.
  4. Endgame conversion.
    Several “abandoned” games were equal or better for you (e.g. vs. i23ask) but fizzled out. Missing technique in rook-and-pawn endings cost points.
    Action: Spend 10 min/day on basic rook endgames: the Lucena, Philidor, “cut-off king”, and opposite-flank pawn races. Good keywords to search: Lucena position, Philidor draw.
  5. Clock management.
    Five of your recent losses were on time or “game abandoned”. You generally start fast, then burn minutes in the middlegame decisions.
    Action: Try a 15 + 10 rapid session where you commit to making a move every 40 seconds unless the position is critical. This habit will translate back to 10 + 10.

Two-week improvement plan

  1. ⏱️ Daily – 5 tactics, 5 endgame puzzles.
  2. 📚 3 sessions – Annotate your own Scandinavian loss, writing down why each move was played and what alternatives existed.
  3. ♜ 2 sessions – Play training games from the position after 1.e4 d5 2.exd5 Qxd5 3.Nc3 Qa5 as White vs a friend or the computer, focusing on harmonious development.
  4. 🎯 Weekend – Review a master game in the Modern Defense; note recurring pawn breaks like ...c5 or ...e5.

Your performance snapshots

 

Stay curious, balance your daring attacks with sound structure, and you’ll break the 1200 barrier soon. Enjoy the journey!


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