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Jesse Nicholas NM

bigjmn Newton Since 2008 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟♟
45.5%- 50.8%- 3.8%
Bullet 1560
2967W 3354L 196D
Blitz 1932
2608W 3119L 272D
Rapid 2054
50W 17L 5D
Daily 1990
212W 31L 10D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Hi Jesse!

Your recent games show an energetic, tactical style that often pays off, but also some recurring problems that cost points – especially on the clock. Below are focused suggestions to help you turn more of those promising positions into wins.

1. Time Management – the Low-Hanging Fruit

  • Five of the last seven losses were time forfeits in positions that were still playable or even better for you. Consider adopting an “anchor move” policy: if your clock dips below 20 s, make the safest decent move you can find, then recalculate on the opponent’s time.
  • Practice increment drills: play 1 | 1 games solely to train the habit of moving with 1-2 s left.
  • Use your opponent’s turn to pick two candidate moves so you never start a full think from zero.

2. Opening Refinement

You already score well in the Ruy López/Italian family as Black, but the 4…Nxe4 line in the Four Knights has been a mixed bag – two recent losses came straight from that choice.

  • Switch to the quieter 4…Bb4 or plain 4…Bc5 until you’ve memorised the forcing lines after 4…Nxe4 5.Nxe4 d5.
  • Versus the French as White you handle the Franco-Sicilian structure well (see the win over drunkfool12). Deepen that repertoire – it fits your aggressive pawn-storm style.
  • Against 1.e4 as Black, add one surprise weapon – e.g. the Scandinavian or Modern – so opponents can’t prepare only for Double-King-Pawn positions.
Illustrative Mini-Tactic

From your win vs jpmsa:


Great example of piece activity over material. Keep hunting these motifs!

3. Middlegame Focus Areas

  • Over-extension of f- and g-pawns. In both the loss to MulticulturalBishops and Brian-D you advanced …f5 / …g5 too early, weakening your king. Ask “What squares am I giving up?” before any flank pawn push.
  • Practise spotting the critical moments where a quiet prophylactic move is stronger than the flashiest tactic. Try pausing when (a) the centre opens, (b) queens come off, (c) a pawn reaches the 5th rank.
  • Add two pattern-recognition themes to your tactics set this week: zwischenzug and the deflection sacrifice. They occur frequently in your openings.

4. Endgame  (quick gains)

  • Your rook endgames are solid, but you sometimes miss the outside passed pawn idea (game vs lordico). Drill the classic Lucena & Philidor setups for 10 minutes a day.
  • Convert small advantages sooner by activating the king earlier; several endings reached move 35 with your king still on the back rank.

5. Progress Tracker

Keep an eye on these milestones:

  • 2258 (2018-02-21) – aim to push it +50 in the next month.
  • Review performance trends:
    01234567891011121314151617181920212223100%0%Hour of Day
    and
    MonTueWedThuFriSatSun100%0%Day of Week
    to identify your sharpest playing windows.

Action Plan for the Next Two Weeks

  1. Play 50 games of 3 | 2 focusing solely on clock discipline.
  2. Memorise the main Four Knights line through move 10 for both sides.
  3. Daily: 20 tactics (rating 1800-2000) filtered for deflection and zwischenzug.
  4. End each session with one basic rook-and-pawn endgame study.

Stick with the plan and that extra 100 rating points will come naturally. Enjoy the grind, Jesse – you’re on the right track!


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