Coach Chesswick
What you’re doing well
- You fight for activity and pressure, especially in sharp or open positions, and you often generate practical chances for you and your opponents to misstep.
- Your piece coordination tends to stay active in the middlegame. You look for cluttered positions where your pieces can coordinate on the king side and in the center.
- You handle time pressure with courage in bullet games, and you’re not afraid to switch gears when the position demands fast decisions.
Key improvement areas for bullet play
Opening focus and practical plans
You show comfort in dynamic, piece-driven openings. Lean on your strongest setups and study the typical middlegame plans that arise from them. For the openings where results are solid for you, reinforce the standard break ideas and typical pawn structures so you can convert advantages more consistently.
Suggested focus areas (qualitative):
Drills and a practical two-week plan
Next steps and motivation
Commit to a small, repeatable routine before each bullet session: quick warm-up puzzles, two focused openings, then a few rapid games with a clear plan. Track which openings consistently give you the initiative and which tend to invite passive defense, and adjust your study focus accordingly.