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Bobisgoatedatchess

Since 2020 (Closed for Fair Play Violations) Chess.com
49.6%- 46.0%- 4.4%
Bullet 1005
683W 636L 43D
Blitz 662
91W 109L 8D
Rapid 1317
377W 312L 53D
Daily 807
29W 36L 0D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick summary for Neil V

Good news: your overall play shows clear strengths (pattern recognition, surprise openings, and strong scoring with offbeat lines). In the most recent rapid loss you were caught by a direct kingside mating pattern after some pawn pushes and a missed tactical sequence. Below are targeted, practical suggestions to stop the same mistakes and convert similar positions in future games.

Example position (recent rapid loss)

Here’s the final tactical line so you can replay the sequence and see the decisive threat. Study the sequence and ask: which checks and captures did you miss?

  • Game: ambatucuck vs you
  • Key line to replay:
[[Pgn|e4|d6|d4|Nf6|Nc3|g6|h4|Bg7|h5|gxh5|Be3|O-O|Be2|Bg4|Bxg4|hxg4|Bh6|Bxh6|Rxh6|Nc6|Qd3|Nb4|Qe2|c5|a3|Nc6|e5|dxe5|dxe5|Nd5|Qxg4+|Kh8|Qf5|Nxc3|Qxh7#|fen|r2q1r1k/pp2pp1Q/2n4R/2p1P3/8/P1n5/1PP2PP1/R3K1N1|orientation|white|autoplay|false]

What went wrong (concrete takeaways)

  • King safety: early pawn moves on the kingside (the advance and exchanges around h4–h5 and later pawn captures) opened the h-file and created targets around your king.
  • Missed tactic: after your opponent brought a rook to the h-file and the queen into attack range, a forced mate on the h7 square appeared. That was a short calculation miss — check for immediate mating threats before non-forcing moves.
  • Priority error: instead of neutralizing the attack (exchanging queens, covering mating squares, or creating luft), you played developing/knight moves that left the mating net intact. When the opponent sacrifices on the king-side, your first thought should be “defend the king.”
  • Transposition of pieces: knight jumps (to b4 / c6) were natural for counterplay, but they didn’t address the primary threat. Active pieces are good — but timing matters: activity that ignores immediate opponent threats loses the game.

What you did well

  • You created real tactical chances by opening the kingside — your opponent converted decisively, but the plan to attack was sound. You’re seeing tactical motifs.
  • You maintain an aggressive opening style that produces imbalances and practical chances — that style fits rapid time controls.
  • Your win/loss record and opening performance show consistency with many favorable lines. Use that to get more wins by tightening defence around the king when the attack heats up.

Short drills (5–15 minutes each) to fix the problem

  • Tactics: 10 mate-in-2 / mate-in-3 puzzles every day for two weeks. Focus on mating nets on the h- and g-files and sacrifices on h6/h7/g7 squares.
  • Prophylaxis checks: practice a checklist before your move: “Are there checks? Captures? Threats?” Force yourself to look for mate threats first, then plan. (Make it a habit: 10 games where you pause 3 seconds to run that checklist.)
  • Mini-lessons: study “Greek gift” and common rook+queen mating nets. You don’t need deep theory — just the motifs and defensive resources (when to trade queens, when to block with the king, counterchecks).
  • Post-game review: after each loss, identify the single move where the evaluation swung most. Write that move down and the defensive alternative. Do this for 5 games a week.

Practical play tips for your next rapid session

  • When you castle and the opponent has opened the h-file or has a pawn storm near your king, prioritize moves that reduce immediate danger: trade queens, create luft, or block entry squares (for example, g6 or h6 ideas when safe).
  • If your opponent sacrifices on h6/h7 or piles pieces on the h-file, calculate the forcing line first — checks and captures change everything. If the line is unclear, try simplifying with an exchange of queens or rooks.
  • Avoid “reactive” knight jumps that don’t stop a direct threat. Use knights to block or to cover key squares near your king when under fire.
  • Time management: in 10|0 games pause an extra second on any position with a potential mating motif. That extra second often finds the defensive move.

Training plan (4 weeks)

Simple, focused, and repeatable.

  • Week 1: Daily mate puzzles (10/day) + review one lost game (identify the decisive mistake).
  • Week 2: Continue puzzles + 3 games slower rapid (15|10) and post-mortem each one, focusing on king safety choices.
  • Week 3: Study 5 example games with successful defensive handling of a kingside attack (watch how players trade or create luft).
  • Week 4: Play normal schedule but apply the “checks/captures/threats” checklist every move. Reassess progress with a short quiz of mate problems at the end of the week.

Small checklist to use during games

  • Before you move: Are there checks? Are there captures? Is my king safe?
  • If opponent is attacking near my king: can I trade queens? can I make luft? can I block the entry square?
  • When choosing between an active move and a defensive move, ask: does this stop their immediate tactical idea?

Next steps — what I want you to do now

  • Replay the PGN above and mark the move where your evaluation changed. Send me that move and I’ll give a short targeted fix for that exact position.
  • Start the 2-week mate-puzzle drill and report back how many puzzles you solved in a row after 7 days.

Motivation & final note

Your rating history shows strong periods and resilience — you’ve improved before and can do it again. Tightening up king safety and adding a short tactics habit will convert many of those close losses into wins. If you want, I can prepare a 7-day puzzle pack focused on the mating patterns you missed here.


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