Avatar of Damien Gould

Damien Gould

BritishMustard Since 2025 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟
52.5%- 45.3%- 2.2%
Bullet 468
375W 360L 14D
Blitz 641
633W 581L 27D
Rapid 1066
1015W 898L 49D
Daily 1130
132W 23L 0D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick recap for Damien Gould

Good recent stretch — you’re winning by punishing loose pieces and thriving in sharp, tactical lines. Your play shows a clear preference for aggressive, trap-heavy openings and you’re getting results from that style. At the same time a few recurring weaknesses are costing you: king safety after grabbing material and getting tangled in mating nets.

What you’re doing well

  • Spotting and punishing loose pieces quickly — in one recent win you grabbed a rook/queenside material and converted the advantage by forcing the opponent’s king out of safety. (See the game vs uncreative5 and the opening Scandinavian Defense).
  • Comfort with sharp, offbeat systems — your repertoire (Barnes, Blackburne Shilling Gambit, Amazon Attack, gambits) creates practical problems for opponents and yields many winning chances from beginners/middling players.
  • Aggressive tactical intuition — you look for forcing continuations and sacrifices that open the enemy king, and that pays off often.
  • Momentum and confidence — you convert chances rather than sitting on them, which is excellent when the opponent blunders.

Main areas to improve

  • King safety after material grabs — several games show you grabbing big material (queen/rook) and then getting into trouble because your king is exposed. Prioritize creating an escape square or quick shelter before going all-in on material.
  • Back-rank / mating awareness — you were checkmated with a back-rank pattern in a recent loss (see robingem80). When you are up material, check for simple mating threats from the opponent and create luft for the king or trade off the attacking rook/queen.
  • Greedy captures vs simple consolidation — don’t automatically take material if it opens lines to your king or leaves pieces uncoordinated. A small consolidation move is often stronger than another grab.
  • Predictable opening traps — your offbeat openings score because opponents fall into traps. As you climb, opponents will avoid those traps and punish you if you don’t have middlegame plans behind them. Learn typical plans and piece-posts from those openings, not only the tricks.

Concrete next steps (practice plan)

Three short sessions you can do over the week:

  • Session A — 20 minutes: Back-rank and basic mating-pattern drills. Focus on creating luft, rook vs rook+queen tactics and common two-rook mate patterns. Repeat 10–15 examples until they're automatic.
  • Session B — 30 minutes: Tactics trainer (mixed). Do 15 focused puzzles that start from positions with exposed kings. After each solve, ask: “If I take here, does it open my king?”
  • Session C — 30 minutes: Play two slow rapid (15|10) or one 25|10 game, deliberately avoiding early greedy queen/rook grabs. Practice consolidating material and improving piece coordination before going for more material.

Concrete move-level advice you can apply immediately

  • Before capturing big material (queen/rook): scan for checks, pins, and open files toward your king. If any exist, find a safe consolidating move first (king luft, guard the back rank, or trade an attacking piece).
  • When your opponent opens the g- or h-file near your king, trade rooks or create luft with pawn moves if it’s safe (pawn to h6 or g6 for example) — small breathing room often prevents mating nets.
  • Avoid weakening f-pawn early unless it gives a definite strategic/ tactical payoff — moves like f6/g6 can create holes around the king that your opponents exploit.
  • If you play aggressive opening traps, learn the common middlegame plans that follow those openings so you don’t “get lucky” only to miss how to finish the game once the trap is declined.

Training targets for the next 30 days

  • Daily: 10–15 tactics (focus on mating nets and back-rank themes) — build pattern recognition.
  • Weekly: 2 slow games (25|10 or 15|10) with post-game self-review. Mark any game where you grabbed material and then lost an attack or mate — that’s your key learning set.
  • Study one opening properly each week from your repertoire (e.g., Barnes Opening: Walkerling or Blackburne Shilling Gambit): learn the typical pawn breaks and ideal squares for minor pieces rather than only the trap moves.

Small checklist to use mid-game

  • Material gain available? — check for immediate counterchecks, pins, or open files to your king.
  • Is my king safe after the capture? — if “no”, find consolidation first.
  • Can I trade off the opponent’s active attacker (rook/queen) without losing the initiative?
  • Do I have a simple winning plan (convert material with rooks, push passed pawns, or trade into a won endgame)?

Examples & study aids

Interactive replay of a recent win — watch how you punished a loose queen and then forced the king into a mating net:

Suggested study terms to look up in your study routine: Back-rank mate, King safety, Loose Piece.

Final notes — mindset & small wins

Your style is an asset: you create chaos and force opponents to find accurate defense. To climb further, combine that chaos with a short checklist to secure your king and your extra material. Small, consistent practice on mating patterns and consolidation will convert more of your current winning chances into rating gains.

If you want, I can prepare a 4-week training plan tailored to the openings you play (Barnes / Blackburne / Amazon lines) and include 30 puzzles keyed to the most common tactics that have tripped you up.


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