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builders_tea

Since 2016 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟
49.3%- 37.2%- 13.5%
Bullet 1514
71W 46L 5D
Blitz 1712
55W 44L 7D
Rapid 2030
547W 538L 112D
Daily 1832
731W 432L 261D
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Coach Chesswick

Quick takeaways

Nice mix of sharp attacking wins and some painful losses to heavy-piece tactics. You’re comfortable creating tactical complications and winning material, but opponent rooks/queens are finding your king. Focus: king safety, simple prophylaxis, and a compact study routine to stop repeat patterns.

  • Win highlight: strong tactical awareness and willingness to grab material (excellent calculation spotting).
  • Recurring loss pattern: opposing heavy pieces (rooks/queen) invading on the 3rd/2nd rank or delivering back‑rank mates.
  • Practical next step: 5–15 minute daily routine — tactics, one short opening check, one endgame/back‑rank drill.

Win — what you did well

Game vs pro33x — aggressive piece play and concrete calculation paid off. You created tactical motifs (knight forking and a queen strike) and ended with a clean checkmate pattern.

  • Good use of the knight to win material early — you looked for forcing lines and didn’t shy from the complication.
  • You kept the initiative after winning material instead of drifting; that made Qc8# possible. That’s textbook: win material, simplify threats, finish quickly.
  • Opening choice worked: Nimzowitsch-Larsen-Attack produced active pieces and targets — keep it in your repertoire.

Replay the sequence to internalize the tactical pattern:

Losses — recurring issues & fixes

Multiple recent losses ended with heavy pieces mating or forcing decisive material wins. Two consistent themes: king exposure and allowing rook/queen infiltration. Examples include games vs Zak Ham and eviemae7912.

  • Back-rank and 3rd-rank infiltrations: Your king often ends up with too little luft or on the same rank as enemy rooks. Simple fixes — make a luft pawn move (h3/g3) earlier when safe, or exchange a rook if you can’t create luft.
  • Passive piece placement: When opponent brings rooks to the 3rd rank (Rh3/Rh5 patterns), your pieces sometimes aren’t coordinated to repel them. Aim to keep one piece (rook, bishop or queen) able to challenge enemy rooks on 3rd/2nd ranks.
  • Trade decisions: In several losses you allowed counterplay by not trading at the right moment (or traded into a position that opened lines to your king). Before forcing trades, scan for enemy checks and back‑rank tactics.
  • Time & temperament: You have good time reserves in these games; the issues are strategic rather than purely clock-related. Use the increment to stop and verify forcing checks before moving.

Study this loss to see the infiltration pattern and improve defensive technique:

Concrete drills — 2 week plan

Short daily sessions you can realistically keep to build quick, practical gains.

  • Daily (15 minutes): 8–10 tactical puzzles (focus forks, pins, skewers and back-rank motifs).
  • Every other day (5 minutes): review one recent loss — identify the decisive moment and write one sentence: “If I had played X instead of Y, I would have…”
  • 3× per week (5–10 minutes): endgame/back-rank practice — simple rook and pawn endgames and defending against rook penetrations (practice making luft, rook trades, and blocking files).
  • Weekly opening check (5–10 minutes): one short line for your main systems (keep Nimzowitsch-Larsen-Attack and your Reti notes tidy; write 2 typical plans and 1 trap to avoid).

Behavioral tips for faster improvement

  • Before each move, ask two quick questions: “Is my king safe?” and “Does opponent have immediate checks?” — this prevents most tactical losses.
  • When ahead in material, trade queens and rooks to reduce counterplay and make the win simpler.
  • Use the increment: spend an extra second to verify there isn’t a tactical shot before you grab a pawn or enter a forcing line.
  • Keep a short post‑game habit: mark one “lesson” per game (win or loss) and save it — you’ll start noticing patterns.

Next small goals (one month)

  • Reduce losses from back‑rank/3rd‑rank infiltrations by 50% — focus on one defensive idea (create luft or trade rooks when attacked).
  • Increase strength‑adjusted win rate by continuing the tactical training (your current number is a solid base).
  • Keep using the openings where you score well (your stats show good results with lines like the Nimzowitsch-Larsen-Attack and similar systems).

If you want, I can:

  • Annotate 2–3 of these games move‑by‑move and highlight the critical moments.
  • Build a 7‑day training plan tailored to how much time you actually have each day.
  • Create 20 targeted puzzles that mimic mistakes from your losses (back‑rank, rook invasions, queen forks).

Which option would you like first?


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