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Chiwa_25

Since 2025 (Inactive) Chess.com ♟♟♟
47.3%- 48.7%- 4.0%
Rapid 678
538W 554L 46D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick summary

Nice work — you're winning sharp games and your longer-term rating trend (+145 over 6 months) shows clear improvement. Recent wins show good tactical awareness and ability to punish opponents' king safety lapses. Your losses point to recurring opening/tactical lapses and occasional overconfidence in early piece trades. Below are focused, practical steps to turn the progress into more consistent results.

Highlight: recent clean win (study this)

You finished a good attacking game as Black vs billnyefry with a decisive queen infiltration and mate on the kingside. Replay the final phase — it shows discipline in chasing the enemy king and converting coordination into a mate.

  • Replay the game:
  • Key lesson: queen + active pieces, exploit weakened back rank and an exposed king. See Back rank mate.

Where you’re doing well

  • You play sharp openings and create tactical chances — this is reflected in your success with aggressive systems (for example Scandinavian Defense shows a strong win rate for you).
  • When the opponent weakens king safety you convert accurately — the win above is a good example.
  • Your long-term improvement curve is strong: steady gains over 3–6 months. That means your study and practice are working.

Recurring issues to fix

  • Loose pieces and tactical oversights: several losses come from allowing a decisive tactic after a capture or knight jump. Before taking a piece, pause and ask “Is it defended? Any forks, pins, or discovered checks?” — check for Loose Piece and hanging tactics.
  • Early knight jumps like Ne5/Nxe5 without full follow-up have backfired in some games. Remember "knight on the rim is dim" — validate the landing square and follow-up plans (Knight on the rim is dim).
  • Trading into unfavorable simplifications: in at least one loss you simplified into a position where the opponent gained an immediate tactical resource. When you trade, check resulting king safety and piece activity.
  • Opening choice consistency: you do well in some gambit/tactical lines but worse in certain quiet lines. Pick a reliable primary opening repertoire and learn typical plans, not just moves.

Concrete next steps (weekly plan)

  • Daily tactics: 10–20 tactics a day focused on forks, pins, skewers, discovered attacks and back-rank patterns. Target pattern recognition rather than speed.
  • One opening session (30–45 min): pick a primary repertoire you feel comfortable with (your data suggests you score well with Scandinavian Defense and sharp gambits). Learn the 6–8 main ideas and 3 typical middlegame plans for each line.
  • One game review per day: pick one rapid you lost or barely escaped, and annotate 5 critical moments — what you missed, candidate moves you didn’t calculate. Use the three-question method: What changed in the position? What does each side want? What tactics are possible?
  • Endgame basics twice a week (15–20 min): king activity, basic rook endgames, and simple queen vs pawn mates. These convert advantages and save tough positions.

Practical checks to use during games

  • Before every capture: count defenders and attackers and look for “if I take, what is the opponent’s best reply?” (2–3 second checklist).
  • When your opponent offers a trade: ask if the resulting position improves their king safety or piece activity. If yes — decline unless you gain concrete material.
  • Three-candidate rule: if you can’t calculate everything, pick the three most reasonable moves and evaluate them quickly instead of moving impulsively.

Small tactical homework (this week)

  • Focus: back-rank and discovered attacks — do 30 puzzles on these patterns across the week.
  • Spot-check one of your recent losses vs thekatz22: replay the critical exchange sequence and ask if you had a safe intermediate move instead of the trade that lost momentum. (Replay:
    ).

Closing encouragement

Your game profile shows you create chances and convert them when the opponent gives you space — lean into that. Small habits (stop-taking-first, quick defender count, 3-candidate moves) will turn tactical potential into steady rating gains. Keep the weekly routine above for a month and re-evaluate — you should see the short-term dip reverse and your momentum continue.


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