Avatar of Michael W

Michael W

ComeHugMyKing Las Vegas, NV Since 2019 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟
47.4%- 47.0%- 5.6%
Bullet 1604
2838W 2744L 327D
Blitz 1400
8405W 8454L 994D
Rapid 1401
1983W 1920L 250D
Daily 949
3W 7L 0D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

What went well in your recent rapid games

You showed good initiative and willingness to take tactical chances when the position allowed. In your win, you kept the opponent under pressure with active piece play and decisive rook and queen coordination that culminated in a practical finish. You also demonstrated the ability to castling safely and to generate multiple forcing threats when the game opened up.

  • Active piece activity and willingness to sacrifice or trade into favorable lines when you detect a concrete plan.
  • Consistent castling and king safety in the early to middlegame, which helped you execute your attacking ideas.
  • Recognition of tactical opportunities to win material or create decisive threats in several sequences.

Key areas to improve for your next sessions

  • Endgame technique: strengthen conversion of material or positional advantages into a win, especially in murkier middlegame-to-endgame transitions.
  • Back-rank and defensive awareness: in some losses, there were sharp tactical blows aimed at the king’s position. Practice prophylaxis and identifying vulnerable back-rank patterns to avoid surprises.
  • Time management: balance time spent on sharp tactical lines with a steady approach. Build a simple plan for the opening moves and stick to it to reserve time for accuracy in the middlegame.
  • Calculation discipline: in complex lines, verify forcing moves and candidate responses before committing. This reduces careless blunders in fast time controls.

Openings: how to strengthen your repertoire

Your openings data shows solid results across several systems, with the Scandinavian Defense and certain Sicilian lines performing well. For rapid games, a compact, repeatable plan helps you avoid overreach in the first 15 moves. Consider focusing on a small, reliable set of lines and study typical middlegame plans that arise from them:

  • Scandinavian Defense: continue refining the main branches you use. Build a clear middlegame plan based on quick development, central control, and pressure on light squares.
  • Sicilian paths that align with your style: you’ve shown mixed results in broader Sicilian lines. Choose 1-2 specific Sicilian variations to master deeply (e.g., Dragon-leaning lines or a solid Scheveningen setup) and practice standard middlegame plans from those positions.
  • Italian Game family: given the exposure in your recent games, pin down a straightforward plan for the Two Knights and Dragon variations, focusing on development, king safety, and clear tactical motifs you can rely on in counterplay.

If you want, I can tailor a simple 2-3 opening repertoire for White and Black based on how you typically respond to common responses, with a short set of standard middlegame plans for each.

Strength-adjusted performance and rating trends: what they mean for your plan

Your strength-adjusted win rate is around 0.499, which suggests there’s room to push your results a bit further with more consistency. Your rating-change data show periods of solid progress but also volatility. The takeaway is to couple sharp, tactical play with a steadier, principled approach in the opening and a checklist for the middlegame to reduce blunders.

  • Focus on a dependable opening plan and a simple, repeatable middlegame idea for each line.
  • Incorporate a quick “blunder check” before making a move in tense positions—a mental prompt to verify threats, captures, and checks.
  • Use regular post-game reviews to identify recurring mistakes and track improvement on a weekly basis.

Two-week practice plan to target improvement

  • Daily 15–20 minute tactic sessions focusing on common tactical motifs you’ve encountered (forks, pins, discovered attacks, back-rank ideas).
  • Review 1 recent win and 1 recent loss in depth. Identify the first critical decision point and what you could have done differently.
  • Practice 2-3 chosen openings with a simple middlegame plan. Use a timer to simulate rapid-game constraints and avoid overthinking the early moves.
  • Endgame drills: rook endings and minor piece endings that frequently arise from the openings you play.
  • Time-management drill: play quick 15–20 move mini-games from a position with equal material, focusing on making purposeful, efficient moves rather than chasing complications.

Next steps and how I can help

If you’d like, share the PGN of a recent game you found tricky and I’ll annotate it move-by-move, highlighting the decision points and suggesting concrete improvements. I can also generate a personalized two-week schedule built around your preferred openings and typical opponent profiles. You can think of this as a targeted coaching plan to translate your talent into more consistent wins in rapid play.

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