Avatar of Fabrice Wantiez

Fabrice Wantiez FM

DimWitChess Brussels Since 2010 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟♟
53.5%- 40.4%- 6.1%
Daily 1585 3284W 2121L 260D
Rapid 2217 15W 7L 2D
Blitz 2515 7610W 6131L 1004D
Bullet 2429 939W 689L 76D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Feedback for Fabrice Wantiez

Fabrice, your recent games demonstrate a solid understanding of key opening principles and tactical awareness. Here are some specific observations and suggestions to help you continue improving:

Strengths

  • Opening preparation: You play ambitious openings such as the King's Gambit, Ruy Lopez, and Nimzowitsch-Larsen Attack, showing a good willingness to take the initiative early. This leads to dynamic positions in many of your games.
  • Attack and initiative: Your games often show aggressive and thematic attacking moves. For example, in your recent win with White, you executed an elegant mating pattern quickly (e.g., 20. Rh8#) displaying good tactical vision.
  • Endgame technique: You have demonstrated you can convert a material or positional advantage well, as seen in several of your wins where you consolidate and close out games effectively.

Areas for Improvement

  • Defensive resilience: In some losses, you faced strong opponents who exploited weaknesses in your position, especially during the middlegame transitions. Focus on strengthening your positional understanding and defense, particularly against counterattacks.
  • Calculation depth: While your tactics are often strong, there were a few moments where deeper calculation or prophylactic thinking could have prevented losing material or momentum. Try working through complex tactical puzzles and practice calculating several moves ahead to improve accuracy.
  • Time management: In long time control games, consistent time usage is crucial. Occasionally, balancing thinking time between the opening and critical moments in the middlegame could improve your overall decision making under pressure.

Recommendations for Further Improvement

  • Analyze your losses: Reviewing your recent defeats move-by-move to understand where the turning points happened will help you avoid similar mistakes in future games.
  • Study endgames: Deepen your endgame knowledge by learning fundamental theoretical positions; this will increase your confidence in complex endgame scenarios.
  • Build a repertoire: Continue refining your opening choices and explore sidelines to add surprise value against your opponents.

Keep up the great work and maintain a balanced study routine combining opening study, tactics training, and endgame practice. Your winning patterns and attacking ideas show real promise!


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