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Dino Dino

Dino082990 Cape Town Since 2012 (Inactive) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟
46.9%- 48.1%- 5.0%
Bullet 737
157W 165L 10D
Blitz 603
9810W 9975L 1021D
Rapid 677
2813W 2936L 324D
Daily 766
4W 25L 0D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick recap — your recent games

Nice work staying active and fighting in messy positions. Quick notes on the three recent results you sent:

  • Win vs aelmgs — a long, tactical middlegame where you kept putting pressure and eventually your opponent flagged (won on time). Good persistence and piece activity. (See the game below.)
  • Loss vs sepsc — you got into a tactical/ending sequence that ended with a mating net on the back rank. The game snowballed after some exchanges left your king exposed.
  • Other recent losses — several games ended quickly with tactical shots against your king or hanging pieces. These are the kind of mistakes that come from not seeing simple motifs or from time trouble.

What you're doing well

  • Active piece play — you move pieces toward the target and keep creating threats instead of sitting passively.
  • Willingness to simplify when appropriate — you trade when necessary and look for clear routes to attack or counterplay.
  • Opening choice that fits you — you play the Center Game and similar lines frequently; that familiarity gives you practical advantages against many opponents.
  • Resilience — you keep playing long games and create problems for the opponent instead of resigning early.

Main areas to improve (high priority)

  • Basic tactics and pattern recognition — many losses come from simple tactical shots (forks, pins, back-rank mates). Daily 10–15 minutes of tactical puzzles keyed to these patterns will cut those losses quickly.
  • King safety and back-rank awareness — in a few losses your king ended up exposed or trapped behind pawns. When trading down, ask: “Is my king safe on the back rank?” If not, create luft or get a rook off the back rank.
  • Time management — a win came from the opponent’s flag. Relying on flags is fine sometimes, but aim to convert winning positions earlier and avoid getting yourself low on time. Try spending a hair more time on critical moments (captures, checks, major imbalances).
  • Avoid early queen shuffling — moving the queen repeatedly in the opening invites development and tempo loss. Focus on minor piece development and king safety first.
  • Endgame basics — a couple of the losses show missed opportunities in rook/queen endgames. Practice a few core endgames (king + pawn vs king, basic rook endgames) so you can convert and defend confidently.

Concrete next steps — 4‑week plan

  • Daily (15–25 min): tactics set focused on forks, pins, skewers, back-rank mates. Keep a log of the motifs you miss and review them weekly.
  • 3× a week (20–30 min): one slow (10+0 or 15|10) game where you avoid premoves and focus on converting advantages. After each game, spend 5–10 minutes annotating two moments: one good decision and one mistake.
  • 2× a week (15–20 min): endgame drills — king + pawn, basic rook endings, and basic queen-vs-pawn endings. Learn the key defensive ideas and the simple winning plans.
  • Opening drill (weekly): pick one reliable line in the Center Game and learn 5 moves of a sound plan (typical middlegame structures and piece placements). Memorize plans, not only moves.
  • Time-control habit: in 10–15 minute games, try to keep at least 1:30 on the clock after the opening (~move 15). If you consistently drop below that, slow down and make one “planning” move every few moves to buy time for critical decisions.

Practical tips you can use immediately

  • Before any exchange, ask: “Does this open lines against my king?” If yes, pause and calculate one extra move.
  • When ahead in material, simplify if the simplification reduces the opponent’s counterplay. If you’re ahead with queens on the board, trade into a winning endgame when safe.
  • When you see a tactic candidate (capture, check, attack a loose piece), stop the clock for a second and scan opponent responses — most blunders are rushed.
  • Make a checklist for critical positions: material, king safety, hanging pieces, checks, and opponent threats. Run it before moving in time trouble.

Game review — your recent win (play through)

Replay the win vs aelmgs and spot the turning points: where you gained activity and how you kept pressure until the opponent flagged.

Short checklist to use during games

  • Move candidate? Check: captures, checks, threats — and opponent replies.
  • Are any pieces hanging or undefended after my move? (Scan the board for en prise pieces.)
  • Is my king safe next turn? If not, seek immediate consolidation.
  • Am I winning by material or position? If material, trade to reduce counterplay; if positional, keep tension and improve pieces.

If you want, I can...

  • Walk through the loss vs sepsc move-by-move and highlight the critical tactical misses.
  • Create a 2‑week tactical routine tailored to your most-missed motifs (forks, pins, back-rank).
  • Make a short opening crib sheet for your favored Center Game lines showing common middlegame plans.

Tell me which of those you'd like and I’ll prepare it.


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