Avatar of Dragan Simonovic

Dragan Simonovic

DrSi Bijelo Polje Since 2014 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟
47.4%- 48.5%- 4.1%
Bullet 1467
42W 40L 2D
Blitz 1933
13094W 13433L 1130D
Rapid 1862
68W 22L 6D
Daily 1001
5W 18L 0D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

What you’re doing well

  • You have a strong handle on a robust opening repertoire, with clear performance in several solid systems. This gives you reliable middlegame plans and helps you avoid getting trapped in unfamiliar positions.
  • You show willingness to press in middlegames and to pursue practical chances rather than settling for draws when opportunities arise.
  • You adapt well to different opponents and game temperatures, keeping your head under pressure and looking for practical chances to complicate the position when you're ahead or if the position is balanced.
  • You have demonstrated strength converting advantages in some openings, and you’re able to keep the game dynamic rather than drifting into passive lines.

Key improvement areas

  • Time management in rapid games: your clocks show that you often spend significant time in the early to middlegame. Build a quick, repeatable routine to identify a couple of candidate plans within the first 5–7 moves, then choose a concrete plan and execute it. This frees time for deeper calculation in critical moments.
  • Prophylaxis and king safety: in sharper moments you can be blindsided by tactical threats or back-rank ideas. Before initiating exchanges or committing to a concrete plan, do a quick check for hidden tactics against your king or loose pieces on your side.
  • Endgame conversion: several games reach middlegame transitions where a small edge could be converted more cleanly into a win. Practice fundamental endgames (especially rook endings and rook+minor piece endings) and work on simplifying to favorable endings when you are ahead.
  • Pattern recognition and tactical awareness: strengthen your ability to spot common attacking motifs (back-rank weaknesses, overloaded defenders, and quiet tactical shots). Regular puzzle practice focused on these themes will help reduce missed opportunities or oversights in rapid time pressure.
  • Opening consolidation: your openings show excellent results in some lines, but a few lines are higher risk in practice. Consider standardizing 2–3 main lines you truly understand deeply, plus a couple secondary systems as backups. Build a quick “plans cheat sheet” for each opening’s typical middlegame ideas and pawn structures.

Opening performance snapshot

  • Slav Defense and the Budapest Variation show very strong results in your recent data. These tend to lead to solid, often symmetrical positions where accurate plan execution matters more than dazzling tactics.
  • In the more dynamic Modern Defense family, you have a higher win rate when you steer the game toward your preferred structures. Continue to refine the typical middlegame plans for these lines and practice recognizing when to simplify or complicate.
  • Avoid over-relying on any single line in unfamiliar territory. When a line leads to imbalanced structures or tactical melee, double-check your plan and consider steering toward a safer, more predictable path if you’re low on time.

Rating trend and practice focus

Your recent rating trajectory shows consistent growth over multiple time horizons, which is a healthy sign of solid improvement and adaptation. To sustain momentum, pair your study with targeted practice in the following areas:

  • Tactical training that emphasizes back-rank themes and overloaded defenses to strengthen calculation under time pressure.
  • Endgame drills, especially rook endings, so you can convert small advantages into wins without leaking resources.
  • Repertoire refinement: lock in 2–3 openings as your main weapons and build a concise plan sheet for each, including typical middlegame ideas and common pawn structures.

Training plan for the next 4 weeks

  • Week 1: Time management and tactics. Do 15–20 minutes of daily puzzles focusing on back-rank motifs and tactical shots. Review 2 recent games to identify one moment where a faster decision could have maintained initiative.
  • Week 2: Repertoire consolidation. Choose 2 openings to own deeply (one solid system and one dynamic option). Create a 1-page plan for each that covers typical structures, key ideas, and common middlegame plans. Practice 3 model games in each opening to reinforce the plans.
  • Week 3: Endgames and conversion. Study essential rook endings and rook+minor piece endings. Solve 5 endgame practice positions per day and annotate how you would convert a small advantage in each.
  • Week 4: Review and integration. Pick 3 recent games, annotate them focusing on where plans diverged from your preferred ideas, and prepare alternative lines or plans for similar positions in the future.

Personalized notes

Use these prompts in your next training sessions to focus your improvement. You can also customize the placeholders to link to your profile or share a sample practice position:

  • Profile reference: dragan%20simonovic
  • Sample training position:


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