Avatar of Đức Hoàng Tấn

Đức Hoàng Tấn

DucTHHH ha noi Since 2014 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟
47.7%- 45.6%- 6.7%
Bullet 2610
1930W 1957L 261D
Blitz 2441
704W 580L 113D
Rapid 1972
21W 6L 1D
Daily 1204
8W 1L 0D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick summary

Nice streak, Đức Hoàng Tấn — 8 wins, 1 loss and a clear upward rating trend. You’re converting practice into results: your rating jumped fast and your strength-adjusted win rate is roughly 70%. Below I highlight what you do well, where to focus, and a short 4‑week plan to make your wins more convincing (and less dependent on opponent timeouts).

What you’re doing well

  • Strong opening variety and comfort with many systems — you repeatedly develop bishops actively and castle early, which leads to safe king positions.
  • Good use of outposts and central squares (for example your knight jump to d5 in your most recent win). That shows an eye for active piece play.
  • Consistent improvement — big rating gains and a clear upward slope. That means your study and practice are working.
  • Good patience in daily games: you take long think time on key moves instead of blitzing, which is valuable for learning.

Key areas to improve

  • Converting advantages: several wins ended on opponent time. Aim to finish the position earlier (exchange simplifications, create a passed pawn, or force a winning endgame) so you don’t rely on flags.
  • Tactical awareness under concrete pressure — your loss in the Closed Sicilian came from a tactical sequence where a central knight and pawn forks appeared. Practice spotting forks, pins and discovered attacks.
  • Move-order and opening plans: you play many different openings — choose 2–3 main lines to deepen plans, typical pawn breaks and common piece maneuvers so you don’t get surprised by simple counterplay.
  • Endgame basics: convert small material/positional edges more reliably (rook vs rook + pawn technique, king activity, basic pawn endgames).

Concrete 4‑week plan

  • Daily: 10–15 tactics puzzles focused on forks, pins and discovered attacks. Speed is less important — review every mistake.
  • Weekly: annotate 2 of your finished daily games (one win, one loss). Write the plan for both sides and one turning point per game.
  • Endgame: learn 3 basic endgames this month (king + pawn vs king, Lucena basics for rook endgames, and an elementary queen vs pawn theme).
  • Openings: pick 2 openings you like from your recent play and study the typical middlegame plans (not just moves). Examples from your recent games: Bishop's, Ruy and QGD:.

Tactics & training drills (practical)

  • Drill 1 — Forks and double attacks: 8 puzzles in a row. Stop when you miss two in a row; review every missed puzzle to see the motif.
  • Drill 2 — One‑move conversion practice: set up simple won positions (extra pawn or piece) and practice converting them in 5–10 moves — aim to avoid unnecessary piece trades that let opponent breathe.
  • Drill 3 — Speed endgames: give yourself 5 minutes to convert basic king+pawn endgames on a board — this trains technique and practical thinking in late stages.

Practical tips for daily games

  • If you are clearly better, simplify with favorable exchanges and trade into an endgame you know how to win — that reduces dependence on opponent timeout.
  • When your opponent plays an early queen or knight sortie (as in some of your games), look for tactical replies and central breaks before committing a second time with the same piece.
  • Keep a short checklist before each long think: king safety, hanging pieces, opponent threats, candidate captures, and a plan for the next 2–3 moves.

Snapshot — your most recent win

Nice constructive game: you developed normally, fianchettoed the bishop, castled, and used a knight jump to d5 to exchange pieces and open the center. The final position left your opponent in a difficult spot and they ran out of time. Review the turning move Nd5 and the resulting exchanges — that pattern repeats often and is worth mastering.

Replay the game here:

Opponent profile: ducnm200116

Next steps & follow‑up

  • Pick one recent win and one loss, annotate them and send both to me — I’ll give focused feedback on move choice and alternative plans.
  • After 4 weeks of the plan above, measure progress by tracking how many games you convert before the opponent’s time runs out.
  • Keep the momentum — your trend is strong. With a bit more tactical drilling and basic endgame work you’ll turn more of these wins into solid, clean victories.

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