Avatar of Lee LaFrese

Lee LaFrese NM

eel1957 Tucson, AZ Since 2010 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟
51.8%- 41.1%- 7.1%
Blitz 2061
2564W 2042L 351D
Rapid 2019
15W 7L 2D
Daily 915
1W 0L 0D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

What went well in your recent rapid games

You demonstrated a willingness to use dynamic openings and to fight for activity in the middlegame. Your openings data show you are comfortable with aggressive setups and you often create practical chances right from the start. This kind of chaos can be a strength in rapid when you spot forcing lines and keep the pressure on your opponent.

  • You are comfortable taking the initiative with ambitious openings and looking for active play rather than merely developing slowly.
  • You frequently activate pieces quickly and create attacking chances, especially when files and diagonals open up.
  • You show resilience in maintaining pressure and finding tactical resources to complicate the position.

Areas to improve for stronger rapid results

  • Time management: in several games the clock ran low while you were calculating or choosing aggressive plans. Build a simple clock discipline: allocate a fixed amount of time for the opening, then check critical moments with a quick safety check (Are my pieces developed? Is my king safe? Are there immediate threats?).
  • Development discipline in the opening: while aggressive lines can pay off, ensure you complete development and king safety before launching complex tactics. Consider adopting a compact, repeatable plan for common openings to reduce think-time under pressure.
  • Endgame conversion: several positions lead into long tactical battles. Strengthen basics of king activity, rook activity, and pawn endgames so you can convert advantages or hold drawn endgames more reliably.
  • Prophylaxis and avoiding overextension: after exchanges, pause to review the opponent’s threats and your own plan. This helps prevent sudden tactical blows that flip the evaluation.
  • Maintain focus on the plan after a key exchange: when you trade off material to simplify, confirm how the resulting structure supports your goal (active pieces, open files, pawn structure) and stay on message rather than drifting into improvised lines.

Opening repertoire notes and guidance

Your openings show strong practical results in several lines. To maximize reliability in rapid games, try to solidify a compact 1-2 opening choices you know well and can execute quickly without getting bogged down in heavy theory. Consider the following approach:

  • Continue leveraging aggressive, initiative-driven ideas in a small set of openings you understand deeply. This helps you press early and avoid long periods of navigation in unfamiliar lines.
  • Couple your aggressive choices with a predictable plan (development, king safety, central control) so you can transition to a strong middlegame plan even if the opponent deviates.
  • Be mindful of opponents who prepare precise refutations; when you sense a risky line is met with solid defense, default to a safer line and regain control rather than forcing a complex tactic.

Optional study ideas: consider reviewing your performance in Amar Gambit and Barnes Defense as starting points for solid, repeatable lines. If you’d like, I can point you to specific practice lines for these setups: Amar Gambit, Barnes Defense.

Practical improvement plan for the next week

  • Daily puzzle focus (15–20 minutes): concentrate on tactical motifs that commonly appear in rapid games (forks, pins, discovered attacks, and back-rank ideas).
  • Opening practice (2 sessions): devote 20 minutes to drilling a compact 1-2 move plan for two chosen openings, then play two practice games focusing on executing the plan rather than exploring many deviations.
  • Endgame basics (2 sessions): review rook endgames and king-and-pawn endings, focusing on the importance of king activity and creating a passed pawn.
  • Review one win and one loss (20 minutes): identify one decision that looked strong and one moment where a safer alternative would have yielded a better result, then write a short recap of the key lessons.
  • Play two practice games with a plan: start each game with a simple, repeatable opening line and a concrete middlegame plan, aiming to reach a position you recognize and can execute confidently.

Optional practice resources

If you want, I can generate a focused training PGN tied to your current openings and typical middlegame plans. For example:


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