Avatar of Tyson Brady

Tyson Brady CM

electrosaw @iwasonce11 Since 2023 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟
58.2%- 29.5%- 12.3%
Daily 1524 90W 25L 3D
Rapid 2548 1014W 415L 231D
Blitz 2571 345W 279L 77D
Bullet 2683 124W 79L 22D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick overview

Nice set of rapid games — you're clearly comfortable with sharp, tactical play and you convert attacking chances. Your last sessions show energetic piece play (knight sacrifices, rook activity and decisive queen checks) but also a couple of avoidable king-safety lapses on the opposite side of the board. Below are focused, practical ideas to keep winning the good positions and stop the sudden mates.

What you're doing well

  • Active, forcing play: you look for tactical punches (knight forks, sacrifices, opening lines to the enemy king) — that’s a big strength in rapid time controls.
  • Strong conversion: when you win material or get the attack, you push the advantage and finish the game rather than letting it fizzle.
  • Good use of rooks on open files and the seventh rank — repeatedly creating practical winning chances.
  • Wide opening repertoire with clear “go-to” systems that score for you (e.g., Nimzo-Larsen, Amazon Attack, Caro‑Kann) — play those more when you want consistent results.

Recurring mistakes & patterns to fix

  • King safety after pawns open on the side. In your loss you got hit by a quick mating net — check for back‑rank and house‑keeping moves (luft, keep a defender on the h-file) before launching operations on the opposite wing. See the mate sequence: AlphawomanA.
  • Premature exchanges that release pressure. Sometimes you trade a key attacker (bishop or knight) when keeping it would maintain mating threats — ask “if I trade, does my attack evaporate?” before swapping.
  • Occasional tunnel vision in sharp positions. After a tactic works you sometimes stop scanning for the opponent’s counterthreats (counterchecks, quiet defenses). Run one quick safety check before committing.
  • Time allocation: in several games the clock got low in critical positions. Keep 10–15 seconds in reserve for tactical moments; if necessary, simplify to reduce calculation cost when low on time.

Concrete, short-term training plan (7–14 days)

  • Daily tactics (15–25 min): focus on knight forks, sacrifices that open a king, and back‑rank mates. Do mixed puzzles and then 10 puzzles of the same theme.
  • King safety checklist (5 min): before every pawn push on the opponent’s wing ask: is my king safe? Do I need luft? Is there an enemy queen/rook battery aimed at my back rank?
  • Opening maintenance (10–15 min every other day): consolidate 2–3 main lines you score well with (Nimzo-Larsen, Amazon Attack, Caro‑Kann). Drill common tactical motifs and a single plan to reach a comfortable middlegame — avoid novelty hunting in rapid play.
  • Postgame review (after each session): pick 2 decisive games and annotate 5 key moments — what you intended vs. what happened. Keep notes for recurring mistakes.
  • One longer training game with analysis (30–45 min): play a rapid (15+10) and analyze with an engine and a coach or stronger friend — focus on decision points, not the whole move list.

Key position — study this tactical theme

Here’s one of your recent wins that shows the type of tactical, sacrificial play you do well. Replay the sequence and ask at every capture: “is this forcing?” and “what replies threaten my king?”

Practical tips to use in your next session

  • Before castling short vs opposite-side pawn storms, ask: “can I safely play g‑, h‑ or f‑pawn moves?” If not, delay castling or pick a prophylactic move.
  • When you see a sacrifice like Nxf7 or a bishop sac on g6, verify at least two opponent replies. If you can force mate or recover material in all lines, go for it — otherwise keep options open.
  • Keep one spare tempo on the clock (10–15s) for sudden tactics — if your clock drops below that, simplify or steer to technical play.
  • Prefer the openings where your win rate is high for serious rapid sessions: Nimzo-Larsen Attack, Amazon Attack, Caro-Kann Defense.

Next steps

  • Do a 7‑day challenge: 15–25 min tactics + 10 min opening review + 1 annotated game per day. Re-evaluate: are back‑rank and king-safety mistakes reduced?
  • If you want, share 1 annotated loss and 1 win from this batch and I’ll give move-by-move coaching on the critical moments.
  • Keep using the strength of your tactical intuition — pair it with a quick safety checklist and you’ll convert more games without getting mated suddenly.

If you want immediate help

Send one of these and I’ll prepare a focused micro‑lesson:

  • “Analyze my loss to AlphawomanA” — I’ll annotate the checkmate sequence and show defensive resources.
  • “Walk me through the Nxf7 game” — I’ll break the tactic into decision nodes and show candidate moves.
  • “Make a 2‑week training schedule” — I’ll tailor it to your time and preferred openings.

Report a Problem