Avatar of Chris Ellarby-Bezak

Chris Ellarby-Bezak

Ellazak86 Since 2022 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟
37.1%- 59.5%- 3.5%
Bullet 190
23W 36L 3D
Blitz 160
30W 30L 9D
Rapid 439
179W 209L 42D
Daily 654
1438W 2405L 103D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick summary

Nice fighting spirit — your recent daily games show a taste for tactical play and sacrificial attacks (those Nxf7/Bxf7 themes). You're trending upward overall; keep sharpening the basics so those attacking instincts convert more often into clean wins instead of risky losses.

Games I looked at (examples)

  • Win vs genemarkchessman — sacrificial Nxf7 worked and your checks kept the opponent under pressure. See replay:
  • Loss vs ellinnapro — you reached a complex middlegame but missed the mating resources (Qf3 / Rh1 mate). Replay:

What you're doing well

  • You take the initiative. Sacrifices like Nxf7 / Bxf7 show you look for tactical targets and king hunts — that's how many quick wins are earned.
  • You're not afraid to play sharp and complicated positions. That creates practical chances against weaker or unprepared opponents.
  • Your long-term trend shows improvement — keep the work consistent and the rating will follow.

Key areas to improve

  • King safety and back-rank awareness — several losses end in mating nets (for example the Rh1# finish). Before and after every trade, ask: is my king safe? Are there back‑rank weaknesses? See Back rank mate.
  • Simple blunder checks — you sometimes grab material or attack without checking the opponent’s counter threats (checks, captures, threats). That allowed Qf3 → Rh1 type tactics in the loss vs ellinnapro.
  • Follow-up calculation after sacrifices — your sacrifices are bold, but make sure you calculate the main defensive resources for the opponent so you don’t run out of steam.
  • Endgame technique — when a win requires slowly converting an advantage (passed pawns, rook endings), focus on methodical play rather than flashy tactics that may not work.

Concrete routines & drills (daily / weekly)

  • Before you play a move: do the quick 3-question blunder check — (1) Does my opponent have a check? (2) Can they capture anything I leave hanging? (3) What is their last move threatening? Make this a habit every turn.
  • Daily tactics: 6–10 puzzles focused on forks, pins, discovered checks and mating nets. Aim for accuracy, not speed.
  • Back‑rank drill: practice 5 positions where you must defend or exploit back‑rank weaknesses. Recognize the pattern: two rooks on the back rank with no luft = danger.
  • One annotated game per week: pick a recent loss, replay it slowly, write down one turning point and what you missed. If possible, review with an engine to confirm candidate moves.

Short weekly practice plan (4 weeks)

  • Week 1 — Tactics focus: forks/pins/skewers; habit-build blunder check each move.
  • Week 2 — King safety & mating patterns: study basic mates and back-rank defenses; practice converting material advantage safely.
  • Week 3 — Practical games: play 5 slow daily games, annotate 3 mistakes per game, and correct them.
  • Week 4 — Review & consolidate: repeat the best puzzles, re-analyze the two most instructive losses, and aim to reduce “missed mate” errors.

Examples of tactical ideas to practice

  • King hunt motifs after Nxf7/Bxf7 — practice the follow-up: are rooks and queen able to join? Is the king escape route blocked?
  • Queen infiltration — when opponent’s queen can reach f3/g2 (or similar squares), look for defensive interpositions or trades. Ask: can I neutralize the queen with a minor piece or a forcing sequence?
  • Rook endgames / passed pawn technique — if you often reach pawn races, learn basic Lucena/Berger techniques to convert one-pawn advantages.

One actionable checklist you can use right now

  • Before every move: Checks? Captures? Threats? (Say it out loud.)
  • If you consider a sacrifice: calculate the opponent’s best reply and a safe back-up plan for move 3 after the sac.
  • If king is in the center or you’ve traded many pieces: prioritize getting your king to safety and making luft for rooks.
  • Finish your post‑game: mark the single biggest mistake and practice that motif until you stop repeating it.

Next steps

Pick one small habit (the 3-question blunder check) and make it automatic over the next 7 games. After that, layer on a tactical set and a weekly annotated game. If you want, I can generate a short set of practice puzzles (10) tailored to the issues above or walk through one loss move-by-move — tell me which game to deep-dive.


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