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epicchess-21

Since 2021 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟
51.4%- 43.8%- 4.7%
Bullet 2236
1473W 1243L 129D
Blitz 2156
571W 510L 60D
Rapid 2185
6W 2L 0D
Daily 1865
9W 0L 0D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Game snapshot

Great win — nice conversion from the middlegame into a won king-and-pawn ending. If you want to replay the final game quickly, here's the score and final position to step through move-by-move:

Recent opponent: fischerfan_2025 • Opening: Sicilian Defense: O'Kelly Variation

What you did well

  • You steer openings into manageable structures you know — the Maroczy/Maroczy-style bind you played put long-term pressure on Black and reduced risky complications.
  • Good piece exchanges at the right time: trading into a favorable endgame (queen trade and simplifying when ahead) so you could convert with king activity and passed pawns.
  • Active king in the endgame — you used your king aggressively to support pawn advances and create decisive threats. That’s a high-quality conversion skill.
  • Tactical awareness in the middlegame: you spotted captures and tactics that eliminated Black’s counterplay and netted material or structure weaknesses.
  • Consistent finishing: forcing resignations rather than relying on time — you convert positions rather than hoping for flagging or blunders.

Recurring weaknesses to fix

  • Allowing active enemy rooks on open files — across a few games opponents found counterplay with rook checks. Spend a little time on rook vs rook and rook+pawn endgames to reduce counterplay risk.
  • Occasional looseness around pawn structure when you open files — a few pawn captures created targets (isolated or backward pawns). Think one move deeper about the resulting pawn weaknesses before opening the position.
  • Time allocation in long games: you sometimes spend long stretches in one phase (opening) which compresses time for the endgame. Plan rough time checkpoints (opening, middlegame, endgame).
  • Some middlegame moves invited tactical checks on your king — prophylaxis (creating a luft or avoiding back-rank issues) would remove easy checking resources for the opponent.

Concrete drills and study plan (next 2–4 weeks)

  • Daily tactics — 10–15 puzzles per day focusing on forks, pins and discovered attacks. That sharpens pattern recognition for quick captures you already find in your games.
  • Endgame practice — 3 focused positions, 3× per week:
    • King + pawn vs king basics (opposition, outside passed pawn).
    • Rook + pawn vs rook endgames (building and defending the Lucena / Philidor ideas).
    • Simple queen and rook endgame motifs with checks and perpetual tricks.
  • Opening refinement — two 30-minute sessions per week:
    • Study 3 key lines in your main systems (for example the O'Kelly/Maroczy setups) and the typical pawn breaks and piece plans.
    • Learn 1–2 typical middlegame plans (where to put knights, bishop targets, when to break with e5 or b4).
  • Post-game routine — after each daily game, spend 10–20 minutes:
    • Annotate three moments: a good move, a mistake/inaccuracy, and a critical decision (why the winning plan worked).
    • Run those critical positions with an engine for a sanity check and write down the main improvement.

Practical in-game tips

  • Before any pawn exchange, ask: "Does this create a target (isolated/backward/doubled pawn)?" If yes, have a plan to attack or to prevent the target from becoming weak.
  • If your rooks are on the board and files open, prioritize getting one rook to the seventh rank or doubling the rooks — this increases winning chances and reduces counterplay.
  • In daily chess you have time — but use checkpoints: spend ~20–30% of remaining time in the opening, ~30–50% in the middlegame, reserve at least 20% for the endgame.»
  • When the opponent starts giving checks with a rook, keep calm: look for interpositions, king runs towards safety, or simplifications to neutralize the checks.

Next steps I can help with

  • I can annotate this match move-by-move and point out 5 exact moments where an alternative plan improves conversion — say if you want a "coach's annotated game".
  • If you'd like, I can generate a 4-week training schedule tailored to your availability (fast daily routine for 20–30 minutes or a more in-depth plan for 60+ minutes).
  • Want targeted puzzles? I can prepare a custom set of tactics and endgames based on the themes from your wins.

Tell me which you prefer and I’ll prepare it: annotated game, custom training plan, or a puzzle pack.


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