Avatar of Jonathan Pagan

Jonathan Pagan NM

FabianoCarlsen Since 2013 (Inactive) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟
46.9%- 48.5%- 4.6%
Daily 1359 156W 95L 33D
Rapid 2435 11W 4L 1D
Blitz 2707 4291W 4258L 516D
Bullet 2792 5181W 5606L 403D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Recent rapid games: what’s going well and what to tighten up

Jonathan, you show a strong willingness to play actively and create chances, which is a big strength in rapid chess. The recent win demonstrates your ability to push pressure and finish when you have the initiative. The loss highlights the importance of keeping a clear plan in the middlegame and staying vigilant for opposing threats, especially in complex positions. The draw indicates resilience, but there were moments where a more precise plan could have pressed for an advantage.

  • You frequently look for active piece play and opportunities to attack, which helps you seize initiative in many games.
  • You can spot tactical ideas and carry them into practical sequences, often generating concrete threats for your opponent.
  • Endgames remain a tricky area where small missteps can swing the result, so strengthening endgame technique will help convert more advantages.

Key areas to improve: concrete steps

  • Endgames: practice rook endings and simple king activity plans to convert advantages. Do short drills that end with a clear plan (activate the king, use the rook on open files, and push a passed pawn). After each drill, write one takeaway to reinforce the lesson.
  • Time management: in rapid games, allocate time deliberately. Try to use roughly a third of your time on the early middlegame, reserve a portion for critical turning points, and keep a buffer for final checks. Practice with fixed time controls to build this habit.
  • Tactics and pattern recognition: maintain daily tactic practice focusing on patterns like back-rank weaknesses, overloaded pieces, forks, and discoveries. Aim to identify two forcing ideas in key positions before committing a move.
  • Opening discipline: refine a compact repertoire of 2–3 lines you know well and study the typical middlegame plans for them. The openings data shows you enjoy both aggressive and solid options; pick a pair that fits your style and study their standard plans and typical counterplay your opponents may use.

Opening insights: how to sharpen your choices

Your openings data suggests you’re comfortable with sharp, tactical starts as well as solid, strategic lines. Use that versatility to your advantage by pairing an aggressive choice with a clear middlegame plan, so you don’t drift into uncertain positions. For example, the Amar Gambit can lead to sharp, tactical battles when you know the typical follow‑ups and tactics; the Colle System and Ruy Lopez lines offer solid, steady development with clear middlegame themes. Keep a short written plan for each line and review it after games to reinforce correct ideas.

If you want to explore more aggressive ideas, approach them with a structured study: learn the main lines, replay sample games focusing on the middle-game transitions, and practice with shorter time controls to handle the pressure.

Practice plan for the next week

  • Daily tactics drill (about 15 minutes) focusing on common motifs such as back-rank weaknesses, overloaded pieces, forks, and discovered attacks.
  • Opening study (3 sessions): pick 2–3 lines you enjoy and study their typical middlegame plans and common pitfalls.
  • Endgame work (2 sessions): rook endings and fundamental checkmating patterns with reduced material.
  • Review two recent games with a lightweight, personal annotation to capture turning points and a single improvement for each.
  • Play 5 rapid practice games using the chosen openings to test plans under time pressure.

Openings in context: quick notes

Your data shows successful results with several openings, including aggressive and solid options. Consider building a small, reliable repertoire around 2–3 lines that you actually enjoy and understand deeply. This helps maintain consistency and makes middlegame plans easier to execute in rapid games. Placeholder references for quick study: Amar Gambit, Colle System, and Ruy Lopez: Closed, Worrall Attack.

Strength and rating trend: practical takeaways

Your overall performance statistics suggest room to stabilize and push forward. Focus on turning short-term gains into consistent long-term progress by following the practice plan above, keeping a tight opening repertoire, and committing to clean endgame technique. Small, steady improvements in these areas tend to compound well in rapid play over time.

Placeholder note

If you’d like, I can tailor this plan to your preferred openings or generate a personalized training schedule that aligns with your upcoming tournament dates. [Optional: profile placeholder] jonathanpagan


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