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Bailey

GGMorrow GA Since 2020 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟
48.3%- 46.6%- 5.1%
Bullet 382
427W 425L 15D
Blitz 515
148W 130L 26D
Rapid 824
393W 403L 65D
Daily 1011
63W 37L 3D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick summary

Nice progress, Bailey — your rating trend over the last 6–12 months is strongly upward and your overall adjusted win rate is just over 50%. You win by being active and tactical, but a handful of avoidable tactical oversights and king-safety issues are costing you the clearest gains. Below are concrete, practical steps to turn those gains into a steady rating climb.

What you’re doing well

  • You play aggressively and create problems for opponents early (you score well with direct pawn breaks and queen activity).
  • Your tactical vision is solid — many wins come from quick combinations and picking off loose pieces.
  • Your opening variety gives you chances to steer games into uncomfortable territory for opponents (good results with some gambit lines and the London Poisoned Pawn).
  • Your workload and volume of games helped you improve fast — the big 6‑month jump shows that practice is paying off.

Biggest recurring weaknesses

  • King safety and back-rank awareness: a few mates came from not creating luft or noticing enemy pieces joining the attack.
  • Premature queen sorties: bringing the queen out early wins material sometimes, but leaves you vulnerable to tempo gains and tactical shots.
  • Opening follow-through in the Caro‑Kann: you play the Caro often but your win rate there is under 41% — you need clearer middlegame plans against common responses.
  • Occasional calculation lapses in critical moments — you miss opponent counterresources before grabbing material.

Concrete next-step fixes

  • Before every capture, ask: “What does my opponent get in return?” Count attackers and defenders and check forcing replies for two moves ahead.
  • Basic checklist before every move in rapid: is my king safe, are any pieces hanging, do I have undefended squares near my king?
  • Against the Caro‑Kann (Caro-Kann Defense), pick two reliable lines (one for White and one for Black) and study typical pawn breaks and piece plans rather than long theory.
  • Improve back-rank awareness by making a habit: if rooks are on the board and you have no luft, create one (pawn move or rook lift) when the position is quiet.

Tactical & endgame drills (daily/weekly)

  • Daily: 15–25 tactics (mix easy and medium). Focus on pins, forks and back-rank motifs for a week.
  • Weekly: 2 focused endgame studies — basic king + pawn versus king, rook endings and simple rook+minor piece endings.
  • Post-game: pick every loss and at least two unclear wins and find the single turning move — write down the reason it was good or bad.

Opening work: efficient, not exhaustive

  • Prioritize plans, not move lists. For example with the Caro-Kann Defense study typical pawn structures and the outlet squares for knights and bishops.
  • Keep the aggressive options you score with (Elephant Gambit and London Poisoned Pawn) but practice one solid backup line for when opponents avoid the traps.
  • Create a one‑page cheat sheet for each opening: common ideas, one typical trap to watch, two endgames that arise from the structure.

Practical rapid-game tips

  • Spend time where decisions matter: 10–15 seconds on routine moves, 30–90 seconds when the position is sharp.
  • When you win material, pause and double-check for immediate counterplay (especially checks and discovered attacks).
  • If an opponent repeats a strange move sequence, keep a simple plan (develop, castle, centralize) rather than chasing the queen too early.
  • When ahead, simplify into safe endgames rather than hunting cheap brilliancies — conversion is a skill.

4‑week training plan (example)

  • Week 1 — Tactics focus: 20 tactics/day; review 10 recent losses for patterns.
  • Week 2 — Openings & plans: 10–15 minutes/day studying two Caro‑Kann lines and the common middlegame plans.
  • Week 3 — Endgames + conversion: 3 endgame drills (rook vs rook, king+pawn) and 10 tactics/day.
  • Week 4 — Practice and review: play 40 rapid games with the checklist; review top 8 games and make a one-page improvements list.

Example recent games (study these key moments)

Win vs. sergio_xadrez — nice central breakthrough and queen activity. Replay the sequence and ask: could the queen have been chased away earlier? Try this replay:

Loss vs. ayushpandey89 — a sharp game that ended with a mate after a missed defense. Replay the final phase and find the defensive resource you missed:

Quick checklist to use during games

  • Are there checks or captures I didn’t calculate? (look twice)
  • Is my king safe — can the opponent create a mating net?
  • If I win material, do I simplify or keep attacking? Pick one and commit.
  • Does my plan improve my worst‑placed piece?

Final encouragement

Your long-term trend is excellent — keep the volume, but add focused study: tactics, one opening plan, and basic endgames. That combination will convert your aggressive style into consistent rating gains.

If you want, I can convert this into a personalized 8‑week schedule with daily tasks and resources, or create a short checklist overlay you can use during games.


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