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.