Avatar of Melikset Khachiyan

Melikset Khachiyan GM

GMMelik Los Angeles Since 2009 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟♟♟
47.8%- 41.8%- 10.4%
Daily 1796 191W 64L 40D
Rapid 2582 19W 4L 2D
Blitz 2740 11019W 10534L 2793D
Bullet 2502 3919W 2662L 451D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Overview of your recent play

You show strong willingness to seek active play and keep pressure on opponents. Your opening choices tend to lead to dynamic middlegames where you coordinate pieces well and look for forcing lines. The wins demonstrate you can convert initiative into tangible advantages, and you often keep rooks and minor pieces actively placed. In losses and draws, the games highlight opportunities to improve your decision making in sharp middlegames and to finish with cleaner conversion or more precise defense. The path forward is about sharpening pattern recognition in complex positions and strengthening a consistent plan after the opening phase.

What you’re doing well

  • Active piece play: you tend to keep pieces on aggressive squares and coordinate threats actively, which puts pressure on opponents early in the middlegame.
  • Tactical readiness: you look for tactical chances and are not afraid to complicate when the position invites it.
  • Resourceful endgame mindset: when white pieces are active, you try to press for a decisive result rather than shuffling into passive setups.
  • Opening flexibility: you’re comfortable with a range of Sicilian structures and adjust plans based on how the opponent responds.

Key areas to improve

  • Plan after the opening: in many sharp middlegames, having a clear, long-term plan (not just chasing immediate tactics) helps you avoid unnecessary material swings and aligns your pieces toward a common goal.
  • Decision making in complex positions: when the board opens up, take a moment to explicitly evaluate candidate plans (active attack vs. simplification vs. defense) before committing to a line.
  • Endgame conversion: practice converting advantages in rook endings and simplified middlegame endings, focusing on king activity and creating practical winning chances rather than relying on material alone.
  • Time management in critical moments: allocate a consistent portion of thinking time to formulate a plan, especially in the middlegame where a single misstep can cascade into a difficult endgame.

Phase-by-phase guidance

  • Opening phase: pick a compact, repeatable plan against common Black responses in your preferred openings. Build a simple set of middle-game ideas tied to your chosen lines so you’re not guessing after 15–20 moves. If you want, consider studying a focused line in the Sicilian Defense: Najdorf or Closed variants to solidify a coherent plan.
  • Middlegame: prioritize piece activity and pawn structure. Look for ways to expand on the kingside or center in a controlled manner, and avoid overextending if your opponent has a clear tactical counter
  • Endgame: practice rook endings and king activity. Work on scenarios where you convert a small material edge into a win, or hold a draw with precise defense when you’re briefly worse.

Practice plan to implement

  • Daily tactical puzzles (10–15 minutes) focused on motifs that showed up in your games (forks, discovered attacks, rook alignments on open files).
  • Two focused endgame sessions per week: rook endings and king activity drills, using common rook endgame setups as templates.
  • Opening review: pick 1–2 Sicilian structures you like and build a concise plan for each, including typical pawn breaks and key piece maneuvers. Add a short post-game note about which plan you actually used and how it worked.
  • Post-game reflection: after each game, write a 3-point takeaway (one thing you did well, one area to improve, one concrete target for the next game).

Study suggestions with placeholders

To deepen understanding of the Sicilian structures you frequently encounter, you might explore focused resources on the following concepts. See the opening terms for quick reference: Sicilian Defense: Najdorf Variation, Sicilian Defense: Closed Variations, and Sicilian Defense: Dragon Variation.

Optional next steps

If you want, I can provide a concise, move-by-move annotated recap of your last few games (in PGN form) highlighting where plans drifted and where you made strong decisions. I can also tailor a 2-week mini-camp focusing on the three areas above and give you a printable checklist for quick daily use.

Want a quick starter plan?

Plan A: 15 minutes of tactics, 15 minutes of endgame drills (rook endings), 15 minutes of opening notes with a 3-mly post-game review. Repeat for two weeks and compare progress in your next coaching session.


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