Coach Chesswick
Quick summary
Good session: you converted material and pawn advantages well, created outside passed pawns repeatedly, and earned a couple of wins by exploiting opponents in time trouble. Main leaks: kingside safety and pawn-structure concessions that let opponents generate tactical shots or dangerous passed pawns. Below are specific observations, concrete drills and a short plan you can apply in the next week.
Notable games (pick for review)
- Win vs chessblaze123 — solid conversion and promotion pressure. Replay:
- Win vs thereddrag — excellent endgame technique and pawn racing.
- Loss vs mrrouviere — instructive: kingside got opened and attack finished quickly after a series of exchanges; good target to study.
What you did well (patterns to keep)
- You convert material + passed pawns reliably — when you get an outside passer you push it and keep opponent busy (see your win with the a- and b-pawn advances).
- Good practical play in blitz: you put pressure and forced opponents into time trouble — that practical edge wins games.
- Opening repertoire: you have many games in French Exchange, Caro-Kann-type structures and Ruy Lopez lines where you are familiar and score well. Use that continuity.
Main weaknesses to fix
- Kingside safety: in the loss vs MrRouviere you allowed pawns and pieces to open lines around your king (hxg6/Bxg6 continuation). Watch for early pawn pushes and back-rank / mating motifs after exchanges.
- Pawn-structure concessions: pawn pushes that create holes in front of your king or give the opponent easy targets (particularly f- and g-file weaknesses).
- Endgame pawn races: in some lost games you were on the wrong side of a race — don’t simplify into pawn-races if the opponent’s outside passer is faster (calculate the race carefully).
- Occasional tactical oversight in sharp positions — practice quick calculation in typical patterns from your openings (pins, forks, sacrifices on g6/h6, knight forks).
Concrete improvements — what to do next 7–14 days
- Daily (15–25 minutes): 12–20 tactical puzzles focused on pins, forks, discovered attacks and back-rank mates. Stop the clock — aim for accuracy first, then speed.
- 3× per week (30–45 minutes): study one short endgame theme:
- Week 1 — rook + pawn endgames (Lucena / Philidor basics + defending the 7th rank)
- Week 2 — king + pawn races (calculate tempi and outside passer races)
- Opening tune-up (2 sessions this week): pick 2 of your high-volume lines (French Exchange, Caro-Kann structures) and review the most common tactical traps for both sides — memorize 2–3 critical moves and the standard pawn breaks.
- Post-game routine: after each session, pick your worst loss and write 5 bullet points: single mistake, why it happened (strategy, tactics, time), how to avoid it next time.
Practical blitz tips (for immediate effect)
- Before pawn breaks near your king, pause 1–2 seconds and check for captures that open files toward your king. Many losses stem from one rushed pawn push.
- If ahead in material, simplify when it reduces opponent counterplay — but avoid simplification if it allows a faster promotion race for the opponent.
- Use checks and forcing moves in time trouble to keep the opponent calculating — a sequence of forcing moves often wins on the clock.
- When opponent sacrifices on your king-side, try to exchange queens or trade a piece to reduce mating potential rather than grab material immediately.
Concrete puzzles and drills
- Tactics drill: 10 forks, 10 pins, 10 discovered-attack puzzles — timed (5 minutes total), repeat daily.
- Endgame drill: play 10 positions of king + pawn vs king and 10 rook + pawn vs rook from both sides (set up and practice the winning / drawing techniques).
- Blitz practice: 5 games of 5+0 where your goal is: no blunders in first 10 moves, keep king safe — focus on accuracy over fancy play.
Opening work — efficient approach
- Pick your top 3 lines from your Openings Performance list (French Exchange, Caro-like lines, London Poisoned Pawn). For each:
- Make a one-page crib sheet: main plans, one typical tactic for you, one trap to avoid.
- Study one model game (annotate key moments) and practice the critical move orders in blitz.
- Don’t over-expand: retain what you play most — your strength is familiarity with these structures.
Mindset & practical checklist during blitz
- Before each move ask: “Is my king safe?” — if no, hunting for big tactics is often wrong.
- If down on time, simplify to reduce calculation load (trade pieces if safe).
- Flag wins are fine, but aim to reduce reliance on opponent time trouble by improving speed on common positions (openings + transitions).
Sample week plan (compact)
- Mon: tactics 20 min; 3 rapid positions from your openings (20 min).
- Tue: endgame drill 30 min (rook + pawn basics); 3 blitz games (5+0).
- Wed: annotate one loss (15–20 min); tactics 15 min.
- Thu: play 5 longer rapid games (10+5) applying king safety checklist.
- Fri: tactics 20 min; review one model game from a favored opening.
- Weekend: mixed — one longer study session (60–90 min) — combine endgame + openings.
What to expect if you follow this
- Faster tactical recognition and fewer blitz blunders within 2 weeks.
- Cleaner endgame technique and better decisions about simplification within a month.
- More consistent rating trend — your recent slopes (1–12 month positive trend) show the work pays off if you focus the drills above.
Placeholders / next steps
Use the links above to re-open the games listed and run the post-mortem. If you want, I can:
- Annotate one loss move-by-move and highlight 3 critical moments.
- Build a 2-week tactic set tailored to the patterns you miss most.
- Produce a one-page opening crib sheet for your top line.
Reply with which option you want first.