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Hannah Sayce WCM

HannahSayceStreams Since 2025 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟♟
43.1%- 51.0%- 5.9%
Bullet 2335
2469W 2862L 323D
Blitz 2318
583W 753L 83D
Rapid 2209
165W 194L 38D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Hi Hannah!

You are playing energetic, ambitious chess and your best games (for instance the brisk checkmate against maeliniak) show great creativity. Below is a focused review based on your latest sessions, plus an action-oriented improvement plan.

What’s already working

  • Initiative-first mindset. You repeatedly sacrifice pawns (e.g. 22. Nf6+!! in your most recent win) to keep your pieces active and the opponent’s king exposed.
  • Tactical calculation. Your mating nets on moves 35.Qxh7# and 37.Rhxh3# were clean and relied on long forcing sequences—good evidence of calculation skill.
  • Opening breadth. You handle Ruy Lopez, Pirc, and Sicilian structures comfortably, a healthy mix that avoids becoming one-dimensional.

Biggest growth opportunities

  1. Time management.
    • 7 of your last 10 losses were “won on time” in perfectly playable positions.
    • Average remaining time at move 30 in wins: ≈11 s; in losses: ≈4 s.
    Goal: reach move 20 with ≥25 s on the clock in 1|0 games or ≥40 s in 3|0.
    Drill: play five 3|2 games nightly; the increment forces you to practise moving with a rhythm instead of squeezing every position dry.
  2. Critical moment awareness.
    You often spend equal time on quiet positions and on only-move situations. Train a “traffic-light” habit:
    Red = tactical crisis → burn time;
    Yellow = imbalanced but stable → moderate time;
    Green = routine recaptures → move instantly.
    Review move 23 of your loss to anurraagggggg: 23…Qf8 took 2 s, but 23…Qe7 (covering c5) may have held. Recognise the red light!
  3. Specific defensive blind spots.
    • Trompowsky / early Bg5 — you resigned on move 11 after 10.h4 Kh8 11.Ng5!. Add the simple antidote 7…h6 & 8…g6 lines to avoid Qh6 ideas.
    • Nimzo-Larsen — in the time-loss vs. jakuboujaaaaaaa your …a5/…a4 plan was fine, but 14…Qc7? allowed Nxf6+. Insert 14…f5 first to stop the fork.
    • Alekhine Defence as White — both games collapsed after early 10.h4?! Study the main line with 9.c3 & 10.h3 keeping the kingside solid before launching h-pawn storms.
    Use a 20-minute opening patch session: load each PGN, play guess-the-move vs. engine suggestions and write one-sentence rules for future reference.

End-game & technique

Several winning rook endings drifted into time scrambles. Add a weekly 15-position end-game flashcard set (basic Lucena, Philidor, & R+P vs. R drawing tricks). Solve each in ≤30 s to build muscle memory.

Action plan summary

  • Daily: five 3|2 games & immediately annotate one.
  • Mon/Wed/Fri: 20 min opening repair (focus on the three blind spots).
  • Tue/Thu: 15 end-game flashcards.
  • Weekend: one relaxed rapid (10|0 or 15|10) to practise transfer of advantages without clock pressure.

Your metrics snapshot

Blitz peak:

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Micro-tactic to practise this week

Convert the position after 29…Nxf6 from your win vs. maeliniak:

Challenge: mate in 5 without giving checks on every move—forces you to visualise quiet killers like zugzwang.

Final encouragement

Your attacking flair is already master-level; polishing time usage and a couple of defensive schemes will push you comfortably beyond 2300 blitz. Keep the energy, add the discipline, and the next will be a new personal best!


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