Coach Chesswick
Quick summary
Nice run — you won sharp games by converting pressure and punishing overextensions, but time trouble and a few structural slip-ups cost you. Below I highlight what you did well, the recurring leaks to fix, and a short, practical training plan you can use this week.
What you did well (keep doing)
- Active counterplay against flank attacks — in the Kings Indian game you answered a risky h-pawn advance with clear queenside counterplay and timely piece exchanges that neutralized the opponent's initiative. (See: )
- Good tactical instincts — you spotted and executed simplifying captures (…Nxc3 and …Bxc3) that left you with the better structure/piece coordination.
- Rook activity and pressure in the endgame — your win with heavy pieces shows you know how to use rooks on the 7th/along open files to create decisive threats.
- Strong repertoire pockets: your stats show excellent results in the Najdorf and Dragon — leverage those lines where you’re already scoring.
Recurring problems and how they cost you
- Time trouble / flag losses. Several recent games ended with you losing on time even from playable positions (example vs LanEdNes). That’s a recurring, high-cost leak — winning on the board is great, but you must win on the clock too. (LanEdNes)
- Allowing passed pawn breakthroughs. In the loss the opponent’s c-pawn advanced to c3 and became decisive. You need clearer plans to stop connected/advanced pawns (blockade, piece trades targeting the passer, or piece activity to create counterplay).
- Overextending without enough compensation. When opponents push flank pawns (h4/h5) you handled it well this time, but sometimes you leave weak squares or fail to exploit the overextension quickly enough — that can allow counterplay or time-sapping complications.
- Opening lines with low win rates. Your Openings Performance shows weaker results in Closed Sicilian / Moscow lines — those are worth trimming or reworking if you play them often in blitz.
Concrete, short-term plan (this week)
- Daily blitz routine (30–45 minutes):
- 10–15 minutes of tactics (puzzle rush / mixed difficulty). Focus on calculation speed and pattern recognition.
- 10 minutes: 3–5 rapid (10+2 or 5+3) games — practice converting advantages with some increment, so you learn to avoid flagging.
- 10 minutes: 2 endgame drills — king + pawn vs king, and basic rook endgames (Lucena & Philidor techniques).
- One session: open your weaker lines (Closed Sicilian / Moscow). Either simplify the lines you play or learn 2 concrete plans you can execute without heavy calculation (pawn breaks, typical piece posts).
- Post-game habit: for every lost win/flag, mark the critical move and ask: “Was this a time management slip or a strategic error?” — then add a short note to review later.
Blitz-specific tips to stop losing on time
- Set a time threshold trigger: when your clock < 20s, stop calculating long forced lines — switch to safe, practical moves (trade pieces, keep king safe).
- Only pre-move when the opponent has a single obvious reply and no tactics are possible. Pre-moves are fine for repeated recaptures or once you’re certain of the tactic.
- When ahead on the board, simplify early. Trading down to a won king+pawn or rook endgame is less mentally expensive in blitz.
- Practice "30-second decision-making": play mini-sessions where you must make a move in ≤30s on average to build speed without losing accuracy.
Game-specific notes (quick)
- Vs positionalvillain — you handled an aggressive kingside pawn push very well. Your plan to counter on the queenside and simplify was textbook; keep the same approach in KID-type positions. (Opening reference: King's Indian Defense)
- Vs TheUnderDog001 — strong use of heavy pieces to pressure and win on the clock. You created a passed pawn and used rook activity; review the transition to the endgame to make those wins more reliable without depending on flagging.
- Vs LanEdNes — the opponent’s passed c-pawn decided matters. In similar pawn-advance structures, aim to: exchange the pawn's supporting piece, block the pawn with a knight/rook, or generate counterplay on the other side. Also, avoid long calculations when the clock is low.
Longer-term improvements (2–4 weeks)
- Endgame study: drill rook endgames and queen vs pawn scenarios until conversion is automatic. That reduces panic in the final phase.
- Repertoire pruning: double down on lines where you already score well (Sicilian Defense: Dragon Variation and Najdorf Variation). For weaker areas (Closed Sicilian, Moscow), either simplify or switch to lines with clear plans you understand.
- Analyze 10 of your recent losses and wins. For each: annotate the turning point, then pick one theme to train (e.g., blockading passed pawns, rook lifts, or fast tactical calculation).
Quick checklist before each blitz game
- One-liner opening plan (3 moves): know your plan for the first 6–8 moves.
- Clock plan: at 1:30 left, avoid long calcs — switch to simple, safe moves.
- King safety check every 5 moves.
- If ahead materially, aim to trade pieces and simplify.
Closing — motivation & next step
You have the tactical sense and opening knowledge to stay well above 2600 on most days. The fastest, highest-leverage fix is time management: practice with increments and a disciplined threshold rule (stop deep calculation when <20s). If you want, send 2–3 of your game links and I’ll annotate the exact turning points (3–5 key moves) to make the learning immediate.
Keep it simple this week: tactics + 10+2 practice + one endgame drill per day. You’ll see immediate gains.