Overview of your recent rapid games
You’ve shown willingness to play sharp, tactical lines and to press when you have a concrete plan. Your win against Dangix demonstrates strong calculation and the ability to finish a forcing sequence with a mating attack. In contrast, your recent loss to the same opponent highlights moments where defending against sharp tactics and maintaining king safety become crucial. Over the last several months, your rating trend has fluctuated, with short-term moves showing softer results, while the longer 12‑month trend remains positive. This suggests you’re capable of sustaining growth, but there are tight windows where refinement will help you convert more often in rapid games.
What you’re doing well
- You create practical, attacking chances when the position opens up, and you don’t shy away from forcing lines when the opportunity presents itself.
- Your winning sequence in the recent game shows good attention to tactical motifs and the ability to spot a decisive continuation when the opponent overextends.
- You manage dynamic positions with confidence, keeping the initiative and applying pressure on the opponent’s king side.
Key areas to improve
- Defense under pressure: in the loss against the same opponent, your king safety and coordination of pieces came under heavy attack. Work on concrete defensive checks, safer piece trades, and identifying when to simplify to a safer structure.
- Endgame conversion and when to simplify: avoid overextending after gaining initiative. Try to convert advantages through solid exchanges and clearer strategic plans rather than relying on tactical explosions that can backfire under time pressure.
- Opening plans and consistency: while you flourish in sharp lines, pairing them with a couple of solid, repeatable middlegame plans will reduce drift and help you maintain advantages more reliably in rapid games.
- Time management in rapid games: develop a simple post-move routine to quickly assess threats, candidate moves, and a safe plan, so you don’t get caught in time trouble at critical moments.
Opening performance and repertoire notes
Your openings data shows strengths in certain setups (for example, Bishop’s Opening and some flexible lines). Leaning into a small, coherent repertoire with clear middlegame ideas can help you convert more positions. Consider reinforcing a couple of solid, repeatable choices and pairing them with targeted middlegame plans. If you want, I can tailor a short two-week opening plan around your preference for aggressive play or steadier, positional play. For quick reference, you can review your likely go-to lines such as Bishop’s Opening and other reliable flexible setups in your repertoire.
Practical plan and drills
- Daily tactical practice focusing on motifs that appeared in your recent games, such as king-side attacks, piece coordination in open files, and common mating nets.
- Two short opening-review sessions per week to reinforce your main choices and their typical middlegame plans.
- Post-game debrief: after each rapid game, write a 2–3 bullet summary of turning points and one safer alternative line you could have played at critical moments.
12-week and longer-term perspective
Short-term trends show room for improvement, but the longer-term trend remains positive. If you focus on the practical plan above over the next few weeks, you should see better conversion in the middlegame and more resilient defense in tactical clashes. You can track progress by noting changes in how often you convert advantages and how well you hold positions in sharp lines.
Next steps
Implement the targeted plan for the next couple of weeks and review your progress with a quick recap after each game. If you’d like, I can customize a 2-week regimen based on your preferred openings and playing style. You can also share a quick note about which openings you enjoyed most, and I’ll tailor drills to those themes. For quick reference on your profile, see ilmussez.