Avatar of Itgelt Khuyagtsogt

Itgelt Khuyagtsogt IM

Itk04 Ulaanbaatar,Mongolia Since 2012 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟♟
52.9%- 41.5%- 5.6%
Bullet 2907
1240W 1122L 142D
Blitz 2863
4562W 3428L 472D
Rapid 2444
108W 86L 14D
Daily 899
0W 4L 1D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick summary

Nice session, Itgelt — you converted several winning games and kept the initiative in many sharp positions. Your short‑term rating is trending up (+22 this month, +522 over 3–6 months), so the training is paying off. Below are focused, practical points based on tonight’s blitz games.

Highlights — what you did well

  • Active piece play: You repeatedly activated rooks and queens onto open files and the 7th/8th ranks — this earned you decisive targets.
  • Endgame technique & practical play: You converted endgames and pressed on the clock, turning pressure into wins or time victories.
  • Opening breadth: Comfort in many structures (French/Tarrasch, Queen’s Gambit/Catalan, King’s Indian ideas) makes you hard to prepare against.
  • Finishing awareness: You spotted decisive tactical motifs in the Catalan‑type game vs Erik R. Gasparyan and punished king safety errors — well done.

Main weaknesses to fix (fast wins)

  • King safety in sharp middlegames: In the loss vs Xiao Tong you were caught by a mating net / tactical sequence on the kingside. Before pawn grabs or attacking, scan for opponent checks and sacrifices near your king.
  • Back‑rank and loose‑piece awareness: A few games had hanging pieces or back‑rank vulnerabilities. Habit: ask “Is my back rank safe?” before simplifying.
  • Time management under complexity: You reached critical low clock values in complex positions. Prioritize candidate moves (safety, forcing checks/captures) to avoid spending too much time on one line.
  • Accepting material without checking opponent counterplay: Double‑check captures that open lines toward your king or create tactical motifs for the opponent.

Concrete drills (this week)

  • Tactics daily — 15 minutes focused on mating patterns, back‑rank mates, pins and forks. Review mistakes; don’t just see the solution.
  • King‑safety checklist — before each move in blitz, pause 2–3 seconds and ask: "Checks? Sacrifices? Flight squares?"
  • Time‑control practice — play 4 games of 10+5 forcing yourself to maintain 20–30 sec for critical decisions; use increment to avoid flagging while training accuracy.
  • Opening patch — pick one shaky line (example: the Tarrasch/French) and learn the typical middlegame plans rather than long move lists. Start with French Defense motifs.

Game‑specific review tasks (5–10 minutes each)

  • Loss vs Xiao Tong: replay the critical sequence where the queen and pawns opened lines. Mark the moment you could have traded queens or improved king safety — propose two alternatives.
  • Win vs Thekarm (won on time): check for earlier prophylactic moves that would have reduced opponent counterplay — note one improvement for next time.
  • Win vs Srihari L (won on time): analyze the rook endgame transitions you executed well and save one technique to reuse (e.g., cutting the king off, pawn advance timing).

Simple 90‑minute session plan (next practice)

  • 10 min warmup — easy tactics + king‑safety checklist practice.
  • 30 min focused practice — 3 × 10+5 games applying the checklist; take one note per game.
  • 20 min targeted study — annotate the loss vs Xiao Tong and write 3 alternative lines.
  • 20 min cooldown — 8–10 blitz games (3+2) applying one specific change (e.g., “never accept the c‑file capture if back rank is weak”).

Next steps I can help with

  • I can annotate the loss vs Xiao Tong move‑by‑move and suggest concrete alternative moves.
  • I can create a 7‑day tactics schedule focused on the exact tactical themes you missed tonight.
  • I can prepare a 6‑move mini‑repertoire in one opening (example: a safe French/Tarrasch plan with typical middlegame ideas).

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