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).
Placeholders / quick links
- Opponents: Erik R. Gasparyan, Xiao Tong, Thekarm, Srihari L
- Opening to review: French Defense, Catalan Opening