Coach Chesswick
Quick recap
Nice session — you found a clean tactical finish in your win and showed reliable opening familiarity, but several games were decided by the clock. Your Strength Adjusted Win Rate (~0.50) means you're performing close to expectation; the fastest improvements will come from better clock management and a few targeted practice items.
What you did well
- You converted an attack into a tactical knockout: you opened lines on the kingside, traded into a winning queen/knight combination and finished with a decisive knight jump. That demonstrates strong pattern recognition and coordination.
- Good use of forcing moves — captures and checks — to keep the opponent on the back foot. Forcing play is gold in bullet.
- Your opening choices (e.g. Sicilian Defense: Closed and French Defense) generate practical middlegame plans that you understand and execute well.
- You made solid defensive decisions when needed and picked active squares for your pieces instead of passive waiting moves.
Key problems to fix
- Time trouble (Zeitnot): several losses ended on the clock. You often reach winning or drawable positions but lose on time. Prioritize clock fixes first — they yield immediate rating gains.
- Endgame conversion under pressure: simple king-and-pawn or rook endings slipped away when the clock got short. Learn one reliable method for common endgames so decisions become automatic.
- Occasional passivity: in some games your rooks and knights got sidelined. Aim to keep at least one rook on an open file or the seventh rank and look for knight outposts.
- Over-ambitious pre-moves: pre-moves in complex positions lead to blunders. Reserve pre-moves for quiet captures/recaptures only.
Immediate bullet tips
- Warm up 3–5 minutes before a session with puzzles to get calculation and clock rhythm working.
- When under 15–20 seconds, switch to a safety plan: trade pieces and simplify rather than hunting for a speculative tactic.
- Use pre-moves only for obvious recaptures or when the opponent has a single safe move. Never pre-move in tactical positions or around checks.
- Make forcing moves (checks, captures, threats) part of your routine — they reduce your opponent’s time and simplify decision-making.
Two-week focused plan
- Daily (10–15 min): mixed tactics, emphasize forks, pins, discovered checks and back-rank ideas.
- Every other day (15 min): quick endgame drills — king + pawn vs king, basic rook endgames, outside passed pawn technique.
- 2× week (20 min): opening review — shore up the main lines you play and one short reply to the most common surprises.
- After each bullet session (5–10 min): review any game lost on time — was it the position or the clock? Note the fix.
Concrete routine changes (start tonight)
- Begin every blitz/bullet block with a 3-minute warmup (puzzles + a 1-minute endgame).
- Create a 3-move “safety kit” you can play automatically when low on time (example: simplify with trade → bring king closer → push outside pawn).
- Log one stat: percentage of losses by time. If it’s high, prioritize clock work over learning new openings for 1–2 weeks.
Longer-term focus
- Keep building on your successful openings (Closed Sicilian and French are solid for you). Drill typical middlegame plans, not just move orders.
- Blend occasional slower time controls (5|0 or 10|0) into your practice to improve conversion technique and calm decision-making.
- If you reduce time losses, your rating trend (currently flat/declining slightly) should reverse — your play quality is already good enough to climb.
Next steps I can help with
- Send 1–2 games you'd like annotated (a win and a loss) and I’ll give move-by-move notes and a short plan to fix recurring errors.
- Want a 2-week training checklist I can generate specific to your openings and endgames? I’ll tailor it to your stats.
- Opponent from the recent games: shawnc222 — review their games for typical plans and prepare one simple anti-plan against them.