Avatar of Jorge Frade

Jorge Frade

Username: JFrade

Location: Açores

Playing Since: 2013-11-16 (Active)

Wow Factor: ♟♟♟♟♟

Chess.com

Daily: 1954
112W / 15L / 11D
Rapid: 2058
73W / 37L / 5D
Blitz: 2220
2739W / 2299L / 365D
Bullet: 2310
1310W / 1024L / 156D

Jorge Frade (JFrade) - Chess Player Profile

Meet Jorge Frade, affectionately known in the chess world as JFrade. A master of speed and strategy, Jorge has been quietly storming online chessboards since at least 2013, climbing the ratings like a knight hopping from square to square with subtle precision.

Rating & Performance Highlights

  • Peak Blitz Rating: 2313 (March 2025) – He’s not just fast, he’s fast and furious in blitz!
  • Peak Bullet Rating: 2378 (February 2025) – Jorge’s bullet games are like lightning strikes, often leaving opponents wondering what just happened.
  • Peak Daily and Rapid: 1898 and 2083 respectively – Slow and steady, but still sneaky deadly.
  • Total Wins: An impressive 3,308 wins across Bullet, Blitz, Daily, and Rapid formats.

Playing Style & Strengths

Jorge’s style can be described as a cocktail of resilience and tactical flair. With a comeback rate of nearly 87.4%, the boy doesn’t know when to quit – unless it's because of an early resignation, which he accepts 55% of the time (hey, even champs know when to save their energy!). His games are rich in endgames, appearing in over 80% of his battles, proving he loves the drawn-out dance as much as the quick brawl.

True to his nickname, he thrives best around 8 AM (his “best time of day to play”), striking like a morning coffee-fueled chess ninja. Don’t underestimate him when the clock runs low — he ends wins after over 77 moves on average, so patience is a virtue against Jorge.

Opening Repertoire

Jorge’s go-to openings read like a chess connoisseur’s menu. His favorite appetizer? The French Defense Exchange Variation and the Alapin Sicilian Defense are his culinary delights, scoring him win rates over 52% to 61% in blitz and bullet formats. He occasionally spices things up with the Top Secret opening, but don’t ask him what that is – even he keeps that one under wraps!

Noteworthy Matches

Recently, Jorge delivered a spectacular victory by checkmate against janashia77 using the Modern Defense Geller System, showcasing his tactical swagger at a blazing time control. His finishes often have that punchline effect — winning on time, by resignation, or at times by that sweet checkmate that leaves spectators applauding (or cursing their own blunders).

Opponent Records & Rivalries

JFrade's most frequently encountered foes include fishoffury, th3ub3rpwn3r, and rock7e7, with some matchups as narrow as a 50% win rate, and others where Jorge’s domination reaches 100%. From friendly rivalries to fierce battles, Jorge plays everyone with a mix of respect and ruthless competition.

Fun Facts & Psychological Quirks

  • His tilt factor is a modest 10 – clearly, he keeps his cool even after losing a piece or two.
  • Games tend to get spicy around 8 AM, with some of the highest win rates recorded at this hour — coffee or pure chess muscle memory?
  • Often chooses to resign early but backs it up with impressive recoveries when the going gets tough.
  • Average moves per win hover around 78 — if patience is a chess skill, Jorge could write a book about it!

In Conclusion

Whether bullet, blitz, rapid, or daily, Jorge Frade proves a versatile and accomplished opponent. He’s the kind of player who makes you rethink your strategy mid-game, the player who can beat you in a tactical brawl or outmaneuver you patiently in the endgame. The chessboard is his stage, and every move is a perfect act in his long-running performance.

So next time you face JFrade, be ready. He doesn't just play chess; he lives it – sometimes with flair, always with commitment, and occasionally with a wink as he pulls off that sneaky checkmate!

For more of his exploits, check out his latest games on Chess.com!


Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick summary

Nice run of blitz recently — you converted active chances, you press opponents well in the middlegame, and your opening choices are working (especially French/Alapin lines). A few tactical oversights and some time trouble cost you in sharper moments. Below are concise, practical suggestions you can use in the next week of training.

Recent game examples (replayable)

Two short replays you can step through on your phone — one clean win and one instructive loss.

  • Win vs yantakarta — French (Advance)

    Good handling of central tension and queenside counterplay. Review the final queen sortie and how you used piece activity to force resignation.


  • Win vs kesakes — Sicilian (Alapin family)

    You created a passed pawn and kept the initiative, then converted under time pressure. Good endgame instincts.


  • Loss vs kuba2503 — instructive mating pattern

    The opponent punished holes around your king and advanced a decisive pawn/knight combination — good to review the sequence where a knight penetrates and the g-pawn advance finishes the game.


What you’re doing well

  • Strong opening choices for blitz — your lines in the French and the Alapin give you comfortable, active positions (French Defense: Advance Variation, Sicilian Defense: Alapin Variation).
  • Good ability to create and press passed pawns — you turn small structural edges into real targets.
  • Solid conversion technique in simplified positions; you don’t panic when pieces come off.
  • High volume play and consistent upward rating trend — your training and practice are paying off (recent month gains). Keep that consistency.

Key areas to improve (fast wins)

Focus on these and you’ll see quick rating gains in blitz.

  • Tactical alertness: a few games show the same pattern — a knight or minor piece jump followed by forks or mating nets. Do 10–20 quick tactics every day (forks, discovered attacks, back-rank).
  • King safety in sharp middlegames: avoid creating holes on the kingside (pushing pawns around your castled king unless you have clear compensation).
  • Time management: you sometimes drift into severe time pressure. Practice making a simple plan in the first 10 seconds and then 5–10 second increments per move. If you’re up on the clock, trade to simplify; if down, keep complications but be pragmatic.
  • Avoid inviting knight forks: in your loss the opponent got active knights that created decisive threats — watch out for squares like f2, e4, g4 when your pawns and king align poorly.

Concrete weekly plan (blitz-focused)

  • Daily: 12–20 tactics on a tactics trainer (focus: forks, pins, discovered attacks) — 10–15 minutes.
  • 3× per week: 20 minutes of endgame work — king + pawn vs king, basic rook endgames, and the Lucena position. This increases conversion rate in time scrambles.
  • 2× per week: 30 minutes of opening review — pick one tiny home prep line in your main French/Alapin and learn typical plans (one model game + 5 common mistakes).
  • In-session habit: when the clock drops below 30 seconds, switch to simple rules — 1) check opponent threats, 2) pick the safest active move, 3) avoid long calculations unless forced.

Short tactical checklist (before you move)

  • Are any of my pieces undefended or en prise? (quick scan)
  • Does my opponent have a fork, pin, or skewer next move?
  • If I capture, what is the immediate reply — is a tactic unleashed?
  • Can I simplify (trade) and keep a clear win if I’m ahead on material or pawn structure?

Personalized notes from these games

  • Win vs yantakarta: good central control and timing of queenside play — keep using that pawn break sequence you chose.
  • Win vs kesakes: you built a passed pawn and used it practically; nice endgame awareness — review the moments you kept the king active instead of passive defense.
  • Loss vs kuba2503: the decisive theme was a knight invasion combined with a pawn storm to g2 — next time prioritize removing the enemy knight’s outpost and be careful pushing kingside pawns prematurely.

Next 3 actions (start today)

  • Do 12 tactics right now (forks + discovered attacks mix).
  • Watch one 10-minute video on "king safety in the middlegame" and note 3 concrete pawn moves you’ll avoid unless justified.
  • Pick one opening line from your repertoire and write a one-paragraph plan for typical middlegames (what to do with rooks, which pawn breaks to seek).

If you want a deeper post‑mortem

Tell me which game you want annotated move-by-move (give the opponent or the PGN above). I can produce a short annotated line-by-line coach report with candidate moves and a few alternative plans you can practice.



🆚 Opponent Insights

Recent Opponents
monte1974 0W / 1L / 0D View
cuch20 0W / 1L / 0D View
chappiechess5 3W / 1L / 0D View
lor2mol4 1W / 1L / 0D View
shadow_forest01 0W / 1L / 0D View
theweinermate 3W / 0L / 0D View
crazychess884 1W / 0L / 0D View
azefanat 0W / 1L / 0D View
catalejo01015 1W / 0L / 0D View
farhamff 0W / 0L / 1D View
Most Played Opponents
FishofFury 12W / 12L / 0D View Games
rock7e7 11W / 9L / 1D View Games
th3ub3rpwn3r 7W / 14L / 0D View Games
eax 9W / 10L / 0D View Games
ashot_mg 8W / 6L / 3D View Games

Rating

Year Bullet Blitz Rapid Daily
2025 2268 2253 2058 1980
2024 2260 2186 1802
2023 2002 1971
2022 1967 2057
2021 2140 1965 2056 985
2013 1974 1471
Rating by Year2013202120222023202420252268985YearRatingBulletBlitzRapidDaily

Stats by Year

Year White Black Moves
2025 856W / 651L / 99D 741W / 726L / 122D 79.3
2024 665W / 490L / 91D 628W / 533L / 83D 80.3
2023 9W / 8L / 3D 10W / 9L / 2D 76.8
2022 25W / 23L / 5D 21W / 25L / 4D 73.9
2021 459W / 285L / 51D 428W / 313L / 48D 79.7
2013 124W / 100L / 8D 138W / 96L / 8D 77.3

Openings: Most Played

Blitz Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
French Defense: Exchange Variation 500 260 205 35 52.0%
Sicilian Defense: Alapin Variation 409 219 164 26 53.5%
French Defense 310 153 136 21 49.4%
Sicilian Defense 227 114 99 14 50.2%
Caro-Kann Defense: Exchange Variation 215 106 92 17 49.3%
French Defense: Advance Variation 189 93 84 12 49.2%
Scandinavian Defense 157 85 58 14 54.1%
Nimzo-Larsen Attack 150 87 56 7 58.0%
French Defense: Burn Variation 130 75 45 10 57.7%
Caro-Kann Defense 127 71 46 10 55.9%
Bullet Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
French Defense 202 103 89 10 51.0%
Nimzo-Larsen Attack 194 103 79 12 53.1%
French Defense: Exchange Variation 193 108 74 11 56.0%
Sicilian Defense: Alapin Variation 148 80 56 12 54.0%
Colle System: Rhamphorhynchus Variation 119 65 47 7 54.6%
Amar Gambit 85 42 35 8 49.4%
Scandinavian Defense 75 34 36 5 45.3%
Nimzo-Larsen Attack: Classical Variation 72 40 24 8 55.6%
Caro-Kann Defense: Exchange Variation 62 34 26 2 54.8%
Amazon Attack 56 26 27 3 46.4%
Daily Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Barnes Defense 10 10 0 0 100.0%
French Defense: Exchange Variation 8 4 1 3 50.0%
Unknown 8 8 0 0 100.0%
Caro-Kann Defense: Exchange Variation 7 7 0 0 100.0%
Amazon Attack 5 4 1 0 80.0%
Sicilian Defense: Alapin Variation 4 2 1 1 50.0%
Amar Gambit 3 3 0 0 100.0%
Bishop's Opening: Urusov Gambit 3 3 0 0 100.0%
Sicilian Defense: Closed, Anti-Sveshnikov Variation, Kharlov-Kramnik Line 3 3 0 0 100.0%
QGD: 3.Nc3 Bb4 3 3 0 0 100.0%
Rapid Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Caro-Kann Defense 22 14 7 1 63.6%
Sicilian Defense: Alapin Variation 9 7 2 0 77.8%
Caro-Kann Defense: Exchange Variation 7 4 3 0 57.1%
Scandinavian Defense 6 6 0 0 100.0%
Sicilian Defense 4 3 0 1 75.0%
Caro-Kann Defense: Classical Variation 4 2 2 0 50.0%
French Defense: Exchange Variation 3 2 0 1 66.7%
Nimzo-Larsen Attack 3 1 2 0 33.3%
Barnes Defense 2 2 0 0 100.0%
Colle System: Rhamphorhynchus Variation 2 2 0 0 100.0%

🔥 Streaks

Streak Longest Current
Winning 13 0
Losing 10 3
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