Avatar of Nathan Blunden

Nathan Blunden

King_Captain77 Since 2019 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟
48.2%- 48.0%- 3.8%
Bullet 1268
1949W 2018L 116D
Blitz 1415
788W 759L 82D
Rapid 1628
471W 428L 55D
Daily 1234
16W 10L 0D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

What your recent games show

Your recent activity demonstrates strong overall results and good adaptability across a range of openings. You tend to generate activity and keep pressure on the opponent’s king, which is a key strength in quick or daily games. There are a few patterns worth noting as you plan your next training block:

  • You perform particularly well in several Sicilian-related setups. This shows you’re comfortable with dynamic, unbalanced positions and you can convert initiative into tangible advantages.
  • Najdorf-style games are a clear growth area. In the Najdorf line you’ve faced, the record is less favorable, suggesting the need for a more focused plan when you encounter that specific branch.
  • Endgames and pawn structures tend to reveal gaps after heavy piece exchanges. Improving technique in simplified positions will help you convert advantages more consistently.
  • Time management can be improved in sharper middlegame storms. Some moves show very quick decisions in critical moments, which can invite inaccuracies under pressure.

Opening performance highlights

Looking at your openings, you have several strong performances and a few areas to watch. Keep in mind that small sample sizes can skew the picture, but they point to useful focus areas:

  • Sicilian Defense: Closed — 3 games, 3 wins, 100% win rate. This line has been reliable for you in the recent set and is worth continuing with careful preparation.
  • Elephant Gambit — 2 games, 2 wins, 100% win rate. This aggressive choice worked well in the samples and shows you can play dynamic, tactical games when needed.
  • Ruy Lopez: Old Steinitz Defense, Semi-Duras Variation — 2 games, 2 wins, 100% win rate. A solid choice that supports steady, strategic play.
  • Caro-Kann Defense — 2 games, 2 wins, 100% win rate. A good structural alternative that often leads to solid endgames.
  • Najdorf Variation (Sicilian): 3 games, 0 wins, 3 losses. This is the area with the strongest signal for improvement; consider refining your plan or temporarily focusing on other lines to reduce risk while you build understanding.
  • Other noted lines (Bird Opening Dutch Variation, Ruy Lopez variants, QGA-related ideas) show mixed results in smaller samples—great for experimentation but with caveats about consistency.

Key improvement areas and focused plan

To translate your strengths into even more reliable results, consider the following targeted focus areas:

  • Najdorf study plan: Since Najdorf results are your current growth edge, develop a compact study of 2-3 trusted lines within the Najdorf and learn the typical middlegame themes and common pawn structures. Practice with model games to internalize ideas, not just moves.
  • Endgame foundation: Strengthen rook and minor piece endgames. Practice converting small advantages (a pawn here, a space gain there) into a clear plan and a win. Short, focused endgame drills several times a week will pay dividends in longer daily games.
  • Calculation discipline: In sharp middlegames, pause to confirm a plan before plunging into tactics. Train yourself to identify a single forcing line and a safe alternative, so you don’t chase complicated sequences without a concrete objective.
  • Time management: Build a simple “three-phase” approach to each move: (1) quick scan of candidate ideas, (2) deeper look at the most forcing line, (3) final check before making the move. Use a timer to ensure you allocate at least a few moments to the critical positions.
  • Opening selection for consistency: Given your strong score in Closed Sicilian and other favorable lines, consider consolidating a small, reliable repertoire for daily games. This reduces over-extension in unfamiliar lines and improves your ability to steer the game toward favorable endgames.

Bonus note: you’ve faced notable players in recent games. Consider reviewing specific lines where your opponent challenged your plan, and extract one or two thematic responses you can reuse next time. For example, when facing a sharp Najdorf idea, have a ready middlegame plan and a safe path to a calmer endgame if needed.

Representative opponents you’ve met include players like King_Captain77 and other active daily-game players. If you’d like, I can tailor a study plan around the typical ideas those opponents employ. Nathan Blunden

Next steps and a practical two-week plan

  • Week 1: Focus Najdorf planning plus one solid endgame drill. Pick 2 Najdorf lines to study deeply and prepare a concrete middlegame plan for each. Do 15–20 minutes of endgame practice (rook endings or rook+minor piece endings) on non-game days.
  • Week 2: Implement the Najdorf study in a few practice games, and continue with endgame drills. Add 1–2 tactical puzzles daily to sharpen calculation under time pressure.
  • Throughout: keep a lightweight opening log to remind yourself of key ideas in the lines you play most. Review a recent loss or a difficult position to identify one concrete improvement per game.
  • General: schedule a quick post-game review to identify where the plan went off course, and adjust your plan for the next game accordingly.

Notes and quick references

If you want to revisit specific games or extract focused study material, you can refer back to your recent win games and the sources you used. For example, a quick reference to your recent Sicilian and Najdorf games can help you concentrate your study on the exact ideas that appeared on the board. nathan%20blunden


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