Avatar of Adrien Demuth

Adrien Demuth GM

Lapitch Basel Since 2010 (Inactive) Chess.com ♟♟♟
61.4%- 31.9%- 6.7%
Bullet 2799
1104W 608L 116D
Blitz 2796
254W 104L 26D
Rapid 2523
22W 7L 3D
Daily 2275
151W 77L 22D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick note for Adrien

Nice string of rapid wins — you show clean tactical vision and practical finishing in these games. Below I highlight the concrete strengths to keep exploiting and the targeted, actionable improvements that will raise your rapid consistency.

What you did well

  • Active, decisive piece play — you repeatedly create forcing sequences (examples: the kingside tactics in your recent
    viewer).
  • Finishing in the complications — you converted a mating net and finished tactics cleanly (see the decisive queen mates from the Ruy Lopez game).
  • Repertoire variety — you handle both flank systems (King's Indian Defense) and open-game play (Ruy Lopez, Sicilian Defense) comfortably; your opening choices get you playable middlegames.
  • Practical endgames and technique — several wins show good understanding of simplified positions and active rook/minor piece play.
  • Psychological edge — you press the opponent when they are uncomfortable: checks, repeated threats and simplifications that favor your plans.

Most useful patterns to keep

  • Look for tactical repeats that force a king walk (knight forks and sacrifices that open files for rooks/queen).
  • When you gain a space/piece activity advantage, swap into a position where your active pieces stay more useful than the opponent's (trade when it reduces their counterplay).
  • Use the increment: when you have forcing lines, spend an extra 5–10 seconds to check for defensive resources — this avoids missed finishing moves under time pressure.

Key areas to improve (actionable)

  • Handle the Sicilian Classical better — your Openings Performance shows a specific weakness vs the Classical. Pick two anti-Classical plans (one positional, one tactical) and rehearse them until you know the typical pawn breaks and piece placements by sight. Example study targets: typical c5–c4 breaks and how to prevent them; piece redeployments after ...Nc6 and ...d6.
  • Pawn breaks and central closures — in a few games you allowed early c- or d-pawn breaks that unlocked counterplay. Against systems that aim for ...c5/c4 or ...d4, prioritize prophylaxis: fix the central tension on your terms or exchange to remove the break square.
  • Time management in complicated positions — practice keeping 1.5–2 minutes in reserve for the late middlegame. With 10+5 rapid, keeping an extra minute prevents tactical misses in the finish.
  • Post-mistake recovery — after an inaccuracy, check for practical swindles before simplifying. You do this well often, but a consistent “first check” routine after an opponent’s move will catch resources earlier.
  • Opening nuance vs the Classical Sicilian and specific Nimzo lines — your Nimzo record is mixed; review the key move orders where opponents transpose and prepare a short, reliable plan for move 10–16 in those lines.

Concrete 4-week training plan

  • Daily (30–45 min): 20 min tactics (mixed motifs, emphasize forks/pins/discovered attacks), 10 min endgames (basic rook + pawn, minor piece endings), 10–15 min opening drills.
  • Weekly (1–2 sessions): 2 rapid games + 15–20 min post-mortem. Focus the post-mortem on one question: "What break or reorder did I allow that changed the evaluation?" Use engine only to check, not to replace your thinking.
  • Opening work: pick the two problematic lines — here start with Sicilian Defense: Classical Variation and the tricky Nimzo transpositions. Make a 6–8 move "no-surprise" book line for both sides and memorize typical plans and one tactical trap to use as a weapon.
  • Tactical deepening: once per week, do an hour of curated puzzles that replicate motifs you missed in your games (discovered attacks, knight forks, back-rank ideas).
  • Endgame mini-camp: 3 sessions devoted to rook + pawn vs rook, and king activity in opposite-color bishop endings — these are high-value for rapid conversion.

How to analyse your two recent wins/losses

  • Pick one win and one loss from this week. Replay each game until the first move you feel uncertain about, then ask: “What was my plan?” and “What plan did my opponent get?”
  • Mark the turning move and test alternative candidate moves for both sides (at least 2 tries). If a candidate changes the evaluation, add it to your opening notes.
  • Use the PGN viewer I included above to step through the Lapitch vs crash2025 game — isolate the knight forks and the decision to liquidate the center; these were decisive and repeatable motifs.

Practical checklist for your next rapid session

  • Before the first move: 3–5 minutes warming tactics to get pattern recognition sharp.
  • In the opening: follow your prepared plan for moves 1–10; if opponent deviates, pick the structure you understand best (avoid getting into unfamiliar sidelines early).
  • Middlegame: when you see a pawn break forming (c5–c4, d5–d4, f5–f4) decide immediately whether to prevent, accept and simplify, or counterbreak elsewhere.
  • Time control: with increment, try to keep 45–90 seconds at move 20 in sharp games; spend time calculating only on forcing lines.

Games to review next (placeholders)

  • Review the recent decisive wins vs crash2025 (both sides) — look for the point where you seized the initiative and the defensive resource the opponent missed.
  • Pick one loss in the Sicilian Classical pair from your opening stats and run a focused line-by-line analysis (you can tag it in your study board as "repair Classical").

Final encouragement

Your Strength Adjusted Win Rate shows you're converting practical chances — with streamlined opening fixes and a small time-management tweak you'll increase consistency quickly. Keep exploiting forcing patterns and make the Sicilian Classical a priority for repair work this month.


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