Avatar of Olga Leticia Gamboa Alvarado

Olga Leticia Gamboa Alvarado WFM

Letigamb San José Since 2016 (Inactive) Chess.com ♟♟
73.3%- 26.7%- 0.0%
Bullet 2000
8W 2L 0D
Blitz 2000
2W 0L 0D
Rapid 2000
1W 2L 0D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Hi Olga Leticia!

Congratulations on the progress you have been making. Your recent peak in Rapid is 1742 (2021-09-03) and the quality of your best wins shows that you are consolidating many important chess skills.

What you are doing well

  • Active, energetic play: In your win against InadaC (Adani Clarke) you willingly gave a pawn to seize the initiative and never looked back. The final counter-attack deserves a replay:
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  • Opening versatility: You handle both 1.d4 (Queens Gambit, Nimzo-Indian) and 1.e4 positions (French, Pirc) with confidence, which makes you hard to prepare for.
  • Tactical alertness: Exchange sacrifices and zwischenzugs (Zwischenzug) appear repeatedly in your wins. Keep sharpening this edge with daily tactic workouts.

Key areas to improve

  • Time management: A noticeable share of your losses come from running out of time in winning or equal positions (e.g. vs oscarluna79). Aim to have at least 25-30 % of your initial time left when you enter the late middlegame. Practical tip: make one quick “safety move” per three difficult moves to keep the clock honest.
  • King safety & pawn structure: In the loss to WGMCarlaHeredia you pushed ...,f5 and ...,f4 without full coordination and your king was soon stuck on h7. Before committing flank pawns, ask “will this weaken dark-squares or open files toward my king?”  Spending one tempo on a prophylactic move (such as ...Kh7 before ...f5) often pays off.
  • Endgame technique: Some wins were secured on the clock rather than on the board. Try finishing a few Rapid games against the computer from equal rook-endgames to polish technique & confidence.

Suggested training plan

  1. Structured openings: Build a “main line” notebook for each side of the board with 8-10 moves of theory and typical middlegame plans; revisit after every session.
  2. Model games: Each week pick one grandmaster game in the Pirc and one in the Nimzo-Indian. Play through once quickly, then a second time pausing at every critical decision and writing down your move before revealing the GM’s choice.
  3. Tactics & calculation drill: 15-20 fresh puzzles daily plus one “deep think” puzzle where you spend at least 5 minutes visualising without moving pieces.
  4. Clock discipline: During Rapid, make it a rule to move within 30 seconds unless the position is totally critical; after each game glance at the move-by-move clock to see where the time sink occurred.

Your activity snapshots

See when you score best and schedule training accordingly:

Win Rate by Hour100%75%25%0%50%15:00 - 100.0%17:00 - 0.0%18:00 - 66.7%19:00 - 50.0%20:00 - 87.5%1517181920Hour of Day (UTC)

Win Rate by Day100%75%25%0%50%Monday - 88.9%Thursday - 0.0%Friday - 100.0%Saturday - 0.0%Sunday - 66.7%MonThuFriSatSunDay of Week

Motivational checkpoint

You already play exciting, ambitious chess. By tightening up on the clock and adding a dose of positional awareness you should comfortably break through the next rating barrier.

Good luck with your studies and never stop enjoying the game!


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