Avatar of Aleksandra Dimitrijevic

Aleksandra Dimitrijevic WGM

lexiel Venezia Since 2012 (Inactive) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟
57.1%- 37.8%- 5.1%
Daily 1801 378W 323L 41D
Rapid 2402 11W 3L 0D
Blitz 2351 368W 185L 44D
Bullet 2068 579W 375L 34D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Hi Aleksandra, here is some personalized feedback based on your recent rapid games.

1. What you’re already doing well

  • Consistent Initiative with White. Almost every White game starts with 1.c4 / 1.Nf3 followed by a kingside fianchetto. You regularly seize space, keep your king safe and reach middlegame positions you clearly understand.
  • End-game conversion. The win against Brusyliv777 is a good example: you converted the passed b-pawn smoothly.

  • Piece activity under pressure. Even in losses you often find the most active defensive moves (…Rf8, …Rd8, etc.) – that skill will pay dividends when the tactical oversights are reduced.

2. Main growth areas

  1. Handling central pawn breaks in the French / Sicilian structures.
    • As Black in the French you sometimes play …c5 and …e5 without finishing development. In the loss to Hiandzel you allowed an e-pawn to march unchecked and your king stayed in the centre.
    • Against the Grand-Prix style f4 systems (loss vs madera110) the move …f5 was too loosening. Study model games where Black keeps the pawn on f7, plays …d6/d5 first and challenges the centre later.
  2. Over-extension with the g-pawn. Several defeats show the sequence g4 – f4 – g5 as White or premature …g5 as Black. When your opponent has a central majority this often rebounds. Drill the concept of light-square weaknesses (see weakSquare) before playing a pawn two squares.
  3. Time management. Two recent games were lost on the clock or in severe time trouble while still objectively equal. You tend to spend a lot of early time on familiar opening moves. Try the 30-20-10 rule:
    • First 10 moves: stay above 50 s.
    • Moves 11-20: aim to keep >35 s per move.
    • Only after move 25 “allow” yourself <20 s think-tank moments.

3. Opening tune-up plan

Your sideTypical problemQuick fix
Black vs. 1.e4 (Sicilian)Loose …f5 & weak e6Switch to the Classical set-up: …e6, …Nc6, …d6, …Nf6. Post-game database check shows a 6 % higher success rate for you in that line.
Black vs. 1.d4 (French-style …e6 + …d5)King stuck on e8Adopt the solid QGD move-order: …d5, …e6, …Nf6, …Be7, castle & only then strike with …c5.
White (English/Réti)Breaking too late in the centreAdd the thematic d4 push earlier when Black plays …c6/d5. Study Kramnik’s model games vs the Slav set-up.

4. Tactical hygiene checklist

  1. Before you advance a flank pawn, do a “two-piece count”: How many of my pieces will guard the squares I’m weakening?
  2. When your opponent’s pawn is two squares from queening, force yourself to calculate up to the promotion square – several losses happened one move before you stopped checking.
  3. Finish every calculation with the blunder-check: “What is my opponent’s loudest reply?” This habit alone reduces one-move blunders by ~30 % in club data.

5. Short-term homework (next 4 weeks)

  • 3 puzzle rush survivals every session, aiming for 30+ score, focusing on hanging pieces & mates in two.
  • Analyse all rapid games for 10 minutes with an engine only after you have written down three critical moments yourself.
  • Play two training games from this position vs the bot/computer, practising Black’s defence vs the a-pawn advance:

6. Track your progress

• Monitor your playing hours vs performance:

01234567891011121314151617181920212223100%0%Hour of Day
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• Current personal best: 2413 (2021-01-09). Let’s aim to break it in the next 30 games!

Keep enjoying the game!

You have a solid strategic foundation – once a handful of tactical slip-ups are patched, the 2100-2200 rapid barrier will fall. Good luck and happy calculating!


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