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MadDog94 IM

MadDog94 Since 2012 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟♟
52.8%- 41.9%- 5.3%
Bullet 2279
8229W 6625L 753D
Blitz 2481
2007W 1606L 285D
Rapid 2385
16W 1L 4D
Daily 1845
129W 7L 4D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick summary

Nice recent wins — you're showing strong attacking instincts, good piece activity and practical conversion in blitz. Your losses are usually from allowing tactical decisive shots (forced checks/captures) or getting caught by passed-pawn tactics in the French. Below are specific, actionable points to keep the upward trend and stop recurring mistakes.

What you did well (from the recent win vs 20r3000)

  • You kept initiative and used active pieces — knights and queen hunted the enemy king aggressively instead of waiting for slow maneuvers.
  • Good tactical awareness: you spotted forks and checks (the knight jump into the opponent’s camp and the sequence of queen checks that forced the king into the open).
  • You convert pressure into concrete threats — instead of just accumulating, you created mating nets and forced the opponent into time trouble.
  • Opening handling: in the Tarrasch-like structure you developed pieces to natural squares and seized the center quickly.

Main weaknesses to fix (from the recent losses)

  • Calculation of forcing sequences: in the loss to gameplyd you missed a decisive sequence with a passed f-pawn and mate threats. Always check immediate checks/captures/threats before a pawn advance or exchange.
  • King safety and back-rank / infiltration awareness. Some pawn pushes (and passive king placement) allowed enemy pieces to invade or create mating nets.
  • Time management under pressure — in blitz you sometimes let the opponent’s clock do part of the job, but you want to avoid relying on flags. Use increment and spend 4–6 seconds on critical forcing moves.
  • Opening-specific: your performance in the French Defense is lower than your main lines (win rate ~47%). Work on the typical ideas and how to handle Advance/Wina­wer plans if you play those positions often.

Concrete next steps — what to practice this week

  • Daily tactics: 15–25 minutes focused on mates and forks (target puzzles that force you to calculate 2–4 ply). That directly reduces missed forced mates like in the game vs gameplyd.
  • Two forced-sequence checks per game: before you move, quickly scan for any checks, captures, threats. Make it a habit (3-second checklist).
  • Opening tune-up: spend 30–45 minutes on the French Defense: Winawer/Advance typical pawn breaks and defensive resources — especially responses to white’s f‑pawn pushes and knight tactics.
  • Review 5 recent losses: do a short post-mortem (engine off first, then engine) and write down 1 repeatable mistake per game. Keep a tiny “errors” notebook.
  • Endgame & conversion drills: 2 sessions this week on king + pawn vs king and rook endings — practical conversion problems help you finish opponents when you have attack or material edge.

Blitz-specific checklist (quick habits during a game)

  • Before you press the clock, ask: “Any checks/captures/threats?” (If yes, calculate.)
  • Avoid unnecessary pawn moves that create holes around your king when the center is open.
  • If you have a clear plan (attack or simplify to a winning endgame), don’t drift — convert. If you’re ahead, swap to simplify; if behind, create complication.
  • Use increment: spend 4–6 seconds on critical forcing moves (captures, checks, promotions).

Study plan (4-week cycle)

  • Week 1 — Tactics bootcamp: 20 minutes/day + review tactical motifs you missed in your last 10 games.
  • Week 2 — Opening focus: 2 sessions on French Defense (Advance/Winawer): plans, typical piece placements, and the main defensive resources. 1 session reviewing your best opening, e.g. Sicilian Defense: Alapin Variation, to reinforce strengths.
  • Week 3 — Endgames: rook+pawn vs rook, passed pawns, basic queen endgame patterns. 2 practical training positions per session.
  • Week 4 — Play and review: 10 blitz games, immediate 5–10 minute review on the worst 3 (note the repeat mistakes). Focus on not repeating the same tactical oversight.

Leverage your strengths

Immediate technical drills (do these in one session)

  • 10 mate-in-2 puzzles (tactics trainer).
  • 5 tactical positions from your last loss — calculate 3 moves ahead and annotate your thought process.
  • 3 mini endgames: king+pawn vs king, rook vs rook+pawn — play them out with a friend or engine at low depth.

Useful reminders

  • Small habits beat big plans: the “scan for checks/captures/threats” habit will eliminate many losses.
  • When ahead, exchange into simpler endings — you convert well when the position is controlled; avoid needless complications.
  • Keep a short log of one recurring mistake per week. If the same issue appears 3 times, make a focused practice block to fix it.

Want me to drill with you?

If you want, tell me which opening you want to fix first (example: French Defense or Tarrasch Variation) and I’ll prepare a 2-week micro-plan with model lines and 10 tactical positions tailored to those structures. I can also walk through one of the recent games move-by-move if you paste the PGN you want reviewed.


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