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البحتري

Malik_ALsuqri Since 2024 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟
51.9%- 45.9%- 2.3%
Bullet 451
171W 145L 3D
Blitz 569
376W 354L 20D
Rapid 619
49W 26L 3D
Daily 173
0W 2L 0D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick summary for Laklak Shoarma

Nice effort — you’re fighting in sharp blitz games and getting results when you stick to simple plans. Your recent wins show good endgame instincts and king activity; your losses reveal recurring opening/tactical oversights and time-pressure mistakes. Below are focused, practical steps to turn those into steady rating gains.

Recent game highlights

  • Win vs van-de-troit — you converted a passed-pawn/endgame advantage and used active king play to finish. Good persistence under pressure.
  • Loss vs hitarth_5004 — an early tactical sequence (queen checks and back-rank motifs) cost material and ended in mate. This was an opening-awareness issue more than calculation depth.
  • Loss vs warzganteng — you lost material from a tactical exchange sequence; needed faster safety checks and simpler decision-making in the opening.

Replay the win to reinforce the conversion technique:

What you’re doing well

  • King activity in the endgame — you use your king aggressively to support passed pawns and win races.
  • Simplifying when ahead — converting advantages by trading into winning king-and-pawn endings.
  • Solid results in a few openings — your Caro-Kann Defense and French Defense show positive win rates; good to keep those as base repertoire options.

Recurring problems to fix

  • Early tactical vulnerability: multiple games show getting hit by checks, queen forks or back-rank threats. This often starts from unsafe king placement or moving the same pawn too many times in the opening.
  • Opening discipline: avoid unnecessary pawn advances (especially moving the e- and f-pawns together early) and make sure you don't drop material to simple tactics.
  • Time management: many late-game sequences are played on very low clock — that increases blunders and losses on time. Work on a fixed time plan per phase.
  • Overcomplication vs stronger opponents: when down material or under pressure you sometimes continue fighting in tactical complications instead of seeking defensive resources or simplifying.

Concrete improvements (apply these every session)

  • Checklist for every opening: (1) Is my king safe / can I castle next move? (2) Are my pieces developed? (3) Did I move the same piece twice without reason? Use this checklist until it’s automatic.
  • Tactics daily: 15 minutes of mate-in-2/3 and fork/pin/skewer puzzles. Focus on recognition patterns (queen checks, discovered checks, back-rank mates).
  • One quick game review after each loss: write down the single reason you lost (e.g., “fell for Qh4 fork”, “back-rank vulnerability”, “flagged”) and one concrete corrective action.
  • Time plan in 5|0 blitz: spend ~30–60 seconds on the opening, 1–2 minutes on critical middlegame decisions, and keep 10–15 seconds for simple endgame moves (don’t fall below 5s unless forced).

Opening advice (short & practical)

  • Favor the lines where you already score well: double down on Caro-Kann Defense and the French Defense. Learn 2–3 typical middlegame plans for each rather than long move-lists.
  • If you like sharper play, keep the Scandinavian Defense but study the most common traps and how to respond to early queen checks (practice Qh4/Qxe4 patterns).
  • When you play systems that push pawns early (f3, g4, etc.), accept that king safety is reduced — prioritize castling or keeping a flight square for the king.

Tactical & endgame drills

  • Drill set A (daily, 10–15 min): 10 puzzles — 50% tactical (forks/pins), 30% mates, 20% calculation of simple exchanges.
  • Drill set B (3× weekly, 20 min): 5 practical endgame positions — king+pawn vs king, rook endgame basics, opposition and passed-pawn races.
  • Practical play: play 2 rapid (15|10) games per week and review them — slower time control trains the right thought process for blitz.

7‑day plan (actionable)

  • Day 1: 15 min tactics (mates+forks) + review the loss vs hitarth_5004 and write one correction.
  • Day 2: 20 min Caro-Kann plans (watch 10–15 min of a model game) + 1 rapid game.
  • Day 3: 15 min endgames (king/pawn) + 5 blitz games, post-mortem fastest loss only.
  • Day 4: 20 min tactics + 1 slow game (15|10) focusing on time management.
  • Days 5–7: repeat best 2 days above and play a small set of 5 blitz games, applying opening checklist each game.

How to review a lost game (3-step routine)

  • Identify the turning move (where evaluation swung decisively) — write it down in one sentence.
  • Find the motif you missed (pin, fork, back-rank, undefended piece). Train 5 similar tactics.
  • Make a rule: e.g., “If opponent plays Qh4 or Qe4 early, immediately check for Nf6/g5 tactics and keep my king safe.”

Mindset & clock tips

  • Keep calm — avoid “move-first-think-later.” If you’re under 10 seconds, simplify: swap pieces, avoid checks and long calculations.
  • When you’re ahead materially, trade pieces and reduce complications; when behind, seek practical chances (checks, passed pawns, piece activity).
  • Use 1–2 pre-move tactics only when completely safe; a single bad pre-move cost is often decisive in blitz.

Next steps & checkpoints

  • Track one metric this week: puzzles solved per day or average time remaining at move 20. Small, measurable goals beat vague ones.
  • If you follow the 7‑day plan, expect to see fewer tactical losses and improved time control within 2 weeks — then shift focus to endgames for another 2 weeks.

If you want, I can: (a) annotate one specific loss with exact alternative moves, or (b) create a 4-week training calendar based on your schedule. Which would you prefer?


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