Avatar of Marcos Daniel Marín

Marcos Daniel Marín

MarcosDMarin Madrid Since 2020 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟♟
52.2%- 44.6%- 3.2%
Bullet 1520
823W 722L 18D
Blitz 2021
8270W 7110L 542D
Rapid 1933
285W 184L 16D
Daily 1050
3W 0L 0D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Short summary

Good session — you forced a lot of decisive king‑side activity and closed out multiple games cleanly (including a neat rook mate). Your instincts for sacrificial ideas and piece coordination are a real weapon in blitz. A couple of losses show the same pattern: committed attack + one tactical slip that hands the opponent counterplay. Small adjustments will convert those near-misses into more wins.

What you're doing well

  • Active attacking play: you repeatedly pry open the opponent's king (examples: Rxg7+, Bxh6 tactics and the Rxf7 mate). You create concrete threats quickly and punish loose kingside structure.
  • Coordination of heavy pieces: rooks + queen often join the attack with tempo. Good sense for lifting rooks and entering the 7th/8th ranks.
  • Tactical intuition: you spot combinations and sacrificial motifs under time pressure — that gives you large practical chances in blitz.
  • Opening choices that suit your style: you play many Sicilian lines and get sharp, unbalanced play where your attacking skills shine.

Key areas to improve

  • Calculation before the sacrifice — especially checks and queen forks. In your most recent loss you launched a kingside attack but allowed counterchecks and an infiltrating queen that swung the game. Before committing to a capture/rook sac, scan for the opponent's checks and queen sorties.
  • Back‑rank and king safety awareness. After trading pieces you sometimes leave your king exposed to checks that change the evaluation; a simple luft or a quieter defensive move can save you trouble.
  • Time management in critical sequences. You win some on time and also play very quickly in winning positions — but in complex tactical sequences invest an extra second or two to verify opponent replies (use your increment when available).
  • Structure & counterplay when ahead. A couple of games show you simplifying while the opponent kept dynamic counterplay (active queen/knight). When ahead, prioritize removing counterplay (trade active enemy pieces, control key squares) rather than only pushing an attack.
  • Openings to shore up: your Caro‑Kann results are weaker than your Sicilian lines. Review typical pawn breaks and piece plans there so you don't drift into passive positions early.

Concrete drills & study plan (next 2–4 weeks)

  • Tactical sets (20 min daily): focus on multi‑move combinations (3–4 ply) and puzzles where the winning idea is a sacrifice or a back‑rank tactic.
  • Blitz practice with a purpose: play 10 games where your goal is "no material sacrifices without checking 2 opponent replies" — force yourself to run one quick visualization pass before committing.
  • 10 endgame basics (3× per week): short drills on back‑rank defense, queen vs rook technical patterns, and basic king+rook vs king conversions — these will help when a queen invades and you need to trade safely.
  • Opening review (2× per week): pick one weaker opening (start with Caro‑Kann) and study 4 typical middlegame plans and one tactical motif that often appears there. Keep those plans as short notes to glance at between games.
  • Game review routine: after each lost or unclear game, mark the one move where evaluation swung. Ask yourself “what checks or counterplay did I miss?” and keep a 10‑line note for future reference.

Quick notes on the recent games

  • Vs calmk (loss): Powerful kingside pressure but let the opponent get counterchecks with the queen. When you grab pawns/pieces in the attack, double‑check for queen checks that change the initiative.
  • Vs piratekiller (win on time): You built slow central pressure and provoked simplifications that favored you. Good patience — try to convert faster so timeouts don’t become your main conversion method.
  • Vs trekvelo (resignation): Excellent use of tactical motifs (knight and queen activity). You punished inaccuracies quickly — keep practicing recognition of enemy weaknesses that create motifs like the rook lift and infiltration.
  • Vs chipi_pi (resignation): Strong tactic identification and decisive queen/rook coordination. You exploited pinned pieces and open files effectively.
  • Vs sivadatta (checkmate): Clean finish — textbook rook invasion delivering mate on f7. Review that sequence and see what opponent missed; replicating that pattern in training is valuable.

Here’s the mate sequence from the Caro‑Kann game so you can replay it quickly:

[[Pgn|e4|c6|d4|d5|exd5|cxd5|Bd3|Nc6|c3|Nf6|Nd2|g6|Ngf3|Bg7|Ne5|Nxe5|dxe5|Nd7|f4|e6|Nf3|O-O|O-O|Nc5|Bc2|b5|a3|Bb7|Nd4|a6|Qg4|Rc8|h4|Qb6|Be3|Qc7|h5|Nd7|hxg6|hxg6|Rae1|Nb6|f5|exf5|Nxf5|Bxe5|Nh6+|Kg7|Bxb6|Qxb6+|Kh1|Kxh6|Rxe5|Kg7|Bxg6|Rh8+|Bh5+|Kf8|Rxf7#|orientation|white|autoplay|false]

Small checklist to use during a blitz game

  • Before any sacrifice: ask "What is my opponent's best checking reply?"
  • If you have the initiative: can you exchange off the most active enemy piece in one move?
  • When down a little on time: simplify when safe; avoid long forcing tactics unless you calculated them clearly.
  • After a trade: always scan for back‑rank issues and queen checks to avoid tactical swindles.

Next steps

  • Pick one lost game and annotate it move‑by‑move (5–10 minutes). Identify the single turning move and the missed defensive resource.
  • Commit to the drills above for two weeks and then reassess — you should see fewer counterplay losses and clearer conversions.
  • If you want, send me one loss + one win and I’ll annotate the exact tactical moments and propose move‑level improvements.

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