Overall impression
Your recent rapid results show steady short-term improvement, with rating gains noted over 1-, 3-, and 6-month spans. However, the 12-month trend is slightly negative, which suggests some variability over the longer term. Your strength-adjusted win rate is around 51%, indicating you’re competitive but there’s room to sharpen consistency, especially in converting chances and handling tougher middlegame positions.
What you are doing well
- You are developing a robust short‑term improvement trajectory, as reflected in positive rating changes over the last 3 and 6 months.
- Openings show multiple strong performances, notably with Nimzo-Indian Defense and Benko Gambit, which you handle with creative middlegame plans and active piece play.
- When you gain initiative, you tend to keep pressure on and look for concrete middlegame plans rather than drifting into passive setups.
- You occasionally convert complex middlegames into wins, which demonstrates good calculation under time pressure and practical resourcefulness.
Key patterns from the openings data
- Nimzo-Indian Defense stands out with a solid 60% win rate over five games, suggesting it’s a strong pillar in your repertoire.
- Benko Gambit and related aggressive lines are also productive for you (66.7% win rate in a small sample). This points to comfort with dynamic play and long-term compensation for sacrificed material.
- Blackburne Shilling Gambit shows a perfect score in a few games, but it’s a risky surprise weapon. Use it selectively and be prepared for sharper, less predictable play from opponents.
- Some calmer, classical setups like the Slav and Italian family lines show mixed results. They can still be viable, but you may benefit from tightening core ideas and typical plans in those lines.
Areas to improve
- Improve consistency in converting advantages. After you gain the initiative, aim to convert with a clear plan and avoid overcomplicating positions that invite counterplay.
- Strengthen endgame technique. In rapid, small edge positions, practice straightforward conversion and simpler endgame themes (opposite-colored bishops, rook endings, and pawn endgames).
- Time management in rapid games. Build a simple time‑allocation framework (e.g., guard the first 15 moves, then pick a plan every 5–7 moves) to reduce rushed decisions in critical middlegames.
- Review losses with a focused lens. Identify a few recurring patterns in the games you lost, such as premature pawn breaks, or hallucinated tactical lines that miss simple, solid continuations.
Opening recommendations
Your results suggest focusing more on the following as a core repertoire, with cautious expansion into other ideas:
- Continue developing the Nimzo-Indian Defense as a primary tool for Black. Deepen understanding of typical pawn structures and key middlegame plans. Nimzo-Indian Defense
- Leverage the Benko Gambit in appropriate contexts to maintain dynamic play and pressure on the queen-side. Build a few reliable response lines to common anti-Benko setups. Benko Gambit
- Maintain an actionable, solid approach in the Slav and related systems, refining main ideas and common tactical motifs to avoid overreach in the early middlegame. Slav Defense
- Use the Blackburne Shilling Gambit sparingly and only when you’re comfortable with the tactical complications and typical traps your opponent may know. Blackburne Shilling Gambit
Strength Adjusted Win Rate and trend context
Strength adjusted win rate is around 0.515, which is a solid baseline but indicates you can gain more precision in the critical moments. The 1-, 3-, and 6-month rating changes show positive momentum, while the 12-month trend indicates a slight drift downward. Use the next training cycle to focus on resolving longer-term gaps and ensuring steady improvement across the year.
Practice plan and next steps
- Choose two openings to deepen this month: Nimzo-Indian Defense (as Black) and Benko Gambit (as Black). Create a short, practical study plan with three core ideas and five representative middlegame plans for each.
- Run a weekly two‑hour focused endgame session. Include rook endings, minor piece endings, and practical table‑base-like rook endgame patterns you’re likely to encounter in rapid games.
- Do a weekly 30‑minute post‑game review of a recent loss or difficult game. Focus on identifying the critical decision points and alternative safer continuations.
- Incorporate a time‑management drill: play a few practice games with a strict time budget, and after 15 moves, pick a clear plan and avoid unnecessary trades that reduce clarity.
- Maintain a lightweight, two‑week review cycle for openings and middlegames, so you can gradually strengthen the long-range plan and reduce the risk of drift over a year.
Progress tracking ideas
To stay on track, consider keeping a simple log of: opening confidence, key middlegame plan success, endgame conversion rate, and time spent on study. This will help you see which areas yield real gains and where to adjust your focus.
Quick encouragement
You are making steady progress in the short term and showing competitive openings. With a targeted plan to improve endgames, time management, and long‑term consistency, you can turn the current positive momentum into sustained improvement over the coming months.
Profile and resources
If you’d like, I can tailor a personalized study plan and link to relevant practice material. mark%20van%20der%20werf