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mate787

Since 2014 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟
46.0%- 48.9%- 5.1%
Bullet 1387
267W 374L 15D
Blitz 1725
2509W 2628L 266D
Rapid 2101
502W 481L 82D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Short summary

Nice session — you mixed solid opening play with a few sharp tactical games. Your recent quick win came from a clean Catalan-style setup where you completed development and castled; your losses came in sharp Sicilian / Benoni / Benko-type games where the opponent generated a kingside attack and you missed defensive resources. Overall trend is upward over the medium term, but there's a small dip recently — the notes below will help you turn that into steady progress.

Highlights — what you did well

  • Opening discipline: in your win you completed development quickly (fianchetto, bishops out, castle) and didn’t create early weaknesses — that’s textbook and hard to punish in blitz.
  • Repertoire strengths: you have strong results with the Alapin and Closed Catalan types — continue to use those as reliable systems. See: Sicilian Defense: Alapin Variation and Catalan Opening: Closed.
  • Willingness to enter complex positions — that’s good. You create practical chances and put pressure on weaker defenses.
  • Resilience: you keep playing long sessions and your medium-term rating trend is positive — you are improving overall.

Recurring mistakes and patterns to fix

  • King safety in messy Sicilians / Benko / Benoni: in the loss vs magnustheegoat a standard attacking plan (pawn storm + sacrifices on h7 and f7) was decisive. When your opponent shows attacking intentions, stop and ask: "Can I keep my king safe after pawn pushes and piece sacrifices?"
  • Slow defensive coordination: after an opening sac or pawn break, your pieces sometimes aren’t on the right squares to help the king. Bring a knight/rook/queen into defense before grabbing material if the king becomes exposed.
  • Over-accepting complications for material: when opponents sacrifice (Bxh7+, Greek-gift themes, or rook lifts to the 7th), proactively evaluate the resulting mating nets instead of assuming you can survive with a tempo or two.
  • Time management: in several losses your clock dipped a lot in critical moments. Blitz rewards quick, correct pattern recognition — don’t leave hard defensive choices to the last seconds.
  • Loose pieces / hanging tactics (LPDO): review critical moves where a tactic like Rxf7 or a back-rank discovery appeared — those patterns repeat in your set of openings.

Concrete study plan (what to work on next 2–4 weeks)

  • Tactics (daily, 15–30 minutes): focus on mating nets, sacrifices and defensive resources. Drill puzzles that end in mate or decisive material swings (Rxf7, Qh5+/Bxh7 motifs).
  • Defensive patterns (2 sessions/week, 30–45 minutes): set up positions with blocked center but a kingside pawn storm (Benoni/Benko/Sicilian) and practice the right defensive piece placement — knight to f6/e7, rook to c8/8th rank, queen to e8/ d7, etc.
  • Opening sharpening (3×/week, 20 minutes): keep your Catalan/Alapin core but study one tricky line in the Benko/Benoni you face often — learn one plan for the middlegame so you don’t rely on “guessing.” Use annotated model games rather than only memorizing moves.
  • Longer games practice (weekly): play 1–2 rapid games (15|10 or 10|5) and do a short post-mortem. Longer time will let you practice defensive calculations without flagging.
  • Post-game checklist (every loss): mark the critical error — was it "king safety", "tactical oversight", "time trouble" or "opening misunderstanding"? Write a one-line remedy and review similar tactics in puzzles.

Quick tactical and practical tips for your next blitz session

  • If opponent plays Bxh7+ or Bh6 ideas: calculate the follow-up — can your rook/queen cover the open files? If not, don’t grab extra material that opens lines to your king.
  • When you see f5–f6 coming from White: consider exchanging pieces or returning a pawn to close the lines before it becomes deadly.
  • In sharp Sicilians, prioritize king safety and piece coordination over grabbing pawns — an extra pawn is worthless if your king gets mated.
  • Use the increment smartly: spend time on critical defensive positions and pre-move only when exchanges are forced or obvious.
  • Flag-proof trick: if your clock is low, simplify — trades that remove attackers reduce practical risk.

Examples from your recent games

Win (solid Catalan development vs choki):

Loss (critical tactical sequence vs magnustheegoat — study the h7 / f7 motifs):

Tip: replay the last 8–12 moves from the loss slowly and ask: what defender could I have activated one move earlier?

Next-session checklist

  • Warm up 10 puzzles (mate-in-2/3 and defender-saving tactics).
  • Play 10–15 minutes of slow blitz (10|5) focusing on not losing king-side safety.
  • Review one lost game and tag the theme (e.g., "didn't defend h7/f7 patterns").
  • Keep a short note: "If pawn storm + open file → trade or block center."

Motivation / final note

You have clear strengths: openings you know well and a steady medium-term upward trend. Convert that into more consistent results by tightening up defense in sharp positions and practicing targeted tactics. Small, consistent practice beats large, irregular sessions — keep it steady and you’ll close the recent dip quickly.


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