Avatar of Mees van Osch

Mees van Osch FM

MeesvanOsch Since 2017 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟
55.4%- 38.1%- 6.5%
Daily 2000 1W 0L 0D
Rapid 2306 48W 8L 4D
Blitz 2751 1192W 751L 158D
Bullet 2611 1829W 1353L 200D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Hi Mees!

Great job keeping your Blitz rating above 2519 (2021-06-13) and scoring a healthy number of wins against strong opposition such as Sandro Tskitishvili. Below is a short review of recent trends and some concrete ideas to sharpen your play further.

1. What you are already doing well

  • Dynamic piece play. Your wins often feature rapid development and active piece coordination. In the miniature below you used fast-paced central tactics to win material and force resignation:

  • Flexible openings. You switch comfortably between 1.e4, 1.d4 and flank openings such as 1.g3. This makes preparation against you tricky.
  • Conversion of extra material. Several endgame wins show good technique, e.g. the rook endgame vs. Sandro Tskitishvili where you calmly created a passed a-pawn and forced resignation.

2. Patterns behind recent losses

  • Time-pressure decisions. Four of your last five losses were on time while you were still objectively better or equal. Good clock handling will give an instant rating gain.
  • King safety in the Sicilian/French systems. In the loss to blunderingmyself you castled short and then allowed Qg4–h4–g3, leaving dark squares weak. A single prophylactic move (…h6 or …g6) would have neutralised the attack.
  • Endgame pawn-races. The marathon vs. Sandro Tskitishvili (see diagram) shows a missed drawing fortress once both sides queened. Work on king activity and outside passed pawn themes.

3. Opening map

Your best results arise from structures you understand deeply:

  • King’s Fianchetto (1.g3). You score above 70 % when you obtain the d4–e4 centre. Continue refining setups against …d6/…c6.
  • French-Sicilian hybrid (…e6 & …c5). As Black you reach comfortable middlegames, but watch the d5/f5 holes that appear after …f6/f5.

4. Middlegame focus areas

  1. Exchange sacs on the 7th/8th rank. Consider thematic ideas like Rxe6! or Rxf8+ when the opponent’s back rank is weak. Reviewing classic games by Tal will sharpen your eye.
  2. Centralisation in opposite-side castling. Some attacks stall because minor pieces stay on their original files. Look for Zwischenzug tactics (Zwischenzug) that bring a knight to e6/d6 or f5 earlier.

5. Endgame checklist

  • Convert an outside passed pawn by cutting off the enemy king with your rook first – then push.
  • When both sides queen, safety checks are key: force perpetuals immediately if down material.
  • Refresh essential rook endings (Lucena, Philidor). Ten minutes of spaced-repetition each day pays huge dividends.

6. Time-management drill

The quickest rating gain for you:

  • Adopt a 30-20-10 rule: by move 10 you should still have ≥ 30 s, by move 20 ≥ 20 s, by move 30 ≥ 10 s.
  • Use the opponent’s think time to decide on candidate moves and blunder-check.
  • Practise bullet “one-touch” input for pre-moving safe recaptures.

7. Suggested weekly plan (total ≈ 3 h)

  1. 30 min: solve 12-15 mixed tactics at 2400-2600 level.
  2. 20 min: review one blitz loss with an engine, focusing on the first critical mistake.
  3. 10 min: rehearse one theoretical line you find uncomfortable (e.g. 6.Bg5 in Najdorf).
  4. 15 min: play a 15 + 10 training game vs. a human, annotate without engine.
  5. Repeat x3 per week.

8. Motivation corner

Your hourly win rate has been steadily climbing – keep the momentum!

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See you at the next training session. Good luck and enjoy the journey!


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