What you’re doing well
Your opening choices show flexibility and the ability to steer the game into positions you are comfortable with. In particular, you have solid results in several sound openings, and you often emerge with a favorable middlegame plan. Your strength-adjusted win rate is around 0.66, which indicates you convert advantages at a solid rate relative to the level of competition. The rating trend data also suggest a steady upward trajectory over different time windows, which is a good sign of consistent improvement.
- Two of your top short lists are performing very well: the Slav Defense with the Alekhine Variation and the Ruy Lopez with the Exchange Variation both show clean results in the sample set.
- Several classical openings—Caro-Kann Exchange, KGA: Fischer, 4.Bc4, and Scandinavian variants—also show strong win counts, suggesting you understand the typical middlegame plans in these lines.
- Multiple openings give you chances to press for an early initiative, which can lead to practical winning chances in faster time controls.
Opportunities to improve
Some openings in your mix have room to tighten, especially when the sample size is larger enough to show patterns. For example, the Sicilian Closed line looks healthy but would benefit from a deeper understanding of the typical pawn structures and common tactical motifs that arise after the early middlegame. A couple of other lines have small sample sizes; treat them as experiments and confirm them against expected plans before relying on them in critical games.
Opening repertoire: where to focus
Based on the openings data you’ve been using, you can anchor your study on a focused subset and still keep a flexible toolkit for opponents’ novelties. Consider strengthening these areas first, then gradually expand:
- Slav Defense: Alekhine Variation — strong results in the current sample. Build a concise plan for typical middlegame ideas and common pawn structures that arise after the early exchanges.
- Ruy Lopez: Exchange Variation — again, excellent performance in small samples. Deepen understanding of the pawn structure and typical endgames emanating from this line.
- Caro-Kann Defense: Exchange Variation — solid results; develop a reliable set of middlegame plans and a few tactical motifs to watch for in the middle game.
- KGA: Fischer, 4.Bc4 and Scandinavian-related lines — good performance. Use these as practical, simpler routes when you want solid development with clear plans.
- Other strong performers: Italian Two Knights, Czech Defense, and Slav lines show competitive results; treat them as backup options and study a couple of key ideas for each to avoid overextension.
Recommended training plan (4 weeks)
- Week 1: Lock in two main openings as your anchors — Slav Defense: Alekhine Variation and Ruy Lopez: Exchange Variation. For each, learn 3-4 recurring middlegame plans and 2 tactical motifs that often arise in these lines. Practice 20 short puzzles per week focused on the typical tactics in these structures.
- Week 2: Add Caro-Kann: Exchange Variation and KGA: Fischer, 4.Bc4 to your study list. Review common endgames that arise from these lines and create a small set of decision rules for when to simplify or keep pieces on the board.
- Week 3: Start a targeted endgame and technique block — pay attention to king activity, pawn structures, and converting minor advantage into a win. Include 15 minutes per session of practical rook endgames and minor piece endings.
- Week 4: Apply in practice — play rapid games with a focus on applying the anchored openings and the learned middlegame plans. After each game, do a quick post-mortem focusing on where the plan did or did not work and what you would change next time.
Actionable habits to adopt
- Prepare a compact opening notebook for your anchor lines (Slav Alekhine and Ruy Lopez Exchange). Include typical middlegame ideas, common pawn structures, and a few target lines to avoid being surprised by a novelty.
- Build a quick-check routine for the first 15 moves of each opening you play: ask what the main plans are, what the typical endgames look like, and what your biggest middlegame goals should be.
- Improve time management under rapid time controls by incorporating a consistent pre-move or pre-plan where you decide your strategy before turning to the computer board. This reduces time pressure and helps you avoid rushed decisions in critical middlegames.
- Integrate short, focused tactical training: 10–15 minutes of tactics daily aimed at recognizing common motifs that appear in your anchor openings (pins, skewers, discovered attacks, and typical pawn lever ideas).
Quick check-in plan
If you’d like, I can tailor a 2-week check-in plan based on your current practice rhythm and preferred time per day. We can set specific targets (e.g., number of games, opening study hours, and tactical puzzles) and review a sample game to reinforce the plans you’ve chosen.