Recent rapid games: what stands out
You have shown a willingness to fight for initiative in sharp, tactical positions. In your recent games, you entered dynamic middlegames that required precise calculation and good piece activity. When you keep the pressure, you can create difficult choices for your opponent. There are also moments where a more methodical approach in the middlegame and a clean transition to the endgame would help you convert advantages more reliably.
Strengths to build on
- Solid willingness to play actively and seek tactical chances when the position allows it.
- Strong tolerance for complications, which helps you seize initiative in the right setups.
- Resilience in the early and middle phase of games; you keep fighting even when the position becomes unclear.
Key areas to improve
- Endgame technique: work on converting even small advantages in rook and minor-piece endings, and practice simplifying when you have a clear edge. This will help you turn promising middlegames into wins more often.
- Opening plan and structure: aim for a concise, repeatable plan in your main lines. A clear first-12-move structure makes your games easier to navigate and reduces time pressure on critical decisions.
- Calculation discipline under time pressure: cultivate a routine for quick, candidate-move checks (threats, forcing moves, counterplay) so you don’t miss practical resources in sharp positions.
- Tactical pattern recognition: reinforce common motifs you see in your preferred openings (forks, pins, discovered attacks) to accelerate accurate play when time is tight.
- Time management during middlegames: practice allocating a strict but reasonable amount of time to evaluate the position, then stick to a small set of candidate moves to avoid getting stuck.
Opening performance: takeaways for a focused plan
Your openings data suggests you perform well in certain lines. In particular, the Scotch Game and the Alapin Variation of the Sicilian show strong results. A practical step is to refine a two-opening repertoire: choose two lines you enjoy and build a clear, repeatable plan for the early middlegame. Create a simple one-page guide for each opening that covers typical pawn structures, typical piece placements, and 2–3 go-to ideas you can use if the position deviates from the main line.
8-point two-week practice plan
- Daily: 15–20 minutes of focused tactical puzzles that mirror themes from your preferred openings (patterns like forks, pins, discovered attacks, and typical tactical motifs in those structures).
- Daily: one endgame drill (rook endings or king-and-pawn endings) to strengthen conversion in simplified positions.
- 2–3 reviews per week: pick the three critical moments from a recent game and identify safer alternatives or stronger continuations.
- Opening refinement: select two main openings you use most, and write a short plan for the early middlegame with common pawn structures and piece placements.
- Play 1–2 short practice games per day with a clock that encourages quick, safe decision-making, then recap after each game.
- During reviews, focus on questions like: Was there a safer simplification? Did I miss a forcing line? Could I have improved king safety earlier?
- Develop a personal post-game routine: note the top 3 moments that decided the game and one concrete improvement for the next time.
- Keep a lightweight, printable repertoire sheet for quick reference during quick games.
Next steps
If you’d like, I can tailor the two-week plan to your preferred play times and openings. Share which two openings you want to emphasize and any time controls you mostly use, and I’ll customize the drills, plus provide a compact repertoire cheat-sheet you can carry into your rapid games.