Coach Chesswick
Feedback for moon_0603
Great job keeping the games lively and tactical! Below you’ll find a quick snapshot of your performance, followed by concrete, bite-sized recommendations you can start using in your very next game.
Your current profile at a glance
- Peak rapid rating:
- Preferred time control: 10 min (600 s) rapid
- Typical results pattern: sharp, decisive games with few draws
When you usually shine
What you are already doing well
- Tactical alertness: You frequently spot one-move tactics such as forks (e.g. …Nxc2+), back-rank ideas and queen infiltrations (your last win ended with …Qxf1#).
- Confidence in open positions: You are not afraid to enter sharp pawn structures or sacrifice material for activity.
- Fast play: You finish most games with plenty of time left, so you rarely lose on the clock.
Main improvement levers
- Basic opening structure
• Follow the classic “three golden moves” in the first five moves: center pawn, knight, bishop.
• Avoid repeating early moves with the same piece (e.g. Be7-g5-h5-g6). It wastes time and invites counter-play.
• As Black, if you like 1…e5, consider the Scotch Four Knights set-up:e5 Nc6 Nf6 Bc5. It keeps your bishop active instead of hiding on e7. - King safety first
• Your losses vs Marcaveli and sopa616 both stemmed from the king staying in the center while pieces hunted pawns. Make castling a non-negotiable habit by move 10 in 90 % of your games.
• Before launching flank pawns (g- or h-pawns) ask “Will this create dark-square weaknesses around my king?” - Slow down at critical moments
• You often have 6–8 minutes left when the game ends. Invest an extra 20–30 seconds whenever you are about to exchange queens or enter an endgame. • Use the simple “blunder check”: after you think you found a move, visualize the opponent’s three strongest replies before you play it. - Endgame fundamentals
• In the loss vs lamnguok (long rook & pawn endgame) you resigned in a position that was still drawable with correct technique. • Spend 15 minutes/day on king & pawn endings. Knowing opposition, outside passed pawn and zugzwang positions will convert many near-winning games.
14-day micro training plan
| Day | Focus | Time |
|---|---|---|
| 1-3 | Opening principles video (30 min) + 10 easy puzzles | 45 min |
| 4-6 | King-safety drills (set up “castle by move 10” in 5 blitz games) | 1 h play |
| 7 | Review own games – write 3 “coach notes” each | 30 min |
| 8-10 | Endgame basics: KP vs K, opposition, triangulation | 40 min |
| 11-13 | Intermediate puzzles (ratings 400-800) until you reach 80 % accuracy | 30 min |
| 14 | Play 3 rapid games, annotate one critical moment per game | 1 h |
Reference game to study
Your recent tactical victory demonstrates many of your strengths. Replay it slowly and ask “Could my opponent have defended?” each move:
[[Pgn|1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Be7 3. Bc4 c6 4. Nc3 d5 5. d3 dxc4 6. dxc4 Nf6 7. O-O O-O 8. Nxe5 Bd6 9. Bf4 b5 10. cxb5 cxb5 11. Nxb5 Bxe5 12. Bxe5 Nxe4 13. Qe2 Qe8 14. Qxe4 Qxb5 15. c4 Qc5 16. b4 Qxb4 17. a3 Qa4 18. Bd4 Qxc4 19. Rae1 Ba6 20. Qxa8 Nc6 21. Re8 Qxf1#]Motivation booster
Keep the board on fire, but give your king a safe house and your rating will jump quickly. Good luck, and enjoy the journey!