Avatar of Najmah Yusuf

Najmah Yusuf

najmahyusuf Since 2022 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟
49.7%- 47.0%- 3.3%
Bullet 281
5W 9L 0D
Blitz 1026
14W 6L 0D
Rapid 1037
1537W 1485L 107D
Daily 1080
73W 39L 2D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick summary

Nice run — your recent results show growing confidence and clear tactical threat-creation in blitz. Your rating and win rate are trending up, and you’re winning sharp games by attack and endgame pressure. At the same time, time trouble (and a loss on time) is costing you wins. Below are focused, practical tips to keep the momentum.

What you’re doing well

  • Active piece play and tactical awareness — you create threats quickly (good examples vs xluqx and obidullah93).
  • Strong exploitation of knight invasions and outposts (your jumps to f7/d6/c7 were decisive in the Sicilian game).
  • Good pawn play: you create and push passed pawns, then use rooks and pieces to support them.
  • You convert pressure into wins—your opponents often crack under combined king/rook/queen threats.
  • Opening choices with consistent success: Scandinavian Defense, Philidor Defense, Petrov's Defense show great win rates — build on those.

Main areas to improve

  • Time management — several games ended on the clock (both wins and a loss). Work on keeping a usable reserve (aim to have ~1:00–1:30 by move 20 in 5|0 games).
  • Conversion under pressure without relying on the flag. Finish positions more cleanly: trade to winning endgames earlier or force mate patterns instead of waiting for the opponent to flag.
  • Opening consistency — you mix many systems. Focus on 2–3 reliable openings for blitz so you know typical plans and avoid slow move thinking early on.
  • Some middlegame structural issues: watch for weakening pawns and holes when pushing aggressively (avoid creating targets in front of your king without compensation).

Concrete 2‑week training plan

  • Daily (15–20 min): 15 tactical puzzles (focus themes: forks, discovered attacks, knight forks, and decoys).
  • 3× week (20–30 min): One endgame module — rook vs rook, king + pawn vs king, and queen endgame basics. Practice converting a passed pawn under a clock.
  • 2× week (15–20 min): Opening review of your best systems — build one short plan per opening (moves 1–12) for Scandinavian Defense and Philidor Defense.
  • Play sessions: 10 blitz games with a clock focus — main rule: no game >10s spent on a single move in the first 12 moves. If you spend >10s once, compensate by moving faster next 3 moves.

Practical blitz tips (apply every game)

  • Start fast: play a prepared opening line for the first 10 moves so you save time for tactics later.
  • Use easy-to-remember plans (example: in closed Sicilian/Bc4 lines, aim king safety + knight to f7/d6 invasion + pawn push on the queenside).
  • Avoid long computations when up material — simplify. If you’re ahead, trade pieces and use the clock advantage.
  • Pre-moves: use them in pure captures only (avoid pre-moving into tactics).
  • If under 30s, switch to “practical” mode: look for forcing moves (checks, captures, threats) and avoid quiet maneuvers that take time to calculate.

Game-specific notes (short)

  • Win vs xluqx — excellent knight invasion (Nxf7, Nxd6+, Nc7+). You turned a tactical melee into a passed pawn race and pressed the advantage. Keep doing this pattern: look for N–f7/d6/c7 jumps when opponent king is exposed.
  • Win vs nemofrost — your endgame technique and active rook play pushed the opponent into passive defense. Practice similar rook activity in training endgames.
  • Loss vs pacoglelz — the game ended on time. The position had counterplay for both sides; you needed a clearer conversion plan and better clock use. When the opponent has active pawns, simplify or exchange queens to reduce counterplay while keeping enough time to convert.
  • Sharp sacrificial patterns (see obidullah93): you spot tactical motifs quickly. Reinforce pattern recognition with 5–7 themed puzzles per session (mate patterns and Greek-gift style ideas).

Short checklist before each session

  • Pick 1 opening for White and 1 for Black (use your Scandinavian/Philidor strengths).
  • Warm up: 5 quick puzzles and 1 3‑minute endgame drill.
  • Target: keep 60–90 seconds on the clock by move 20 in 5|0 games.
  • After a loss: 1–2 minute review of the critical moment (don’t tilt — note one lesson and close the tab).

Motivation & next milestone

Your rating trend slope and recent +59 change show rapid improvement — keep the training focused and you can target +100 more rating points in the next 3 months by tightening time management and deepening opening familiarity.

Optional: replay one of your recent wins

To study your best tactical game, open the win vs xluqx and replay the key knight jumps and pawn pushes — try to spot the moment you could have simplified earlier to avoid relying on the clock.


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