Coach Chesswick
Quick summary — recent blitz wins
Great job converting messy, tactical Caro‑Kann positions into full points. You repeatedly turned small advantages into promotion threats and forced mates — showing strong practical judgment and persistence in long endgames.
What you did well
- Endgame persistence: you kept probing with passed pawns until promotions were unavoidable.
- Queen/rook invasions: early raids and back‑rank pressure won material and opened decisive files.
- Time management: you handled the clock steadily and didn’t flag in long conversions.
- Practical technique: you turned tactical wins into strategic gains instead of simplifying into draws prematurely.
Where to improve
- Safety checks before large material grabs — queen grabs in the opening can be double‑edged. Run a 1–2 move safety check: opponent’s counterplay, mates, or development with tempo.
- Tactical sharpness in transitions — some trades gave the opponent counterplay; aim to calculate forced continuations or simpler winning simplifications.
- Recognize when to simplify: sometimes trading into a straightforward winning pawn endgame is safer than keeping extra pieces and risking perpetual tricks.
Concrete next steps (4‑week plan)
- Daily 10–15 min: pawn & king endgame drills (opposition, outside passed pawn, basic rook+pawn).
- 3× per week: 12 tactical puzzles focusing on promotion tactics and forks.
- Weekly: review 3 blitz games (pick your wins and one loss). Annotate 3 turning points before checking engine.
- One session: sharpen one Caro‑Kann line and note common traps for both sides. See Caro-Kann Defense.
Practical study drills (short)
- Drill 1 — Pawn race practice: set up positions where both sides have passed pawns and play 5 rapid races from both sides. Focus on tempo and king placement.
- Drill 2 — Queen invasion checklist: before grabbing a loose pawn with the queen, ask: opponent gains development with tempo? Is there a mating net? If answer is “maybe,” don’t grab in blitz without checking one extra move.
- Drill 3 — Underpromotion awareness: review 8 short examples where underpromotion (to knight or bishop) is the tactic — so spotting becomes automatic.
Opening & repertoire notes
Your Caro‑Kann games are a strength. Keep the practical lines that produce imbalances and promotion chances, but add a simple safety checklist for early queen excursions.
- Short prep: memorise 3 responses to the common early queen raids so you avoid tactical surprises.
- If you want, we can prepare 1‑page notes for your most played Caro‑Kann subline.
Quick checklist before each blitz game
- 1) One‑move safety check before grabbing big material.
- 2) If a pawn race starts, evaluate outside passed pawn + king activity first.
- 3) Prefer safe simplification into won endgames when obvious; avoid trading into unclear technical positions if short on increment.
Extras — drills and replay
Want a short replay to drill on your phone? Here’s a condensed, valid PGN snippet from your typical Caro‑Kann win for practice:
Pick one of your wins and I’ll annotate the turning points move‑by‑move. Opponent example: cr16sd.