Coach Chesswick
Quick summary
Indy — nice string of wins and some instructive losses in the latest blitz batch. You convert passed pawns well and your king activity in endgames is strong. Main leak: time management and a few passive responses in unfamiliar setups (Chess960) that allow opponents to generate counterplay.
- Recent win highlight: strong pawn-promotion technique and active king play in the final phase — small conversion details mattered.
- Recent loss takeaway: Chess960 games (vs Andrey Ubushiev) exposed passive piece placement and missed simplification opportunities.
- Overall trend: positive momentum (one-month jump +348) and a Strength-Adjusted Win Rate around 56.6% — you're consistently beating appropriately rated opponents.
- Example short sequence (illustrative): .
What you're doing well
- Endgame conversion — you consistently push passed pawns and use the king effectively to support promotion races.
- Opening familiarity — strong results in your core lines (for example Colle System: Rhamphorhynchus Variation and Caro-Kann Defense: Exchange Variation), which gives you comfortable middlegame plans.
- Practical pressure — winning on time and creating chaos when ahead shows good psychological and practical play.
- Tactical scanning — you spot forks and mating nets quickly in many wins.
Recurring issues and how to fix them
These are the common mistakes that cost you points in blitz.
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Time management
- Problem: tight clocks lead to rushed moves and occasional blunders.
- Fix: warm up with 3|0 games focusing on making decent moves quickly; practice a 2s "safety check" before each move to avoid hanging pieces.
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Passive play in unfamiliar openings (Chess960)
- Problem: passive setups let the opponent seize the initiative early.
- Fix: prioritize piece activity and early king safety. If unsure, trade a pair of pieces and steer toward an endgame you know.
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Missed simplification opportunities
- Problem: you sometimes shuffle when a timely exchange or pawn break would decide the game.
- Fix: set one clear strategic goal per turn: improve a piece, create a break, or simplify. If none is clear, favor activity or an exchange that reduces opponent counterplay.
Concrete drills and study plan (weekly)
- Daily: 15–20 minutes of tactics (forks, skewers, back-rank, promotion tactics).
- 3×/week: 20 minutes of endgame practice — king+pawn, queen vs rook endgames and basic rook endgames; focus on converting a single passed pawn.
- 2×/week: 10 Chess960 rapid games to reduce confusion from odd starting setups.
- Weekly: review 3 blitz games (one win, one loss, one draw). Annotate the critical decision and pick one recurring mistake to fix.
- One-month goal: reduce time blunders by establishing the 2s safety-check habit.
Opening notes — targeted tips
- Stick with what works: deepen plans in your best lines (for example English Opening: Agincourt Defense and the Colle) so you can play faster and more confidently out of the opening.
- In the Caro‑Kann: avoid exchanging into equal structures unless your rooks will be active on the open files; look for timely c4 or f3 breaks to gain space.
- For flank openings like the Nimzo‑Larsen: define a pawn-break plan (c4/c5) early so you have a concrete middlegame plan instead of aimless piece moves.
Practical tips for your next session
- Start with 5 minutes of tactics to warm up pattern recognition.
- Play a block of 3|0 games to train fast decisions, then 5|0 to practice slightly deeper calculation under time pressure.
- In Chess960 or novel positions: if you feel lost, exchange pieces and head for an endgame you can convert.
- Before each move, do the micro-check: any hanging pieces? Any direct forks or pins created by this move?
Resources & next steps
- Endgame set: practise basic promotion and king activation positions until converting becomes almost automatic.
- Tactics streaks: aim for 15–30 puzzles with >85% accuracy.
- Game review: annotate the loss to Andrey Ubushiev and one Chess960 loss to identify the turning moment.
- Expand one opening line by adding a prepared transposition so you avoid surprises early on.
Closing
You’re on an upward trajectory: strong endgame technique and practical pressure are your biggest assets. Tightening the clock habits and improving clarity in unfamiliar openings will push the next rating jump. Want a short annotated review of one of the specific games above (win, loss, or draw)? Pick one and I’ll mark critical moments and suggest exact alternatives.
- Pick a game to deep-dive: win vs kolomeets_daniel, win vs Sandokan, or loss vs Andrey Ubushiev.