Coach Chesswick
Quick summary
Nice work — you closed two sharp games recently (including a clean mate pattern against skatch07). Your play shows good tactical awareness and willingness to create imbalances (castling opposite sides, pawn storms, sacrificing for activity). At the same time you have a few recurring issues: occasional back-rank / queen infiltration weaknesses, some risky long-castle decisions, and time management in complex positions.
Highlights — what you did well
- You convert dynamic chances: in the win vs skatch07 you generated decisive counterplay and finished with a mating net — strong pattern recognition on the attack. (Replay: )
- Good tactical calculation in open positions — you spot forks, captures, and passed pawn races quickly (e.g., push to queening square in the English-style game where a passed pawn became decisive).
- You use opposite-side castling to create attacking play when appropriate; that yields practical chances and winning chances in blitz.
- Your opening repertoire includes several high-success lines (King's Indian Attack: French Variation has a 60% win rate for you). Keep using what works.
Main areas to improve
- Back-rank and queen infiltration: in the loss to aldomontenegro you were checkmated on the back rank. Add luft for your king or exchange pieces before pushing pawns that open lines to your king.
- Decision when to castle long vs short: opposite-side castling is double-edged. When you castle long, calculate whether your opponent can open the center quickly — if you don’t have time to defend, prefer safer kingside castling.
- Time management under tension: clocks in your PGNs show you sometimes reach very low time with complex positions. That increases tactical oversights (missed defenses, missed winning continuations).
- Endgame conversion and pawn races: you won via promotion in one game but lost other queen/rook endgames on time or by coordination mistakes. Work on basic conversion patterns (rook endgames, king+pawn races).
Concrete next steps (drills you can do this week)
- Back-rank drill: 15–20 tactics that target back-rank motifs every day for 5 days. Focus on creating luft, defending with a rook, and exchanging queens when necessary.
- Play 10 rapid games (10|5 or 15|10) and spend 30–60 seconds after each game reviewing only the critical blunders (where evaluation swung). Look for the single defensive move you missed in losses.
- Tactics set: solve 100 mixed tactics over three sessions that include mate-in-2/3, forks, discovered checks, and clearance sacrifices — these are patterns you already use, so sharpen them.
- Endgame practice: run through 10 rook endgame positions and 10 queen vs. rook/pawn races — know the basic winning plans and drawing ideas (active king, cutting off checks).
- Opening checklist: before playing your main lines (for example Caro-Kann Defense or King's Indian Attack), write a one-line plan for move 10 (where will your king go, which flank to attack, typical pawn breaks). That reduces goal-less moves in blitz.
Practical in-game habits to adopt
- Before castling long, ask: "Can my opponent open the center next 3 moves?" If yes, delay or choose the other side.
- When you have 30 seconds left, switch to “safety mode”: trade pieces if you are worse, simplify if you are better, and avoid speculative pawn storms unless checkmate is clear.
- Use checks and forcing sequences to buy time on the clock — simple tactical checks often flip low-time situations into practical wins.
Small adjustments with big impact
- Routine postgame review: pick one loss and one win per session and tag the single critical move that changed the evaluation. Make that the focus of improvement that day.
- Keep a short opening note for the top 2 lines you play often (main traps, safe move if opponent surprises you). That reduces on-the-clock confusion.
- Keep practicing pawn-break timing — many of your decisive games hinge on well-timed pawn pushes (d5, e5, f4/f5). Learn when a pawn push is a commitment and when it’s a preparation.
Notes tailored to your stats
- Your strength-adjusted win rate (~50.1%) shows you’re at a level where small fixes (time management, back-rank awareness) will reliably raise your score.
- Recent rating trend is mixed but long-term slope is positive — keep emphasizing fundamentals and selective study rather than volume-only blitz.
- Openings: you have strong results with the King's Indian Attack family — keep refining that line and the common plans rather than over-expanding your repertoire right now.
Follow-up
Pick one of the drills above and try it for five sessions. If you want, paste one game (loss or win) and I’ll give a 5–7 move “what to play instead” sequence for the critical moment. Keep doing what works — and tighten the defensive checklist.
Extras / placeholders
- Replay the key mate from your recent win vs skatch07:
- Openings reference: Caro-Kann Defense and King's Indian Attack — keep short written plans for each line you play frequently.