Avatar of Paula Reyes Jara

Paula Reyes Jara WFM

palipali Santiago Since 2012 (Inactive) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟
73.9%- 19.6%- 6.5%
Bullet 2050
15W 3L 0D
Blitz 1902
31W 14L 4D
Rapid 1851
13W 5L 3D
Daily 1676
43W 5L 2D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Hi Paula!

Great job keeping an active playing schedule and testing yourself in several time-controls. Below is tailored feedback drawn from your latest games and trends.

Quick Snapshot

  • Current peak rating: 2148 (2020-08-15)
  • Your wins often come from sharp, tactical play in the middlegame.
  • Losses cluster around time trouble and unbalanced king safety positions.
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Opening Phase

What’s working – With White you steer games into Italian-type structures (Bc4, Nf3, c3/d3) that give you fast development and kingside pressure. You also spot aggressive ideas such as 15.Nxe6! in your recent win.

To improve

  • Black repertoire: You’ve tested French, Petroff, Benoni and the occasional off-beat setups. Instead of “sampling” many systems, choose one solid main line and dig deeper. For example, if you enjoy counter-punching, the French Classical 3…Nf6 line could be your anchor opening.
  • Move-order hygiene: A few early …f6 (or …f5) moves left dark-square holes around your king. When you feel the urge to push an f-pawn in the opening, ask the “three-question check”: 1) Does it help development? 2) Does it create a target? 3) What is the concrete follow-up?

Middlegame

You demonstrate good tactical vision. The following miniature shows your strength—spotting forcing moves that overload the opponent:


Next step: balance tactics with prophylaxis. In several losses you ignored the opponent’s counter-threat (e.g., allowing 29…Nc4! in the Benoni game). Before playing an attacking move, pause for five seconds and ask, “What is my opponent’s most annoying reply?”

Endgame & Technique

  • You reach many won endgames but sometimes need several extra moves to convert. Add 15-minute sessions of basic rook-and-pawn drills to your weekly routine—especially Lucena and Philidor positions.
  • Review the ending of your win versus ChileAudax: after promoting on f8 you still allowed perpetual-like checks. Aim to “reduce counter-play first, promote second.”

Time Management

Both your most recent win and loss were decided on the clock. Consider these habits:

  1. Openings: play the first 10 moves almost instantly by using a light repertoire you know well—save time for critical middlegame decisions.
  2. 40/20 rule: try to keep at least 40 % of your starting time when you leave the opening and 20 % for the last ten moves.
  3. During the opponent’s turn, calculate one line deeper so you already have a reply ready.

Action Plan for the Next 4 Weeks

  1. Choose one main opening with Black (e.g., French) and build a two-page “cheat sheet.” Play at least 5 rapid games using only that opening.
  2. Each day solve 3 tactics rated 50–100 points above your current puzzle rating, focusing on motifs such as deflection and zwischenzug.
  3. Play one thematic endgame against the computer (rook + pawn vs. rook) until you can win from both sides in under 60 seconds.
  4. After every game, note one move where you spent >2 minutes. Ask: “Could I have used a principle instead of deep calculation?” Build a personal “thinking shortcuts” list.

Encouragement

Your attacking flair is evident and with a bit more structure—especially in openings and time usage—you’re well on your way to the 1800+ bracket. Keep sharpening your tactics, but don’t forget the quieter skills that glue everything together. Good luck and enjoy the journey!


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