PanzerX – Personalized Performance Feedback
What you are already doing well
- Enterprising openings. Your French-Knight (1.e4 e6 2.Nc3 d5) and Nimzowitsch Defence (…Nc6) choices keep opponents out of book and score well when you follow up energetically. The recent win against guidaluz shows this clearly.
- Powerful pawn storms. Early f- and g-pawn thrusts frequently disorganise the enemy king (see 1.e4 c5 2.Nc3 … g4!? in many of your games).
- Tactical alertness. In the 27.Rxd6!! finish of your latest win you spotted the overloaded queen instantly – a good sign that you calculate forcing lines with confidence.
- Fighting spirit. Even in lost positions you keep posing problems, and many victories come from opponents collapsing on the clock or in complex positions.
Key areas to upgrade next
- Time management. Five of your last six defeats were on the clock. You often spend half your time on the first 15 moves and then blitz critical positions. Train yourself to reach move 15 with ≥60 % of your clock left.
- Over-extension. Pawn storms (g4, h4) work best when the centre is stable. In your loss to mohamadjavad1366 the pawns advanced while your king sat on g1 and the centre exploded – suddenly the pawn chain became a target instead of a spear.
- End-game conversion. Several losses featured rook-endgame slips. Review the Philidor/Lucena positions and practice converting two-pawn leads with 5-minute drills.
- Opening depth. The off-beat Nimzowitsch (1…Nc6) is fine, but twice you lost after queens were exchanged early and you had no active plan. Add one main-line defence (e.g. French Classical or Caro-Kann) so you can choose between surprise and solidity.
Three-week action plan
- Clock discipline drill. Play 20 blitz games where you must keep ≥1 minute for every 10 moves. Abort the game if you fail the rule. This builds an internal metronome.
- Structured opening notes. Create a 10-line “spine” for each colour. Write only the ideas: pawn breaks, piece placement and typical sacrifices. Refer to it before every session until it feels second-nature.
- End-game micro-sessions. Spend 10 minutes/day on rook-and-pawn endings. Focus on tempo counting, the square rule and building bridges. Play the same position from both sides to understand the drawing resources.
- Tactics under time pressure. Use a puzzle-rush (3-minute) run after each playing session. This trains quick calculation and keeps you comfortable when low on time.
Opening snapshots
Closed Sicilian (White)
• Storm only after completing Nf3, d3, Be3/Bd2 and castling.
• If Black plays …d5 early, strike back in the centre instead of pushing more pawns – you will gain the initiative.
• Swap queens willingly when you win a pawn; your piece activity remains high.
Nimzowitsch Defence (Black)
• After 1.e4 Nc6 2.d4 e5 3.Nf3, consider 3…exd4 4.Nxd4 Nf6 heading for a Scotch-type game you already know from the white side.
• Against 3.d5 keep the plan …Nce7, …Ng6, …Bc5 plus queenside castling – this scored 2/2 last week.
Progress trackers
Use the charts below to verify that the plan is working:
Inspirational highlight
Study how patiently you built up before the final tactic in your latest win:
Final encouragement
Your attacking flair is already at 2000-level; sharpening clock handling and adding a solid fallback opening will lift the whole game. Stay consistent, review each session briefly, and celebrate small wins. See you above 2100 soon!