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ProfessorChess

ProfessorisLive Since 2024 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟
52.8%- 42.0%- 5.2%
Bullet 1504
467W 400L 56D
Blitz 1125
165W 132L 9D
Rapid 1485
113W 60L 9D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick summary

Nice run — your rating trend over the last 3–6 months is strongly positive, and your win-rate in many sharp, tactical openings is solid. In your recent games you convert active piece play into concrete mating nets and you don’t shy away from simplification when it’s practical. At the same time a few recurring issues cost you games: occasional king-safety oversights, back-rank/queen-check tactics, and inconsistent clock management in bullet.

Highlights — what you’re doing well

  • Transitioning tactical pressure into decisive threats: the Rxh2 mate shows you spot attacking patterns and follow through until mate.
  • Active piece play and rook activity — you use rooks aggressively on open files and the 7th/2nd ranks.
  • Good conversion of small advantages: pushing passed pawns and using the king actively in the endgame were effective in one win where a passed c‑pawn and king march sealed the result.
  • You have openings where you excel — e.g. Modern Defense and the Vienna Gambit → keep leveraging those strengths.
  • Practical play under pressure: winning on time shows you keep moving and maintain practical chances when the clock becomes a factor.

Recurring problems to fix

  • King safety & back-rank weaknesses — a couple of losses ended with decisive checks (including a Qe1/Qd2 mate sequence). Build a habit of checking for enemy back-rank and long‑diagonal checks before every move.
  • Tactical oversights in the middlegame — there were moments where a knight/queen fork or a discovered check was missed. Fast pattern recognition will cut these errors down.
  • Opening lines with slightly worse outcomes — your stats show some lines (Czech, Caro‑Kann) have lower win-rates. Either clean those lines up or avoid them in fast bullet sessions.
  • Time management in bullet — several games reach frighteningly low clocks. That burns practical chances. Aim to keep a small time buffer every game (10–15s) rather than getting to 0–5s frequently.

Concrete, game-level takeaways

  • After castling (especially long), scan for enemy pawn breaks and diagonal/rook lifts that open lines toward your king.
  • When simplified into rooks + pawns, prioritize creating passed pawns and active king moves — you already do this well; make it automatic.
  • Before every move in time trouble: ask two quick questions — "Is my king safe?" and "Do I lose material to a tactic?" If yes, spend the extra second.
  • Openings: lean on your best-performing systems in bullet — Modern Defense and Vienna Gambit — and avoid experimenting with theoretical sidelines unless you have time to study them.

Practical bullet drills (next 2 weeks)

  • Daily 5–10 minute tactics: focus on forks, skewers, discovered checks, back‑rank patterns (15–20 puzzles/day).
  • 10 practice bullet games with one fixed opening you want to improve. Play only that opening and review quick blunders after each game (5–10 min review).
  • 5 endgame drills: basic king + pawn, rook endgames, and converting a single passed pawn — 2 problems per session.
  • One session of slow analysis per week: pick a recent loss and do a short post-mortem (10–15 min) to find the critical turning move.

Bullet-specific tips

  • Pre-move smartly: only pre-move when you’re certain (captures that are safe, recaptures). Avoid wild pre-moves in closed positions.
  • Keep moves practical: in time trouble swap a complex long think for a solid, simple developing/defensive move that keeps the position manageable.
  • Use repetition: if you reach a winning rook+king end with a passed pawn, simplify and push — many opponents blunder under time pressure.

Suggested short study plan (4 weeks)

  • Week 1: Tactics + back‑rank patterns (daily 15–20 puzzles).
  • Week 2: Opening refinement — pick 1–2 best openings from your stats (Modern Defense, Vienna Gambit) and learn 3 typical plans/one common trap each.
  • Week 3: Endgames — rook endings and king + passed pawn conversion drills.
  • Week 4: Play 50 bullet games focusing on time management rules you set (e.g., never go below 8s unless forced). Post-mortem the 10 most instructive ones.

Quick resources & references (placeholders)

  • Study a recent opponent: raghav-gupta — review the game you won on time and note how you forced simplification after an early queen exchange.
  • Example winning sequence (review on your phone):
  • Openings to study: Pirc Defense, English Opening, Caro-Kann Defense (target weak spots in those lines).

Final words — quick checklist before each bullet game

  • Protect the back rank — give a luft or keep a flight square when attacking.
  • Keep a 10–15 second buffer on the clock when possible.
  • Play your best openings until you’ve studied alternatives.
  • After the game: 1–2 minute review of the turning point; note one tactic you missed.

Keep the momentum — your long-term trend is up. Small, focused improvements on tactics and time management will turn some of those narrow losses into consistent wins.


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