Quick recap
Good run of daily games — you convert advantages and punish inaccuracies. Your last win finishes with a clean promotion and mating net; replaying that sequence will help cement the pattern.
Replay the winning sequence here:
What you’re doing well
- Converting material and pawn advantages — your passed pawn play (especially the f‑pawn) is forceful and efficient.
- Active rooks — you invade on open files and use doubled rooks effectively in the middlegame and endgame.
- Tactical vision — you spot forcing sequences and mating nets quickly; that’s a major strength in daily games.
- Opening consistency — you steer to middlegames you know well, which gives you more practical chances to outplay opponents.
Recurring issues to fix
- Trading into opponents’ activity: a few losses occurred after exchanges that opened files for enemy rooks. Before trading, ask who benefits from the opened lines.
- King safety underestimations: some sequences gave the opponent incoming checks. Before pushing pawns or simplifying, scan for discovered checks and back‑rank weaknesses.
- Passive responses: sometimes you react rather than build a plan. Try moves that both improve your pieces and limit opponent counterplay.
- Endgame technique under pressure: polish rook and queen endgames so conversions become routine rather than guesswork.
Concrete example from your recent loss
In the loss versus Coach-Mae you traded into a position where their rooks became very active and your king was exposed. A quick checklist before a simplification would have caught that: what checks or infiltration squares do I give my opponent? If the answer includes enemy rooks on open files, pause and reassess.
Practical drills (daily)
- 15 tactics a day (focus on pins, forks, discovered checks and back‑rank motifs).
- 10 minutes visualization: pick a short tactical sequence from your game and calculate 3–4 moves ahead without touching the pieces.
- 3 rook‑endgame positions a few times per week — practice cutting the king off and Lucena technique basics.
- Annotate one loss per week: identify the move where the evaluation swung and list 2 candidate moves you missed.
4‑week focused plan
- Week 1 — Tactics & candidate move discipline: 15 puzzles/day + write down 2 candidate moves before each key decision in one daily game.
- Week 2 — Endgames: 30–45 minutes, 4 sessions on rook pawn endgames, queen vs rook basics, and king activity.
- Week 3 — Prophylaxis & planning: study short games that demonstrate how to restrict opponent plans; practice one prophylactic move per game.
- Week 4 — Practice and review: play 6 daily games, annotate them, and focus on not repeating the specific mistakes found earlier.
Pre‑move checklist (use before every move)
- What are my opponent’s immediate threats (checks, captures, forks)?
- If I capture/push, which lines open and who benefits?
- Can I improve a passive piece while creating a concrete threat?
- Does simplification hand my opponent active rooks or passed pawns?
Mini goals for the next 2 weeks
- Solve 200 tactics (emphasize discovered checks and back‑rank patterns).
- Convert 3 won rook endgames in training play or vs engine.
- Annotate 4 recent games and stop one repeated mistake (for example, trading into active enemy rooks).
Want targeted feedback?
Send one game (PGN or link) and I’ll give a short annotated post‑mortem: missed tactics, an alternate plan, and a single motif to train. A good next step is your loss vs Coach-Mae — we’ll zoom in on the critical trade and defensive plan.