Avatar of Rafael Leite

Rafael Leite

rafaelvleite SP Since 2018 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟♟♟
50.4%- 41.0%- 8.6%
Bullet 2144
32W 29L 4D
Blitz 2324
9238W 7699L 1543D
Rapid 2353
1415W 982L 279D
Daily 1964
38W 13L 4D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

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.


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