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Rafo-74

Since 2023 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟
48.3%- 47.0%- 4.7%
Rapid 1218
1989W 1937L 193D
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Coach Chesswick

Quick summary

Nice session — you converted several winning positions and finished with clean tactical checks and mates. A recurring strength is putting pressure on the enemy king and turning active pieces into decisive threats. A clear area to fix is early-king safety and a couple of opening pawn moves that create weak squares (the game vs mohamad3289 is a sharp reminder).

Highlights — what you did well

  • Finishing ability: in multiple wins you found the mating net or forced decisive material wins instead of letting the game slip. Example: your Q-h7 mate in the game versus gisfro showed good coordination of queen and rooks.
  • Active piece play: you get pieces to useful squares quickly and punish passive opponent play (works well in openings like Bishop's Opening).
  • Converting material: when you win a pawn or an exchange you pushed for simplification and used rooks/queens actively to convert.
  • Tactical awareness: several games show you spotting forks, pins and decisive checks — keep building that pattern memory.

Recurring mistakes & patterns to fix

  • King safety in the opening — avoid weakening pawn moves (f6, moving the king early) unless you're certain of the consequences. The loss to mohamad3289 after playing f6 / Ke7 became a tactical liability (the opponent exploited the open diagonals and mate threats).
  • Back-rank vulnerability — a few wins were close calls where the opponent had counterplay on open files. When you simplify into rook-and-pawn endgames, always check for back-rank or back-rank mating motifs.
  • Opening move accuracy — you play many lines in the Queen’s-pawn / London family and some gambit-ish sidelines. Tighten move orders: avoid random pawn pushes that hand the opponent central squares.
  • Time management under pressure — you generally keep time, but when a critical tactical decision appears, slow down and calculate two extra candidate moves (look for checks, captures, threats).

Concrete next steps (2–4 week plan)

  • Tactics daily: 12–20 quality puzzles per day focusing on mates in 1–3, forks, pins, discovered attacks. Aim for accuracy over speed; pause and enumerate candidate moves before clicking.
  • King safety drill: play 10 rapid (10+0 or 8+0) games where you force yourself to follow simple rules — never move g/f pawns in front of an uncastled king unless it gains concrete compensation; castle early if safe.
  • Back-rank checks: run a 30-minute session on back-rank mates and typical defensive resources (luft, rook lifts, king escape squares). After each game, ask: "Does my opponent have back-rank checks?"
  • Mini opening repertoire: pick 2 comfortable replies for common opponent moves (for example, keep the reliable lines in Bishop's Opening and shore up answers to 2...Nc6 and 3...Bb4). Learn 6–8 move orders and the key tactical ideas — not every line.
  • Post-game habit: annotate 1–2 losses per day. For each annotated game, identify the exact move that changed the evaluation and write a one-line rule you will remember next time.

Practical tips you can apply immediately

  • Before you castle: scan opponent threats for one move (any mate, queen checks, or discovered attacks). If you see danger, fix it first.
  • When ahead by material: simplify into endgames only when your king is safe and you won’t drop tempo allowing counterplay.
  • Candidate move shortcut: for every position, force yourself to name three candidate moves (best, second, a tactical shot) before moving.
  • Keep a “no-f6” rule in open e-pawn games unless it wins material or blocks mate squares — f6 often creates holes and knight forks.

Model win — study this finish

Play through the Q-h7 mate game vs gisfro to study queen + rook coordination and how you used checks to herd the king. Use the viewer below to replay the sequence.

Openings — focused advice

  • Your best-performing lines include the Bishop’s Opening and some Colle/Alekhine setups. Continue to use those as your main repertoire and study typical middlegame plans rather than memorizing long theory.
  • Against the Italian Game and similar aggressive lines, prioritize safety: don’t play f6 early and be careful with king moves — the game vs mohamad3289 shows how quickly the opponent can punish those weaknesses.
  • If you enjoy sharp play, prepare one anti-trap line vs early Qh5/Nf5 motifs so you’re ready when opponents try to bait you.

Study resources & micro-tasks

  • Daily: 15 minutes tactics, 10 minutes back-rank drills, 10 minutes of an opening line review.
  • Weekly: annotate 3 lost or close wins, then check the critical moments with an engine to confirm the key move(s).
  • Micro-task before each game: 30 seconds to review the opponent's most common opening (if available) and one defensive pattern to watch for.

Next steps from me

  • If you want, send one game you felt unsure about (loss or sketchy win). I can give a brief annotated line-by-line plan you can practice.
  • Tell me which area you prefer to improve first: tactics, opening move orders, or endgame conversion — I’ll build a 2-week drill schedule.

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