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rhinobritos GM

Since 2022 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟
62.8%- 28.6%- 8.7%
Bullet 3210
245W 83L 16D
Blitz 3028
602W 304L 102D
Rapid 2443
6W 1L 0D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Hi rhinobritos!

You are already playing at an impressive level (≈3086 (2023-04-30)) and your overall win-rate curve (

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) shows steady upward momentum. Below is targeted feedback extracted from your most recent games.

What you’re doing well

  • Opening versatility. You alternate comfortably between 1.e4 (Ruy Lopez, French Exchange) and 1.d4/1.c4 systems, while answering 1.d4 with Queen’s- & Nimzo-Indian setups and 1.e4 with both the French and Caro-Kann. This makes you hard to prepare for.
  • Technical conversions. In several wins you converted extra material with methodical rook-maneuvering (e.g. vs Michael Brown). Your technique in Ruy Lopez +C77 endgames is especially clean.
  • Kingside initiative. You often generate dangerous pawn storms (h- and g-pawns) that suffocate the opponent, as in the 1-0 miniature on 2025-06-05.

Key areas to sharpen

  • Early tactical awareness vs unorthodox play.
    Losses to 12.Bb5+ and 18…Nf2+ indicate that you occasionally underestimate “one-move” tactics before development is complete. A quick rehearsal of forcing motifs (forks, pins, discovered attacks) before committing to expanding pawns (e.g. f4, b4) will save several rating points.
  • Caro-Kann middlegames.
    In the B15 & B13 defeats you fell behind after …g6/…Bf5 setups. Black’s light-square bishop kept getting chased and allowed White large central space. Consider the Classical line with …Bf5 & …e6 without …g6, or adopt the more dynamic Bronstein-Larsen (…gxf6) idea to maintain counter-play.
  • Handling flank systems (b3/Larsen).
    The quick 1.b3 game shows difficulty meeting early Ba4/Nc5 ideas. A simple antidote is 1…e5 2…Nc6 3…d5, grabbing the centre and preventing Bb5+.
  • Clock management in won positions.
    You flagged an opponent at move 71, but earlier burns (and several sub-20 second scrambles) show that time trouble is still costing you clarity. Practice increment drills: play 30-second puzzles and vocalise the first safe move you see to train decisiveness.

In-depth example: quick tactical collapse

The critical sequence from your 0-1 loss on 2025-05-28:


Move 18 illustrates a recurring pattern: king still in the centre, both bishops pointing at you, and a knight jump exploiting an unprotected f-square. A four-point blunder-check (King – Queen – Major pieces – knights) before playing f-pawn pushes will help avoid this.

Action plan for the next 2 weeks

  1. Daily tactics: 20 mixed problems focusing on forks & double-attacks. Filter them by theme “back-rank & f-pawn”.
  2. Opening tune-ups:
    • Analyse 10 master games in the Caro-Kann Classical 4…Bf5, noting how Black keeps the e6-square solid.
    • Create a compact 8-move PGN repertoire vs 1.b3 with early …e5/d5 and practice it twice a day vs engine set to 2400.
  3. Time-management drill: Play three 3 + 2 games per session; forbid yourself from dipping under 1:15 in the first 15 moves. Track progress with
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    .
  4. Post-game discipline: After every session, tag each game with one word (e.g. “calculation”, “opening”). Patterns will emerge within a week.

Quick glossary

prophylaxis – anticipating the opponent’s plan before pursuing your own.
zugzwang – a position where any move worsens your game; often appears in your rook endgames – keep pressing!

Closing thoughts

Your attacking flair already matches titled strength; bolstering early tactical vigilance and a couple of specific repertoire fixes should push you beyond the 3000-blitz barrier soon. Keep the momentum going, and enjoy the climb!


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