Coach Chesswick
Overall assessment
You’re showing solid resilience in rapid games, with a notable ability to press in dynamic, tactical settings and convert long games where you’re ahead on activity. Your opening choices indicate a willingness to fight for practical chances, and your rating trend shows steady progress over the periods you’ve played. The main opportunities lie in tightening time management, sharpening endgame technique, and consolidating a small but reliable opening repertoire that suits your rhythm in rapid time controls.
What you’re doing well
- Strong results in some sharp defenses, notably Scandinavian Defense and Petrov’s Defense, showing you can handle solid, low-risk structures and convert pressure into wins.
- Good willingness to complicate positions when the situation invites it, which suits your current style in rapid games.
- Solid ability to press towards a win in endgames when you have the initiative, evidenced by successful promotion themes and piece activity in long sequences.
- Consistent effort to learn from each game, reflected in steady rating changes and ongoing engagement with a diverse opening set.
Areas to focus on (improvement plan)
- Time management: You have had losses on time in several rapid events. Build a simple time strategy: set a maximum thinking time per phase (for example, a quick 10–15 seconds on routine moves, and a tighter cap on complex middlegames). Learn to trim lines that are tempting but not critical, especially in the early middlegame.
- Endgame technique: Work on routine endgames (rook endings, opposite-colored bishop endings, and pawn endgames). Practice simplifying when you’re ahead and converting passed pawns with a clear plan rather than sacrificing tempo chasing material.
- Calculation discipline: In sharp positions, establish a two-line plan (primary plan and a safe alternative) and check for forcing moves that change the evaluation without over-loading the calculation.
- Opening depth and consistency: You perform well with Scandi and Petrov. Consider deepening these lines in your training so you can reach the middlegame with a clear plan and fewer surprises. Aim for one or two additional solid setups that you know inside-out to reduce last-make decisions under time pressure.
Opening repertoire and plan
Based on openings performance, you’re doing well with several active choices. To build consistency in rapid games, consider the following direction:
- Continue to develop and teach your Scandianavian and Petrov setups, focusing on plan concepts rather than memorized lines.
- Maintain a practical “two-punch” approach for White against common defenses, so you have a clear middlegame plan even when opponents deviate.
- Limit exposure to openings with poor results unless you enjoy them and know the typical plans well; spend a little extra study time on the Australian Defense and Unknown Opening family to understand their typical weaknesses and how to navigate them when your opponent surprises you.
- For rapid games, prepare a simple anti-setup in your chosen defenses so you can seize the initiative early rather than chasing compensations later.
Practice plan and next steps
- Time management drill: in each practice game, assign a strict per-move thinking limit (for example, 20–25 seconds on the opening moves, then 30 seconds on the middlegame, with a hard cut after 15 minutes total). Review any position where you ran out of time and identify a more straightforward plan you could have carried out faster.
- Endgame focus: dedicate 1–2 weekly sessions to rook endings and king-and-pawn endings. Use short, instructive endgame puzzles and drill converting passed pawns.
- Tactics with tempo: solve a set of 10–15 puzzles daily that emphasize forcing moves, checks, and short tactical sequences to improve speed and accuracy under pressure.
- Post-game review habit: after every rapid game, write down the top three decision points where you could have chosen a simpler plan, and the top two ideas you want to try next time.
- Weekly progress check: track a single focus area (time management, endgames, or opening plan) and measure improvement by how often you reach your target plan within the allotted time.