Overview of recent performance and current trajectory
You’ve shown solid long‑term improvement with a notable six‑month rating gain and steady upward trend. While the longer 3‑month window is flat, the six‑month slope indicates real progress and the 12‑month trend supports continued growth. Your strength‑adjusted win rate is just under 0.5, so there’s room to push the edge a bit more and convert more roughly equal positions into wins. Overall, you’re in a good path, but a focused plan can break the recent plateau and lift consistent results in rapid time controls.
What you do well
- You handle aggressive openings and tactical opportunities with confidence, often creating practical chances to press early in the middlegame.
- Your six‑month rating trend shows clear upward momentum, highlighting your ability to learn from recent games and apply it over several months.
- You perform strongly in several sharp openings, including aggressive lines in your repertoire, which helps you seize initiative when opponents are unprepared.
Key areas to improve
- Convert edges into decisive results more consistently. Strength‑adjusted win rate is close to 0.49, so focus on turning small advantages into tangible gains rather than settling for draws.
- Solidify opening plans to avoid drifting into unclear middlegames. Build a small, principled repertoire with clear middlegame ideas to reduce guessing in unfamiliar lines.
- Time management in the middlegame. Practice sticking to a simple plan in the first 10–15 moves of your chosen openings and then evaluating only two or three main continuations, reducing time pressure later in the game.
- Endgame technique. Work on converting material or positional advantages into a win in rook endings and simple endgames, as this is a common area where near‑equal positions can slip away.
Opening performance and repertoire guidance
You show strong results across a variety of openings, with particularly high success in aggressive lines. Since sample sizes vary by opening, use this as a guide to inform a compact, practical repertoire rather than chasing every line.
- Top performers include aggressive setups where you can press early and keep the opponent under pressure. Consider consolidating to 2–3 White openings and 2–3 Black responders you understand deeply, each with a simple, repeatable middlegame plan.
- From the data, you do well in dynamic structures (for example, sharp gambits and active piece play). Pair these with one solid, less risky option to balance your games when you face stronger opponents in rapid time controls.
- Develop a small set of standard middlegame ideas for your chosen openings (pawn storms, pressure on the king’s wing, or central minority attacks). This helps you play faster and more confidently in the critical middle phase.
Practice plan to break the plateau
Given the flat 1‑ and 3‑month changes, a targeted, short‑cycle plan can help you push through the plateau and keep momentum going.
- Week 1–2: Lock in a compact opening repertoire (2 White openings and 2 Black responses). For each, define a clear middlegame plan and 2 backup ideas. Practice these in 6–8 short games with post‑game review focusing on the transition from opening to middlegame.
- Daily routine: 15 minutes of tactical puzzles focusing on patterns that arise in your chosen openings; 20 minutes of opening study focused on the key plans and typical responses; 15–20 minutes of endgame practice (rook endings and basic pawn endings).
- Weekly review: Analyze 1–2 recent games with a coach or engine, identifying 2 concrete improvements per game and confirming a preferred move order for future games.
Practical next steps and drills
- Drill target: improve conversion of small advantages. After obtaining a slight edge, practice forcing continuation moves that maintain pressure and limit the opponent’s counterplay.
- Pattern recognition: focus on common tactical motifs that occur in your favorite openings (fork themes, discovered attacks, back‑rank ideas) and practice them in 15‑20 minute daily sessions.
- Endgame confidence: set up simple endgame positions (rook vs rook with a pawn, rook + minor piece vs rook, etc.) and practice converting a theoretical advantage into a win in 10–15 moves.
Optional quick reference
For quick context on your profile and openings focus, you can review your setup here: Igor Shapoval and opening repertoire