Avatar of Ademola Sorungbe

Ademola Sorungbe CM

SilencerBaba Texas Since 2014 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟
43.8%- 51.2%- 5.0%
Bullet 2116
249W 267L 16D
Blitz 2378
3716W 4366L 435D
Rapid 2071
0W 1L 0D
Daily 739
1W 0L 0D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Hi Ademola, here’s some personalised feedback based on your recent games.

What you’re already doing well ✅

  • Dynamic play with White in the Open Sicilian. Your 5.Nxc6 Lowenthal win shows excellent piece activity and a keen eye for initiative-grabbing moves such as 9.Bg5! and 13.b4! which kept Black on the back foot.
  • Grünfeld-style structures with Black. Both D82 and D94 victories display confident central counter-punching (…c5, …Na5/…Nc6 ideas) and good end-game technique. Stick with this line – it suits your tactical style.
  • Tactical alertness in complex middlegames. Converting the extra exchange vs taglit and spotting 27…Rb8–b1+ against Evgechernykh highlight strong calculation skills when the position becomes sharp.

Main improvement themes ➡️

  1. Early-king-safety lapses in French structures.
    • Loss to ronaldberdera: 7…f5?! weakened the dark squares and 9…Kf8 left the king stranded.
    • Exchange French defeat vs houdinibarua: castling long without completing development invited counter-play.
    Action: Choose one solid French line (e.g. the Rubinstein with 3…Nf6 or Classical 3…Nf6 4.Bg5 Bb4+) and study the typical plans; avoid premature pawn thrusts like …f5 until you’re fully developed.
  2. Handling the Scheveningen-Sozin as White.
    Several losses (to RemKoolhas & sigmalonewolf6) came from the same structure: you played f4–e5 but didn’t meet …dxe5 …Nfd7 accurately and fell behind on the clock.
    Action: Add the main-line 11.Be3 Qc7 12.Qf3 ideas to your repertoire, or switch to 6.Be2 sidelines which are less theory-heavy.
  3. Time-management in critical positions.
    You flagged or plunged below ten seconds in four of the six losses. This suggests over-investing time in the opening/middlegame.
    Action: Use a simple “40/40/20” rule as a guide – aim to have 40 % of your time after move 15 and 20 % for the final 10 moves. Practise playing thematic positions against an engine at increment 0 to build intuition speed.

Opening snapshot

As WhiteAs Black
• 1.e4 → Open Sicilian main lines ✔️
• Occasional French Exchange & Caro-Kann struggles ❌
• Grünfeld/Slav hybrid vs 1.d4 ✔️
• French / Caro-Kann experiments vs 1.e4 – results mixed

Recommendation: Against 1.e4 pick ONE main defence (either French or Caro-Kann) and commit to learning the structures in depth.

Training plan for the next 4 weeks

  • Day 1–7: Drill 50 puzzles focused on defending against queen-side attacks and dark-square weaknesses. Use the “Defence” filter in your tactics trainer.
  • Day 8–14: Create a custom Lichess/Chess.com opening trainer for the French Rubinstein (Black) and the Sozin 6…e6 7…Be7 lines (White). Spend 15 min daily on spaced-repetition.
  • Day 15–21: Play at least ten 15 | 10 games using a physical board to enforce slower, structured thinking. Annotate each game briefly (win or lose).
  • Day 22–28: End-game week – study rook + pawn vs rook endings (because several of your wins reached R+P phases). Solve 30 end-game studies, then play engine defence/attack drills.

Key stats & visual trackers

Peak Blitz rating:
Hour-by-hour performance:

01234567891011121314151617181920212223100%0%Hour of Day

Win-rate by day of the week:
FridayMondaySaturdaySundayThursdayTuesdayWednesday100%0%Day

Game of the week

The attacking Lowenthal (June 6) is a model for future Sicilian battles – replay it and annotate why 10.Qf3! and 14.Ne3! worked so well.

Final takeaway

You’re already operating at a high level; incremental improvements in opening depth against 1.e4 and time handling could push you beyond the 2350-2400 mark. Stay consistent, review each loss for a single actionable change, and enjoy the journey!


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