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sodramas

Since 2019 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟♟
43.9%- 48.1%- 8.0%
Bullet 2123
960W 859L 104D
Blitz 2465
12002W 13391L 2257D
Rapid 2376
49W 22L 9D
Daily 1443
18W 18L 0D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick summary

Nice session — you converted a complex middlegame into a winning queen+passed-pawn endgame and handled time pressure well in your win. The losses both came from opponent infiltration and tactical pressure on the queenside/center. Overall pattern: good attacking instincts and endgame resourcefulness, but recurring vulnerabilities to tactical counterplay and piece infiltration.

Recent games I reviewed

  • Win (Black) vs classic_turtle — opened with Philidor Defense and converted a passed pawn to a queen; opponent flagged.
  • Loss (White) vs williamjohnb — queenside pressure and a decisive knight infiltration; final break with Nf4.
  • Loss (White) vs himlalion — central breakthrough and rook infiltration (Rc3 / Rd3) left the c2 pawn and back-rank weak.

What you did well

  • Creating and pushing passed pawns — in the win you turned a passed pawn into a decisive queen promotion. That’s textbook converting technique.
  • Active queen + pawn coordination — you used the queen to escort the pawn and to create counterthreats, which made the opponent’s defense difficult under time pressure.
  • Keeping pieces active — you didn’t shy away from simplifying when it favored your pawn-advance plan, and you used rook/queen activity to dominate files and ranks.
  • Resilience in time trouble — you finished the win while low on clock, showing practical speed and calm under the blitz clock.

Recurring weaknesses to fix

  • Watch tactical infiltration on the queenside/center — both losses featured opponent pieces getting to c3/c4 or f4 and creating decisive threats. Slow down when the opponent has open files toward your back rank or c-pawns.
  • Loose pawn/king structure after advancing — aggressive pawn pushes (like early g4/g5 you faced and sometimes played) open lines; make sure piece coordination and king safety are addressed first. Consider the Loose Piece and prevent overextending pawns without support.
  • Missed tactical resources — small tactical motifs (knight forks, back-rank threats, queen penetrations) turned the game. Daily focused tactics (pins, forks, skewers) will help.
  • Opening familiarity in key lines — your record shows Philidor Defense results are below 50% (see your openings data). Learn a few clean plans and standard pawn breaks (for example when c5-c4 matters) so you avoid early churn into tactically dangerous positions.

Concrete training plan (4-week blitz cycle)

  • Week 1 — Tactics sprint: 20–30 minutes/day of tactical puzzles focusing on forks, pins and back-rank mates. Emphasize pattern recognition, not just speed.
  • Week 2 — Endgame basics: 15–20 minutes/day on queen vs queen+pawn and rook endgames. Practice converting outside passed pawns and defending against passed pawns. A single exercise every session: defend/promote a passed pawn against the enemy queen.
  • Week 3 — Opening consolidation: pick the main line(s) you play (e.g. Philidor Defense) and learn 3 typical plans for each side: development plan, pawn break, and one tactical trap to avoid. Play 5-minute OTB-style slow blitz (10+0 rapid) to practice ideas without panic.
  • Week 4 — Practical play + review: play a 20–30 blitz block, then review 10 losing/close games for tactical oversights and recurring themes. Mark recurring mistakes and make micro-drills from them.

Concrete adjustments for your next session

  • When you see opponent pieces aiming at c3/c4 or f4, ask: "Can I be infiltrated?" If yes, neutralize with a pawn push or exchange before chasing pawns elsewhere.
  • Before pushing pawns (g4/g5, a5/a6 etc.), ensure a safe escape square for your king and at least one defender can return — avoid creating permanent weaknesses.
  • In time trouble: simplify only when simplification preserves your passed pawns or removes opponent counterplay. Otherwise keep checks and threats available.
  • Use one post-game check: spend 3–5 minutes scanning for any single missed tactic that changed evaluation — then make one short drill to fix it.

Next steps & helpful links

  • Re-watch your win vs classic_turtle with the goal “how did my passed pawn become unstoppable?” — identify the moment the breakthrough became inevitable.
  • Review the loss vs williamjohnb and tag every move that allowed infiltration (mark those squares). Try to find a defensive alternative for each tagged move.
  • Study the main ideas in the Philidor Defense: pawn breaks, knight re-routing, and when to liquidate into favorable endgames.

Quick checklist before each blitz game

  • King safety: any open files toward your king? If yes, delay risky pawn storms.
  • Loose pieces: are any pieces undefended or en prise? (Avoid easy Loose Piece blunders.)
  • Opponent threats: is there a square they can infiltrate next move (c3, f4, d4)? If yes, prepare a forcing reply.
  • Time buffer: keep 10–15 seconds for critical conversions (promotions, tactics).

If you want, I can…

  • Make a short annotated review of any one of the games above (5–8 key moments).
  • Create a 7-day puzzle pack tailored to the tactical themes you’re missing (forks, back-rank, knight outposts).
  • Suggest a trimmed opening cheat-sheet for your favorite lines in the Philidor Defense.

Which one would you like first?


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