Quick summary for THIYAGARAJAN S
Nice session — your rating and results show steady improvement (recent +24 this month, +196 over six months). You’re sharp tactically and play aggressively in the opening, which creates practical chances in blitz. There are a few recurring weaknesses to target so your improvement keeps accelerating.
What you’re doing well
- Active, attacking play — you look for forcing lines and mating nets (examples: the game that finished with a decisive queen capture on c7 and the queen/rook coordination wins).
- Opening choices suit your style — strong results in Bishop’s Opening and Vienna Gambit where you get open, tactical positions. See your good records in Bishop's Opening and Vienna Gambit, with Max Lange Defense.
- Willingness to sacrifice and simplify into winning tactical endgames — you convert concrete gains rather than letting them slip away.
- Solid upward trend — your Strength Adjusted Win Rate (~0.51) and positive slope show you’re improving in a sustainable way.
Main things to improve (high impact)
- King safety and back-rank awareness — you’ve lost/near-lost games to back-rank/queen intrusions (for example a game ended with the opponent delivering mate on the a1/h6 file). Before each move ask: is my king safe? Create a small luft or trade a piece if needed. Review Back rank patterns.
- Watch hanging pieces and loose tactics when you’re attacking — aggressive play is great, but double-check that captures you make don’t leave you open to counterchecks or forks. Pause one extra second on forcing captures.
- Time management in critical moments — in blitz the difference is often using a few seconds to verify a forcing sequence. Avoid instant captures when the opponent has counterplay; keep time buffer for moves 10–20 and during tactical complications.
- Opening consistency against specific replies — some lines (Scotch/Scotch-Gambit type positions) require careful move-order; a quick refresher on main lines will reduce early mistakes. See Scotch Game.
Concrete practice plan (weekly)
- Daily (10–20 minutes): Tactics — 15 puzzles focused on mating patterns, forks, pins, and discovered checks. Emphasize accuracy over speed.
- 3× per week (30–60 minutes): Play 5 blitz games with a focused goal — e.g., “today I will always create luft before move 25” or “today I will avoid premature queen excursions.” After each game, review only the top 3 mistakes.
- Weekly (1 session): One slow game (15|10 or 30|0) and a 15–20 minute post-mortem. Use the engine to find the top blunders and write down the recurring theme (king safety, loose piece, missed tactic).
- Study minis: 2–3 short videos or 5–10 minute articles on back-rank mates and basic defensive technique (how to create luft, when to trade, prophylaxis).
Drills & checkpoints to use in games
- Before every capture that wins material: scan opponent’s checks and forks for one extra second.
- Before castling or after castling: check escape squares and weak pawns around the king.
- If you win a piece or pawn: switch to a “simplify and secure” mindset — trade off attackers that can cause your king problems.
- When ahead in material, ask: can I force simplification? If yes, trade; if no, look for safe maneuvers that keep king protected.
Example game to review (play through)
Study this winning game where your queen/rook coordination finishes the fight. Replay slowly and note moments where you could have improved defense or sped up calculation.
Viewer:
Opponent profiles you faced this session: daniielsavitar, qisamukhtasar, bhanumalooka.
Small checklist to use right now (start of each game)
- Pick your opening plan and one move-order idea you will avoid (helps reduce early mistakes).
- Decide when you will castle (early, late, or not at all).
- Set a mental rule: on any capture that looks winning, spend at least 2 extra seconds double-checking opponent replies.
Final notes & next steps
Your pattern is clear: you thrive in tactical, open games and your rating trend is positive — keep that aggression but add a thin layer of defensive checking and time discipline. If you want, I can create a 4‑week training plan tailored to your openings and tactical weaknesses, or annotate 2–3 of your recent games move-by-move.