Coach Chesswick
Quick summary
Maksim — nice string of rapid results and clear upward momentum. Your recent tournament shows strong opening preparation (you’re getting good results from the Alapin / Sicilian lines) and an ability to convert tactical opportunities — see the Qe7 mate in your last win. You also have a recurring issue with time management and a few endgame / passed-pawn defensive tasks that cost you games.
What you did well (concrete positives)
- Opening preparation: You consistently get comfortable positions out of the Alapin/Sicilian systems — this is reflected in your opening win rates. Keep that repertoire. (Alapin Variation)
- Piece activity and coordination: In the win against Turboplombir your pieces (knight, rook, queen) combined quickly and decisively — good tactical awareness and finishing instinct. (Sergey Sklokin)
- Conversion skill: When you get an initiative you know how to increase pressure (moving the queen into the enemy camp, simplifying into winning structures).
- Form and trend: Your rating and month-to-month slopes show sustained improvement — keep the momentum (1‑month +49, 3‑month +66, 6‑month +75).
Recurring problems & patterns to fix
- Time trouble: Several games end or become dicey because your clock is low in critical moments (including a loss on time). Build a simple time allocation plan for 10+0 rapid so you don’t burn all your time early.
- Passed pawn defence / pawn races: In your longer game losses your opponent’s passed pawn advanced with too little counterpressure from you. You need clearer plans to block, trade into a drawn rook endgame, or create counterplay.
- Endgame technique under pressure: Some endgame decisions (rook + pawns vs rook, king activity) could be improved — study key defensive motifs and Lucena/Philidor ideas for simplification choices.
- Tactical oversights in complex positions: A couple of games show you missing the best defending in-between moves. Slowing down to candidate moves in key positions will pay off.
Concrete, short-term training plan (next 4 weeks)
- Daily tactics: 20–30 tactics per day, focus on motifs that appear in your games (pins, forks, discoveries, back-rank mates). Use a mix of speed and accuracy sessions.
- Time-management drill: Play 10 practice games at the same time control where your target is to keep 2–3 minutes for the final 10 moves. Consciously follow a rule: opening = 3 min, early middlegame = 4–6 min, reserve 2+ min for late middlegame/endgame.
- Endgame micro‑course: 3 sessions/week: rook endgames (Lucena/Philidor), defending passed pawns, and king + pawn basics. 30–45 minutes per session. Focus on defense techniques and active king use.
- Opening review: Once a week, review two recent opening games where you felt uncomfortable — identify the typical pawn breaks and one key plan for both sides. Keep an active line vs the most common replies.
- Weekly game analysis: Annotate 4 of your rapid games (wins, draw, loss, and one instructive win). Mark where you spent time, what candidate moves you considered, and where you mis-evaluated.
Practical, game-ready checklist (use during your games)
- Before you move: ask 3 questions — What threats does my opponent have? Which of my pieces are hanging or poorly placed? What candidate moves change the situation?
- If ahead materially: simplify if it reduces your opponent’s counterplay; avoid unnecessary pawn races unless winning the race is calculated.
- If behind or equal: seek active defensive resources (checks, pins, counterplay) — passive defence loses time and morale.
- Time rule of thumb (10|0 rapid): By move 20 try to keep at least 4 minutes; if below 2: switch to safe, practical moves unless forced tactics exist.
- Avoid speculative premoves in unclear positions — they cost you in tactical fights.
Targeted study topics based on recent games
- Study tactical patterns that led to your mate/finish — replay your winning sequence and memorize the key motifs (knight check to open lines, queen infiltration).
- Rook + pawn vs rook: drill defense/winning techniques (weekly practice positions and online endgame puzzles).
- Opening follow-up: keep consolidating the Alapin / Sicilian ideas you play — add one tactical novelty to your repertoire every 2 weeks to stay sharp against prepared opponents.
- Practical psychology: practice staying calm in time trouble by training with the clock and practicing one-minute breathing breaks (10–15 seconds) when you hit low time.
Replay your decisive win (quick study)
Open the winning game to review the combination and the mating idea. Replaying it will help you recognize the same patterns in future games.
Next steps & offer
If you want, I can:
- Annotate one full loss with move-by-move suggestions (time allocation + better defensive plans).
- Produce a one-week training schedule tailored to your calendar (tactics / endgame / game review).
- Go deeper into your Alapin lines and suggest a short anti‑prep novelty to surprise opponents.
Tell me which option you prefer or paste one game you want detailed analysis for. You can also review your profile here: Maksim Tsaruk