Avatar of Marcos Lianes

Marcos Lianes IM

ulises2013 Madrid Since 2013 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟♟
56.2%- 35.4%- 8.5%
Daily 1840 154W 78L 19D
Rapid 2564 32W 6L 2D
Blitz 2860 2365W 1429L 499D
Bullet 3032 4706W 3054L 575D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Overview of your recent rapid games

You show clear fighting spirit with sharp, dynamic positions. You often seize the initiative and convert that pressure into tangible advantages. In a few games, the timing and tactical awareness paid off beautifully, culminating in decisive finishes. There are also moments where accuracy slips in complex middlegame tactics, which you can tighten up with targeted practice.

What you are doing well

  • You create strong attacking chances when your opponent’s king is unsettled, coordinating pieces to maximize pressure.
  • You’re good at leveraging initiative to convert opportunities into wins and even clean finishes when you spot a tactical sequence.
  • Your opening choices often lead to dynamic, double-edged positions where you are comfortable calculating and weighing risks.
  • You keep fighting in complicated middlegames and look for active plans rather than settling for passive defense.

Areas to improve and practical steps

  • Time management: allocate thinking time at critical junctures (early middlegame and around key exchanges) to reduce pressure on the clock later in the game. Use shorter, focused reviews of candidate moves instead of rushing to a quick decision.
  • Consolidation after trades: in some games, you simplify into positions where you no longer maintain clear winning chances. Before exchanging pieces, check whether the simplification still preserves your initiative or creates your opponent’s counterplay.
  • Guarding against back-rank and tactical risks: stay vigilant for back-rank weaknesses and tactical shots that swing material. Develop a habit of scanning for a single tactical counter after each significant exchange.
  • Endgame technique: practice common rook endings and pawn endgames. A simple routine—review one endgame motif after each game—will boost your conversion in many tight results.
  • Opening depth and consistency: you perform well in several lines, but prepare a small, reliable toolkit for the top 2–3 openings you use most. Know typical middlegame plans and common pawn structures to stay ahead of your opponents’ ideas.

Opening performance and plan

Your results are strong in several flexible openings that lead to active play. Consider deepening your understanding of those lines to solidify middlegame plans and improve decision-making under pressure. It’s also helpful to have a concise plan ready for opponents’ common replies to keep your play coherent from move one.

Training ideas for the next two weeks

  • Daily 15-minute tactical puzzles focusing on motifs you encounter most (forks, pins, discovered attacks, and back-rank themes).
  • Two weekly openings study sessions: choose two high-utility lines you favor and map out a simple move-tree with typical middlegame ideas and standard responses.
  • Endgame practice: dedicate two short sessions to rook endings and king activity in pawn endgames to improve conversion chances.
  • Post-game reflection: after each rapid game, write one decision you would revise and one alternative line to consider next time.

Next steps

If you want, I can tailor a focused two-week plan around your strongest openings and the recurring mistakes you’ve shown. Share a few recent games you’d like reviewed, and I’ll point out precise moments to improve with concrete alternatives and plan adjustments.


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