Avatar of Noemi Špiranec

Noemi Špiranec WFM

unbreakable7 Since 2019 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟♟
49.3%- 41.8%- 8.9%
Bullet 2163
1W 1L 1D
Blitz 2052
135W 114L 22D
Rapid 2074
3W 1L 0D
Daily 1422
0W 2L 2D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Hi Noemi, here is your personalized training report!

Quick Snapshot

• Current form: solid 2000-2150 range, with a healthy win-rate in your favourite Catalan / Fianchetto set-ups.
• Historical best: – aim to pass this mark again before the next rating cycle.
• Activity pattern:  

What you are already doing well

  • Strategic Set-ups: Your repeated use of g3-Bg2 structures shows good understanding of long-diagonal pressure and you often steer the game into pleasant middlegames.
  • Piece Activity: When you sense open lines, you rarely hesitate to seize them (e.g. the thrust 17.Bd6! in your win vs uday_adhau).
  • Tactical Vision: Your combinations are crisp once the opponent’s king becomes airy – see the exchange-sac plan in the Spanish win 23...Rxe2, finished with an unstoppable passed c-pawn.
  • Psychology: In several games you kept posing problems quickly; opponents flagged or resigned in worse positions. This “fast pressure” is a real asset in 3|2 time-controls.

Main growth areas for the next 4-6 weeks

  1. Benoni & Benko structures as White.
    The loss to m_ns05 (Modern Benoni, A67) revealed two recurring issues:
    • After 19.Rb1 a6 20.Qe2 Rae8 21.Qc4 you allowed …c4!, handing Black the thematic pawn wedge.
    • Your queen drifted to a4/ b3 and you missed Black’s …Re2/ …Qxf4 combination.
    Action plan: rehearse typical Benoni motifs with a small motif deck; play out 10 mini-games vs engine starting from move 15.
  2. Time management.
    In several decisive moments you dropped under 45 seconds with complex positions still on the board (see moves 30-40 vs DanishZ0507). Try the “30-second rule”: if a move is forced, play it inside half a minute; bank time for branching positions.
  3. Endgame conversion.
    While you often reach winning endings, the technique is occasionally shaky (e.g. Catalan win vs yeleupov_nurbol – promotion could have been smoother). Dedicate three study sessions per week to:
    • King-and-pawn vs king drills.
    • Lucena & Philidor rook endings.
    • Opposite-colour bishops + passer themes.
  4. Defensive alertness & prophylaxis.
    In the English loss to Eichborn you neglected the queenside dark-square complex; a simple …a6/…b5 would have softened White’s bind before it was irreversible. Each time you consider an attacking move, ask “what is my opponent’s next threat?”--a classic Nemtsov rule.

Opening focus for April

ColourCurrent favouriteSuggested additionWhy
WhiteCatalan / KID Fianchetto1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 e6 3.Nf3 and 4.g3 lines (Avoid early d5 pawn capture)Keeps you in familiar set-ups but sidesteps Benoni-type discomfort.
Black vs 1.e4Classical 1…e5 repertoireScandinavian sideline refresh (…Qd6 ideas)Adds surprise value without heavy theory.
Black vs 1.d4KID / Benoni mixSolid Nimzo-Indian back-upGives a quieter choice on days you want lowering risk.

Exercise pack

1. Solve 20 intermediate tactics every morning on the theme “interference” and “clearance”.
2. Weekly sparring: two 15|10 games starting from this critical Benoni position –

– play once as each colour.
3. End of week: annotate one of your own games without engine help first, then compare with engine – note every instance of missed zwischenzug or zugzwang idea.

Motivational checkpoint

Remember: steady 10-point rating gains each fortnight compound quickly. Stick to the plan for just a month and you are extremely likely to smash through the 2200 barrier.

Good luck, train hard, and have fun!


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