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
-
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.
- After 19.Rb1 a6 20.Qe2 Rae8 21.Qc4 you allowed …
-
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. -
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 + passerthemes.
-
Defensive alertness & prophylaxis.
In the English loss to Eichborn you neglected the queenside dark-square complex; a simple…a6/…b5would 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
| Colour | Current favourite | Suggested addition | Why |
|---|---|---|---|
| White | Catalan / KID Fianchetto | 1.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.e4 | Classical 1…e5 repertoire | Scandinavian sideline refresh (…Qd6 ideas) | Adds surprise value without heavy theory. |
| Black vs 1.d4 | KID / Benoni mix | Solid Nimzo-Indian back-up | Gives 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 –
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.