Coach Chesswick
Hi William!
You have a clear, fighting style that produces sharp positions and rewarding tactical opportunities. Below you’ll find praise for your current strengths, the biggest themes holding you back, and a concrete study plan to accelerate your improvement.
Your Current Snapshot
- Favourite openings: Caro-Kann & French as Black, 1.e4 as White.
- Typical game length: 25–35 moves – very tactical, rarely reaching long endgames.
- Peak rating so far: .
- Win-rate heat-map:
What You Already Do Well
- Tactical Vision – You frequently spot intermediate moves (e.g. 18…Nd3! in your latest win) and aren’t afraid to sacrifice material for activity.
- Opening Variety – Mixing the Caro-Kann, French and 1.e4 keeps opponents guessing.
- Practical Mind-set – You happily accept “messy” positions instead of forcing symmetry or early draws.
Recurring Obstacles
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Time-management
• Five of your last six losses ended on time in positions that were still playable.
• You often spend 20-30 seconds on obvious recaptures and under 5 seconds on critical defensive moves.
Goal: Finish every opening with ≥70 % of your clock. -
Loose King Safety
• Sample: Against steand17 (move 11…bxc3) you opened the b-file before castling and later got mated.
• In several Caro-Kann games the …g- and …c-pawns advanced too early, leaving dark-square holes. -
Endgame Technique
• Your wins are overwhelmingly tactical; when queens come off, your conversion rate drops.
• Example versus gadji2000 you were a pawn up but flagged in a rook ending.
Priority Fixes & Exercises
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“Two-Tempo Rule” – In the first 15 moves never spend more than two tempi (≈10 sec in 5-min blitz) on any single decision unless a tactic hangs.
• Drill this by playing Bullet with Increment (1 + 1) to force snappier instincts without total chaos. -
Structured Opening Repertoire
• Black: Add the solid …e6-…c5 set-up versus flank openings so you aren’t improvising on move 2.
• White: Prepare a calm anti-French system: 1.e4 e6 2.d4 d5 3.Nd2 or 3.exd5 to avoid the mainline theory you currently skip. -
King-in-the-Center Alert
• Create a “castle by move 10” habit checklist.
• If your opponent’s king is also stuck, ask “who opens the position first?” and be cautious. -
Endgame Mini-Plan
• Every session solve two basic rook-endgame puzzles (Lucena, Philidor) until 90 % accuracy.
• When up material, trade queens unless you already have a direct attack.
Illustrative Moments
31…Nd3! – Turning defence into offence (latest win)
You correctly switched from defending c5 to hitting the e4-square, winning space and time.
Flagged in a won rook ending vs. gadji2000
Convert a two-pawn edge by pushing your passed pawn before hunting extra material. In endgames, time = king/pawn distance, not a resource to hoard until zero.
Training Schedule (4-week template)
- Mon/Wed/Fri – 30 min tactics (CT-like puzzle rush).
- Tue/Thu – Play 3 blitz games, annotate one with engine only after self-analysis.
- Weekend – 1 classical (15 + 10) game focusing on time usage + review one theoretical line.
- Endgame Sunday – 20 min rook & pawn drills.
Mind-set Reminders
• “Win the clock, lose the board” – Balance the two.
• When in doubt, activate your worst piece.
• Make your opponent’s life difficult every move – but not your own king’s!
Stick with this plan for a month and you should see a smoother climb and far fewer “losses on time.” Keep the games coming, William – I’m eager to review your next milestone!