Avatar of Juan Pablo Hobaica

Juan Pablo Hobaica IM

Yanhob Villa Gesell Since 2015 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟
51.8%- 40.7%- 7.6%
Bullet 2502
453W 378L 51D
Blitz 2601
2247W 1743L 345D
Rapid 2409
2W 0L 0D
Daily 400
3W 5L 0D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Hola Juan Pablo (Yanhob) đź‘‹

It’s great to see you pushing your blitz and Chess960 rating toward and experimenting with many openings. Below is a concise review of recent patterns, followed by an action-plan to accelerate your improvement.

What you already do well

  • Tactical alertness. In your win against nightofzero_on_fire you spotted 29.N7xd5+ and forced a favorable queen trade, showing excellent calculation under 20 sec.
  • Counter-punching with the initiative. Your French Defence game vs j0hn-001 (Pgn #3 in the list) featured multiple tempo-gaining moves (17.Ng5!, 27.Nxe6!) that kept Black permanently on the back foot.
  • End-game technique. Converting the R+N vs pawn ending in your Chess960 win (h-pawn promotion followed by Nd5#) shows calm execution even with single-digit seconds on the clock.
  • Opening creativity. Chess960 forces originality, and you score well there  (
    FridayMondaySaturdaySundayThursdayTuesdayWednesday100%0%Day
    confirms a positive Friday performance spike).

Recurring issues worth fixing

  • Early pawn stabs that weaken your own king. Games you lost often started with …g6 / …h5 or premature …b5. In the loss to Timur Kocharin the structure g6-h5 was targeted by 3.h4!. Consider delaying flank pawn pushes until you have castled.
  • Loose piece coordination in the transition to end-games. In the English-Symmetrical loss you allowed 41.Nxc4! because your rooks were disconnected and minor pieces scattered. Aim to double rooks first, then push pawns.
  • Clock management. Four of the five recent defeats occurred with <10 sec remaining (one was a loss on time). Try a simple rule: if your clock dips below your move number Ă—2 sec, enter “panic-free” mode—use a safe response instead of searching for the perfect one.
  • Over-reliance on tactics to solve strategic problems. When tactics are absent, you sometimes drift (e.g. Modern Defence loss after 18…dxe5). Introduce one strategic checkpoint every 10 moves: king safety, worst piece, pawn breaks.

Opening recommendations (90-day focus)

  1. With White: Add a solid line versus the Modern/Robatsch (1.e4 g6 2.d4 Bg7) such as 3.Nc3 d6 4.f4. Study 15 illustrative games and build a cue-card of typical plans.
  2. With Black: Against 1.d4, streamline into the Queen’s Gambit Accepted or the Tarrasch. Both avoid the early London System clamp that slowed you in several blitz games.
  3. Chess960: Keep playing—no added prep needed; focus on principles (center, develop, castle) rather than specific move orders.

End-game drill set

Spend 10 minutes/day on: (1) Rook vs Rook + Pawn side defence, (2) N+B vs K, (3) conversion of an outside passed pawn. These endings appear frequently in your blitz span and will convert extra half-points.

Illustrative miniature

Review the tactics but also note where you could have simplified earlier.

Next-month checklist

  • Play three 15|10 games per week to practice slow thinking.
  • Annotate one win and one loss after each session—focus on the first irreversible mistake, not the final tactic.
  • Watch for the word “hope.” If during a game you think “I hope he doesn’t see…”, look for a safer alternative immediately.

Keep enjoying the game, and reach out any time you’d like deeper analysis!

—Your Chess Coach


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