Avatar of Ahmet Tekin

Ahmet Tekin

zedabi Since 2024 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟
49.5%- 44.8%- 5.7%
Bullet 1276
181W 155L 19D
Blitz 1116
22W 15L 1D
Rapid 1736
1051W 983L 127D
Daily 1042
24W 2L 0D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick summary

Nice run — 3 wins in a row, no losses. You pushed your rating from 400 to 624 (a +224 jump). That shows you're playing confidently and finishing games. Below are friendly, practical tips to keep that momentum going.

What you did well

Concrete positives I see in these games:

  • Aggressive, decisive play — you went for forcing ideas (sacrificing a knight to damage the king side) and that paid off. That killer instinct wins games.
  • Finishing ability — you converted the attack into a mating sequence in the long daily game instead of letting the win slip away.
  • Good use of tactical themes — forks, discovered checks and mating nets showed up in your decisive game.
  • Consistency — three straight wins and a clear positive trend. Keep that practice habit up.

Where to improve (concrete focus areas)

Targets that will give the biggest improvement quickly:

  • Opening fundamentals: gambits are fine, but make sure your development and king safety aren’t sacrificed unnecessarily. A quick goal: castle within the first 10 moves in 70% of your games unless you have a clear reason not to.
  • Avoid leaving pieces undefended. Look for "loose" pieces before you move — opponents will happily pick them off. (Tip: pause and scan for any pieces that can be captured without recapture.)
  • Calculation depth and verification: when you sacrifice, calculate the opponent’s best replies (two moves deeper than you first imagine). That will reduce cases of optimism chess where a sacrifice doesn’t actually work.
  • Endgame basics: practice converting simple material advantages (rook and bishop vs lone king, passed pawn basics). Daily games often head into long endgames where technique matters.
  • Time management in daily chess: your clocks can get weird over long days — keep clear notes on when to simplify and when to press. Try to avoid long multi-hour thinking sessions on one move unless the position is critical.

Concrete drills (what to practice this week)

Do these short, repeatable exercises to build reliable habits:

  • Solve 5 tactical puzzles every day (focus: forks, pins, discovered attacks). Short sessions beat marathon ones.
  • One game review per week: pick a won game (like your long win) and annotate 5 critical moments — what was the idea, what else could have been done?
  • Practice basic mates and simple endgames for 15 minutes: king + rook vs king, and bishop + rook vs king patterns.
  • Play 5 training games where your goal is “develop all pieces and castle by move 10.” This builds safe opening habits even when you like gambits.

Simple checklist to use during a game

Run this mental checklist before you finalize a move:

  • Are any of my pieces undefended or hanging? (Look for Loose pieces drop off situations.)
  • Am I leaving my king exposed or delaying castling without good reason?
  • If I sacrifice, did I calculate the opponent’s best defense at least two replies deep?
  • Does my move improve piece activity or just shuffle pieces aimlessly?

Next steps & study plan (4 weeks)

Short, focused plan you can follow:

  • Week 1: Tactics (5 puzzles/day) + 3 training games (development goal).
  • Week 2: Review two of your wins in detail. Identify one recurring mistake (exposed king, loose piece, or miscalculation).
  • Week 3: Endgame basics (15 minutes, 3 times a week) + continue puzzles.
  • Week 4: Play 10 daily games focusing on applying the checklist; review quickly after each game.

Review the decisive game (play it back)

Replay your long win to spot the turning points and the final mating net:

You can step through that game and pause at each major capture to ask “why was this winning?”

Encouragement & closing

Great progress — a +224 rating swing and a clean 3–0 record is impressive. Keep the aggression, but add a little more routine (development + safety checks) and your upward trend will stabilize into steady improvement. If you want, I can:

  • Annotate one of the wins move-by-move for you.
  • Build a 2-week training schedule tailored to the openings you enjoy.
  • Give short daily homework (tactics + one opening idea).

Which of those would you like next?


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