Avatar of Jorge Herrera

Jorge Herrera

ZetaJorge Quito Since 2017 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟♟
60.9%- 33.8%- 5.3%
Bullet 2508
19345W 10715L 1639D
Blitz 2400
3145W 1869L 331D
Rapid 1900
203W 21L 8D
Daily 1116
13W 4L 0D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Hi Jorge, here’s some tailored feedback to help you climb to the next level!

🔎 Quick Snapshot

  • Peak rating so far: 2628 (2025-04-29)
  • Favourite defences with Black: Caro-Kann (vs 1.e4), Old Benoni / QGA ideas (vs 1.d4)
  • Typical result: many wins on the clock, fewer by checkmate

💪 What you already do well

  1. Opening confidence: You reach playable middlegames quickly with …c6 setups. Opponents rarely get an obvious edge out of the gate.
  2. Practical speed: Your moves come fast, forcing opponents to flag. Your intuition in tactical positions is clearly above average.
  3. Resilience in messy positions: Even when structure is damaged you keep material balanced and look for counter-shots.

🚧 Priority fixes

  1. King safety in the Exchange-Slav & Benoni structures
    Two recent losses show the king walking to e6/e5 on move 16-18 and getting mated. This starts with an automatic …Qb6 grabbing b2/b2.
    Guideline: in open centre + queens on board positions, value tempo and safety above pawns. If the d-pawn reaches d6/d5 with tempo, castle instead of pawn-grabbing.
  2. Converting won positions
    5/5 recent wins were “won on time” while still objectively equal or even slightly worse (e.g. Benoni move 58).
    • When up on the clock, simplify to a clearly winning endgame so you deserve the point even if increment is added.
    • Practise basic technical endings (Q+K vs K, R+P vs R, opposite-colour bishops). 10-minute drill sessions will bake them in.
  3. Handling premature pawn storms
    In several King’s Indian setups you launched …f5/…g5 very early. If White locks the centre with e3-d4 you often over-extend. Remedy: before advancing flanks, complete development & secure the e6/g7 diagonals with a rook lift or …Re8-Nf8 typical of King's Indian themes.

📚 Opening tweaks

LineIssueSuggested Upgrade
Caro-Kann Tartakower (6…Bf5 7…Bg6) Less control of d4 square; you often shuffle pieces (…Be7/…Bd6) and lose tempo. Test the solid 6…Bd6 immediate trade or the mainline 6…Nd7 7…Ngf6 plans; you’ll castle quicker.
Old Benoni with early …g6 Dark-square holes after …f5 …g5. Consider the classical setup …e6 …d6 …Ne7 …O-O. You can still break with …f5 later when pieces support.
Slav Exchange (loss PGN) Pawn-grabbing on b2 triggers Qa4/Qd5+ motifs. Curb greed: play 13…e6, castle, then look for …c5 break under safer conditions.

🕒 Time-management drill

Your reflexes are great; now balance them with 30-second pause points:

  • After the opening phase finishes (≈ move 10) – ask “What does opponent want?”
  • Right before any pawn break or piece sacrifice.
  • Entering endgames with ≤ 4 pieces per side.

🎯 Tactical motif of the week


The whole mating net arose because Black’s king never castled. Load this mini-game into your engine and let it remind you: “Grab pawns only when the king is safe.”

📈 When do you win most?

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🗓️ 4-Week Improvement Plan

  1. Week 1: 200 puzzles on “mate in 2-3”, focus on king hunts after …Qb6 grabs.
  2. Week 2: Review 10 own games where you were winning but needed the clock. Identify a cleaner conversion line for each.
  3. Week 3: Choose one safer Slav/Caro sideline and play it exclusively; aim for 30 games.
  4. Week 4: Endgame boot-camp: play only rook-and-pawn endgames vs engine on difficulty 3 until you convert 10 in a row.

👍 Final encouragement

You already compete at a high bullet level; smoothing these few structural wrinkles will translate into earned wins, not just flagged ones. Keep the energy, add the discipline, and a 2500 bullet badge is realistic.


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