Quick recap
Nice run recently — you finished a few games with clean tactical finishes and your 6‑month trend shows a strong climb. Your most recent win ended with a textbook mating combination after a knight incursion and a decisive queen finish. Open the final sequence below to replay the key tactic.
Replay the decisive combination:
Opponent on that game: edwardcouch
What you're doing well
- Sharp tactics: you spot forks and attacking jumps (example: the Nc7+ → Nxe6 combination) — that's a real strength.
- Finishing ability: when you get the opponent's king exposed you often convert — you have a good sense for final blows and mating nets.
- Opening variety: you try lots of lines (Scotch, Barnes, Three Knights) which helps you build practical experience quickly. Your best win rates are with the Three Knights Opening and Barnes Defense.
- Overall progress: rating trend over 6 months is very positive — the hard work is paying off.
Recurring problems to fix
- Loose pieces and tactical oversights: a few losses show pieces left unguarded or missed enemy checks. Make “are my pieces hanging?” a habit before you move.
- Endgame & rook activity: in your recent loss vs mslamblambs the opponent’s rooks invaded and you ended up passive. Practice basic rook endgames and rook lifts to avoid being shut out.
- Opening choices with low win rates: avoid or study deeply the lines where your win rate is poor (for example Dresden Opening: The Goblin and the Scandinavian Defense) — either learn the typical plans or stop playing them until you’re ready.
- Time & pacing in daily games: some games show very uneven thinking times. Try to allocate your long think for critical moments (tactical decisions, when the position simplifies) and move faster in obvious positions.
Concrete next steps (4‑week plan)
- Daily tactics — 10 focused puzzles per day. Emphasize knight forks, pins, discovered checks and back‑rank motifs.
- Endgame drills — 15–20 minutes twice a week: basic rook endgames, simple king + pawn promotions, and common mating patterns (back rank, smothered mate basics).
- Opening focus — pick 2 reliable systems to play as White and 2 as Black. Double down on the lines where you have the best results (Scotch / Barnes / Three Knights). Study typical plans, not only move orders.
- Review your wins and losses: after each game, do a 10–15 minute postmortem before engine checks. Write down the one turning move and one theme you missed.
Game‑specific teaching points
- Recent win vs edwardcouch — great use of a knight fork and follow‑up. You exploited king exposure and coordinated queen + knight for mate. Repeatable lesson: when the opponent’s king hasn’t castled or has lost pawn cover, look for knight jumps into their camp (Nc7/Nxe6 style).
- Loss vs mslamblambs — your king and rook activity got crowded. Key moment: after Rxb2 you let the opponent keep active rooks and invade the 2nd rank. Look for early simplification or a timely king escape; also watch back‑rank safety (make luft if rooks are nearby).
- Pattern to avoid: repeatedly allowing opponent’s major pieces onto your 2nd/7th ranks. Trade or create counterplay before the invasion becomes decisive.
Openings — practical advice
Your best returns come from sharper, tactical openings you understand. A quick roadmap:
- Keep playing and polishing the Scotch Game — you have a >50% win rate there. Study 2–3 mainlines and typical middlegame plans.
- Use the Barnes Defense and Barnes Opening: Walkerling selectively — they're doing well for you; reinforce typical piece setups.
- Avoid the Dresden Opening: The Goblin and the Scandinavian Defense unless you study them. Your win rates there are low — they’re either tricky or lead to unfamiliar positions for you.
Short checklist to use during games
- Before each move: count attackers/defenders on all pieces in contact (avoid a Loose Piece).
- If you see a knight jump into the opponent’s 7th/8th ranks, calculate it — your combination skill is strong there.
- In simplified positions, ask: can the opponent’s rooks invade? If yes, create luft or trade rooks.
- Mark critical positions to spend more time; move quickly in quiet, equal positions.
Final encouragement
Your tactical vision and ability to finish are solid foundations. Close the gap by making fewer hanging pieces, practicing rook endgames, and focusing your opening repertoire on the lines that give you practical chances. With a couple of weeks of targeted practice you’ll convert more of those middlegame advantages into rating gains — keep it up!
Want a short personalized drill set (10 puzzles + 3 endgames) and a suggested two‑opening repertoire to practice this week? Reply and I’ll make one for you.