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Jeff K's avatar

Doc - Another AMAZING article. Over the past couple of years I have incorporated many of your thoughts/idea into my training regiment. One idea that I have started using is Chess coordinates training. I have an ANKI deck of chess coordinates which spend two (2) min each day on. That and using a physical board, chess clock and recording mine my opponents moves on my Classical on-line chess games has helped me with more accurate chess notations of my games. As for tactics, each day I do fifteen (15) min of Lichess puzzles easy to normal mode. Three (3) times a week (M-W-F) I do thirty (30) min of Step 2 Mixed and on Tue-Thu-Sat do thirty (30) min of Step 2 Thinking Ahead. I use a board to set up each position and give myself three (3) min to solve each one. I write down the solution for each tactic. I do stop the clock for writing the solution and setting up the next position. I really like your idea on 'Study Positions' and may try to incorporate that into my training plan. The 'Some Honesty' section was spot on. BTW - you answered a question I've had about how you train, that being if you timed your session. Now I know that answer. I'll be very interested in your progress report on this training regiment. Thanks again Doc. Please keep'em coming.

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Andy Lee's avatar

Playing lots of games until I had tactics sorted was definitely what pushed me from 1300 to 1800. I was a teenager at the time, so the progress was probably faster than for adult improvers, but I basically spent a ton of time playing fast games against one of the rudimentary chess computers that existed in the mid-1990s. I fell into the same tactical traps over and over until I started to recognize them and then suddenly I wasn't blundering all the time in tournament games and my rating jumped really rapidly.

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