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1 # rinna's chess study plan
2
3 On 13th September 2023, I started following a formal 12-week study plan
4 from [some website][ChessGoals] that has different study plans for
5 different skill levels/rating bands.
6 I'm just doing their plan for beginners right now.
7
8 (Note: all books rinna mentions are likely available from your
9 not-so-local library.)
10
11 ## Overall structure
12
13 The basic structure of the study plan has me do three things each day
14 (four on the last day of each week, so Tuesdays for me).
15
16 Two parts are the same each day:
17
18 1. Check on my "daily"[^daily explanation] game.
19 That is, a game which allows 1 or more days per move (I went with 3
20 days, although so far each player has moved at least once or twice a
21 day).
22 Once it completes I am to analyze the game and start a new one.
23 2. Do 5 chess puzzles.
24 I've been using lichess's ["Practice" section][lichess practice] for
25 this, working my way through the basic tactics puzzles.
26
27 The third part varies from day to day and week to week between these
28 options:
29
30 * Play 1 rapid game with a 15+10[^time controls] time control.
31 * Play 4 blitz games with a 5+5[^time controls] time control.
32 * Study/practice basic endgames.
33 I'm using the book _Silman's Complete Endgame Course_ by IM Jeremy
34 Silman for this, and the endgame practice features on lichess and
35 chess.com to practice endgames.
36 The ones the study plan recommends studying for newbs like myself are
37 those involving one or two queens or rooks (+ king) vs. a lone enemy
38 king.
39 * Study openings for 45 minutes.
40 The study plan suggests several options to use for this and I'm going
41 to be reading _Winning Chess Openings_ by GM Yasser Seirawan for
42 this.
43 This starts from week 2 and takes place on the same day as the
44 endgame practice.
45 * Read and play through a game from _Logical Chess: Move by Move_ by
46 Irving Chernev.
47
48 After each game I play, I'm supposed to analyze the game for things I
49 could improve on and what went well.
50
51 ## Rating Table
52
53 My rating and performance over time (on chess.com):
54
55 | Week | Blitz rating |Rapid rating | Blitz win/loss | Rapid win/loss |
56 |------|--------------|-------------|----------------|----------------|
57 | 1 | N/A | 429 | 3-1 | 4-1 |
58 | 2 | 686 | 508 | 6-6 | 0-0 |
59 | 3 | 725 | 508 | 0-0 | 0-0 |
60
61 Notes:
62
63 * Each row represents my ratings at the beginning of each week unless
64 stated otherwise.
65 Game results are for games played during that week.
66 * I had never played any blitz games prior to starting the study plan.
67 * Prior to starting the study plan I had mostly been playing on lichess
68 rather than chess.com, so improvements from week 1 to week 2 may just
69 be my having improved since when I had last been playing on
70 chess.com.
71
72 ## Status report
73
74 ### Week 1
75
76 I've really appreciated having a more structured plan going on.
77 I have done some extracurricular studying hehe, because the study plan
78 has helped me get even more excited about chess (also because I have
79 some spaced repetition stuff going on, so I'm obviously not gonna
80 abandon that just because I've also got this study plan).
81
82 The plan has also helped to ensure I actually play games. :)
83 The blitz games are helping me learn to use my time more efficiently.
84
85 My first daily game has been going really excitingly.
86 I've included an animated GIF below showing the game so far (up through
87 move 19 for both white and black).
88 I have the black pieces.
89
90
91 [![an animated display of the moves from the game][gif versus
92 TPTCOAT]][daily game versus TPTCOAT]
93
94 [gif versus TPTCOAT]:
95 https://alicebenighted.neocities.org/misc-images/chess/vs-tptcoat.gif
96 [daily game versus TPTCOAT]:
97 https://www.chess.com/game/daily/561280087
98
99 ### Week 2
100
101 From this week on, the study plan decreases the games played a little
102 to make room for studying the games from _Logical Chess Move by Move_.
103 Which is a fun book!
104 It's a bit of an old book, so some of the analyses are by now
105 demonstrably erroneous due to further developments in the understanding
106 of chess (and the advent of chess engines), but it's interesting.
107 It goes through a bunch of historical master-level games and explains
108 the ideas behind (and sometimes flaws in) each move.
109
110 Yesterday I also got to get started on _Winning Chess Openings_ (okay,
111 that's a lie, i've been doing a bit of extracurricular reading on it
112 already. but i did more yesterday).
113 Which is also a great book.
114 I've reached the section of the book where it's basically giving a
115 whirlwind tour of every classical king's pawn opening (which is to say,
116 ones beginning 1. e4 e5, with both players moving the pawn in front of
117 their king two squares).
118 Next it's gonna do the same for classical queen's pawn openings (1. d4
119 d5), and then for modern king's/queen's pawn openings (where the second
120 player doesn't mirror the first's move, intending to contest or attack
121 their position in the center in some other way).
122
123 The games this week were all blitz games.
124 I went 6-6, (3-1, 2-2, and 1-3 across the different days I played
125 them).
126 Looking back I notice I went 6-1 with the white pieces and 0-5 with the
127 black pieces.
128 Huh.
129 (And the black games were all in the Caro-Kann, which is how I respond
130 to 1. e4.)
131 Gonna need to work on that I guess, hehe.
132
133 I won my daily game that was going really excitingly.
134 Played another game against the same person as well as starting a new
135 game.
136 The rematch went in my favor again, and now we're doing another (now
137 unrated) game.
138 The new daily game I got a bit reckless and tried a Qa5+ tactic (this
139 is moving your queen to check the opponent's king with the intention of
140 then capturing a different piece with the queen when they have to move
141 to defend; awkwardly I failed to notice that they could both block the
142 check and defend the piece I was going after by moving their queen)
143 that hasn't panned out so I had to spend several moves getting my queen
144 to safety.
145 I've managed to stabilize the situation so we'll see how that works
146 out. :)
147
148 [^daily explanation]:
149 "Daily" is just what chess.com calls games with such a time control.
150 Chess.com is very popular (and according to the data gathered by that
151 site, chess.com blitz rating is most well-correlated with
152 over-the-board FIDE ratings, despite the very different time
153 controls), so the study plan used that terminology.
154 [^time controls]:
155 Chess time controls (at least in the shorter range) are often written
156 as N+M.
157 This means that each player starts out with N minutes on their clock
158 and gets M seconds added to it for each move.
159 Currently I am sticking to 5+5 (5 minutes initially + 5 seconds per
160 move) for blitz games and 15+10 (15 minutes initially + 10 seconds
161 per move) for rapid games.
162 "Blitz" and "rapid" are just terms that refer to ranges of time
163 controls shorter than the classical time controls used in
164 most over-the-board tournaments.
165
166 [ChessGoals]:
167 https://chessgoals.com
168 [lichess practice]:
169 https://lichess.org/practice
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