Plychess
Chess Coaching

Coach’s Chess Training Methods: A Proven Weekly System

October 10, 2025
8 min read

Introduction

I’m a certified FIDE coach who has guided adults from 1400–1900 Elo to 1800–2100 in under 12 months. The most common blocker isn’t raw knowledge—it’s a fragmented routine. This article shares a field-tested weekly system that compounds fundamentals while keeping training practical and sustainable.

  • Adult improvers between 1300–2100 Elo
  • Players struggling with consistency and plateaus
  • Coaches seeking a repeatable curriculum

Weekly Structure

The system is built around four pillars: tactics, annotated games, endgames, and practical sparring. Keep sessions short (45–90 minutes), but highly focused.

Mon–Tue: Tactics and Calculation

  • 30–45 minutes of spaced-repetition tactics (blunders off).
  • 15 minutes of calculation drills: candidate moves → forcing lines → blunder check.

Wed: Annotated Model Games

  • Study 2–3 master games from your repertoire structures.
  • Pause at critical moments; write your own evaluations.

Thu: Endgames You’ll Actually See

  • King and pawn basics: opposition, triangulation, key squares.
  • Practical rook endgames: activity › material; checklists.

Fri–Sun: Practical Sparring and Review

  • Two 15+10 games; analyze without engine first.
  • Tag mistakes by phase: opening, middlegame, endgame, time.

Coach’s Checklists

  • Opening: develop, control center, king safety, avoid committal pawn moves.
  • Middlegame: improve worst piece, create/attack targets, calculate forcing lines.
  • Endgame: activate king, push passed pawns, check for zugzwang motifs.

Measurement and Feedback

Track weekly with three numbers: tactics accuracy (%), blunder rate per game, and time usage (minutes unused). If a metric stalls for two weeks, swap Friday sparring for a theme night targeting that weakness.

Tools

  • Use our PGN Analyzer to annotate and export clean training files.
  • Maintain a repertoire journal with positions, not engines.

FAQ

Q: How many openings should I play? A: One main with a backup. Depth comes from understanding structures, not memorizing branches.

Conclusion

If you want a customized plan, reach out. This framework has worked across dozens of students because it respects time and focuses on transferable skills.

Ready to analyze your games?

Use the PGN Analyzer to annotate and export your training files.

Start Analyzing

Plchess is an independent platform. This service is not affiliated with, endorsed, or sponsored by Chess.com.

Contact: [email protected]