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.