An Experiment in Rapid Chess Improvement

Record of my experience in undertaking Michael de la Maza's "Rapid Chess Improvement" program.

Monday, April 25, 2005

Victorious on the Field of Battle

Well, everyone, I defended Caissa's honor and did the Knights proud today by finishing circle 7 and the MDLM program. The seventh circle actually wasn't all that bad. I started at 9:20 a.m. and finished at 9:04 p.m. I even had time to go out to a celebratory dinner with my wife after I finished. I thought about trying to do levels 80+, but I was feeling great about finishing level 70 and lower per the last few circles and didn't want to spoil my celebratory mood. Let's look at the final stats:

Level 1 % 2 % 3 % 4 % 5 % 6 % 7 %
----- --- --- ---- ---- ---- ---- ----
10 96% 99% 100% 100% 100% 100% 100%
20 91% 93% 95% 97% 98% 99% 99%
30 74% 80% 87% 93% 96% 99% 99%
40 69% 74% 82% 88% 95% 98% 99%
50 67% 72% 81% 89% 90% 97% 99%
60 55% 64% 75% 83% 93% 96% 100%
70 60% 58% 68% -- 79% 90% 99%
80 57% -- 64% -- -- -- --
90+ 55% -- 58% -- -- -- --
I missed a total of 11 out of 1100 problems, primarily due to careless mistakes from going on autopilot most of the time (yep, autopilot even on level 70). Here's the Average Time Per Problem (ATPP):

Level Circle 5 ATPP Circle 6 ATPP Circle 7 ATPP
----- ------------- ------------- -------------
10 17.5 sec 14.2 sec 13.1 sec
20 30.2 sec 22.2 sec 18.5 sec
30 53.8 sec 31.8 sec 24.7 sec
40 58.2 sec 45.3 sec 29.1 sec
50 1.5 min 1.1 min 35.8 sec
60 1.4 min 1.5 min 40.7 sec
70 3.4 min 2.3 min 50.8 sec
80 -- -- --
90+ -- -- --
----- ------------- ------------- -------------
Total 17.4 hours 13.5 hours 8.2 hours
"ATPP" I need to trademark that or something. Anyway, I was surprised to see my times improve so much, but doing circle 6 over the weekend sure helped. The difference between the 8.2 total hours you see above and the ~12 total time was due to lunch and breaks. I never believed it when I was starting out, but now I think it would have been possible to do all 1209 problems in a single day had I kept up with level 80+ the whole time.

Thoughts and Reflections
The only thing that comes to mind now is "wow". I did it. Time will tell if it was worth it, but anecdotal evidence thus far is encouraging. Last night, for example, I was reviewing PMD's first game from this weekend's tournament. I wasn't really thinking about it much as I went through it, but lots of things just jumped out at me. When he dropped a pawn on move 15, as soon as I played the move 15.c5 on my board I thought "oops". I wasn't consciously looking for stuff, but it just popped into my head. When I noticed his opponent played 50...d2 at the end, I immediately realized he could have done better and retained the rook, and the mating pattern that resulted from that analysis was a pattern all too familiar from CT-Art. Little flashes like this just give me the slightest hint of what it must be like to be a GM where so much of this stuff is just automatic. Speaking of GMs, here's my final Elo graph:



My final Elo was 2710, which puts me at #15 in the last FIDE ratings list, right after Boris Gelfand! Boy, I can't wait to start crushing those puny sub-2700 GMs! Just to be safe, though, I think I'll play a bit on InstantChess.com before I quit my day job and become a professional super-GM. :-)

Here's the final stats from CT-Art:



CT-Art actually shorted me 20 points on problem 954 (and I have a screenshot to prove it!), which is why the screenshot only shows 98% on level 50 instead of the 99% I quoted above.

Looking Ahead
Over the next few days I plan to collect my thoughts and sift through my 600+ line spreadsheet of data I kept throughout the program and put a page on my website describing my experience and give recommendations for future Knights. I'm also going to determine a study plan going forward. First thing is I will probably read all of Dan Heisman's Novice Nook articles at ChessCafe and get some ideas. And I will definitely get back to playing. I will also probably review the problems in CT-Art maybe twice a month to keep all the patterns fresh. I also need to figure out what to do with my blog: bring it to a close, start a new one, or just keep it going. Whatever I do, I will probably limit studying to 2-3 hours a day max. I just have too many other things going on to devote five+ hours a night to chess.

As a reward for finishing such a grueling program, I've been thinking about getting myself a nice set of chess pieces from House of Staunton, or maybe one of those sensory chess boards I've been wanting forever. However, money is a bit tight these days so I may have to hold off for now.

Anyway, thanks again to everyone for their words of encouragement and for all the hilarious posts. I hope to make all the knights proud in my future OTB play. I'll keep you posted!

Now it is time to go relax and do something other than chess problems for once.

18 Comments:

At 9:56 PM, Blogger Nezha said...

Congratulation!!! I will now put your name on the graduate list. Boy, I am really envious of you and how you did it. I mean keeping to the schedule and doing 8 hours of problems is very, very hard to do. And yes, please post your after-circles experience to give hope to all of us here left =>.

p.s.
If I may offer a suggestion, please continue the blog. Its easier to get back to the previous posts that way.

 
At 9:59 PM, Blogger Pale Morning Dun - Errant Knight de la Maza said...

Dude,
Congrats, congrats, congrats. Impressive numbers. I think they speak to an innate tactical ability. Now get out there and play some chess, kick butt, and tell us of your victories...and defeats. Please don't shut down the blog. I think doing the program is one thing, but letting others see how it impacts your chess is also incredibly important too. Fellow knight, I salute you!

 
At 11:00 PM, Blogger King of the Spill said...

Congratulations! That final score kicks butt!!!

Hope to see some games in the future.

 
At 11:00 PM, Blogger King of the Spill said...

This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

 
At 1:20 AM, Blogger Temposchlucker said...

Congratulations. Well done!!
The figures are really impressing. Can you tell us what you experienced in relation to our three hot items: calculation, pattern recognition and memorization?

 
At 4:16 AM, Blogger Don Q. said...

Feels good. Doesn't it.

Well done. You certainly have mastered the material. Enjoy kicking butt and taking names.

 
At 6:15 AM, Blogger Blue Devil Knight said...

Excellent. Impressive performance all around, and inspiring to this wannabe chess player. You must have been dreaming about chess screenshots all night! I look forward to hearing about your comments about the Circles once you get some perspective...

 
At 6:17 AM, Blogger Chris said...

CONGRATS!!!

Your stats have been very impressive. And it sounds like you are already reaping some of the benefits.

Great job, Chris!

 
At 7:44 AM, Blogger Christian said...

Congratulations! Impressive! Please keep blogging! Let us know if your real rating will skyrocket the same was as your puzzle rating did!

 
At 7:56 AM, Blogger fussylizard said...

Thanks, all. I will probably keep blogging; I think the question is whether or not to keep this one going and leave it as a record solely of my MDLM experience, or to start another one. Maybe I'll take Nez's recommendation and just keep this one going, though I may change the name.

Don and Chris, you know how good this feels. :-)

Tempo, without having given it too much thought, my calculation and pattern recognitions skills have increased "a lot". Memorization played a fair part in the final few circles, but in general I think that long after the move sequences have faded from memory, I will still retain some of the creativity and ideas that will help me find similar moves. Stuff I would never have thought to look for before will now be considered. Anyway, I'll probably address these issues in my summary to be posted in the next few days.

PS- I started reading Dan Heisman's Looking for Trouble book last night (yeah, more tactics problems). Looks very promising and should really help me on my thought process.

 
At 8:56 AM, Blogger CelticDeath said...

Congratulations!! Those are some outstanding scores! You is a tactical whiz, Fussy Liz!

 
At 9:57 AM, Blogger scitcat said...

Way to go! Great scores too!

 
At 10:22 AM, Blogger Dave said...

Awesome! Congrats

 
At 7:21 PM, Blogger Unknown said...

Nicely done. The success rate numbers are impressive.

 
At 10:34 PM, Blogger fussylizard said...

Well, my first night *without* CT-Art is about to come to a close. I feel so lazy not doing tactics problems. Instead I started documenting my experience for my website, and went through 8 games in Chernev's Logical Chess book. I've gone through some of these games before, but it is incredible how different it is now that I am seeing so much more. A number of moves that I would never have guessed in the past were at least on my candidates move list, and when it came to forcing attacking sequences, I was all over it.

I'm about to hit the sack, but before I do I will probably do 20-30 problems in my Chess Tactics for Juniors book. Nothing like a few chess problems to wind down the brain for the day. :-)

P.S.- I noted that Convekta has a package called Chess Tactics for Intermediate Players. Since I'm already jonesing for CT-Art, I might get that just in case I start suffering from serious withdrawals...

 
At 12:10 AM, Blogger Temposchlucker said...

You have to build things slowly down. Otherwise you end up as a chessproblem-addict. The dandelions will love that. . .

 
At 6:33 PM, Blogger fussylizard said...

harmless- I think temposchlucker is keeping the "official" list, but we're always happy to add new folks into the fun. I have added your blog to the list on my site; hopefully others will follow suit!

Welcome, Sir Knight!

 
At 11:17 AM, Blogger Pawnsensei said...

Awesome! Let us know when you reach Grandmaster and please don't take down the site.

PS

 

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