Hammersmith Chess Featured on the Perpetual Chess Podcast

We’re delighted to share that Hammersmith Chess Club was featured on the Perpetual Chess Podcast. In this episode, Club Captain Gastón Franco talks about how the club grew from fewer than 20 members into one of the most active and welcoming clubs in London.

Some highlights include:

Listen to the podcast on Spotify or watch the video on YouTube, both included below:

Half Way Stage, Half Our Teams No. 1

Happy New Year! Hammersmith Chess Club will soon resume their league activity with 4 matches to be played on the week of 5th Jan, and we share an update on how we’ve done so far this season. Almost half of our teams stand at the top of their respective league tables!

Given we have 19 different teams, it’s no surprise that we’ve already had lots of competitive chess in the first few months of the season. Indeed, since September we have already played nearly 450 games! The season will run until June 2026, which means there is still much to look forward to, and newer members who haven’t played yet will have more than enough opportunities to join a team – speak to a captain or feel free to message me directly if you’re not sure where to start!

Below is a summary of our stats by team so far. It’s comforting to notice that 9 (out of 19) teams are currently in sole or shared first place in their divisions! This includes: most of our “first” teams; our Women’s team (defending champions); our Juniors team, crushing it in an adult division;  and two brand new teams (Mackenzie and Cadets) currently sharing first place in the Minor Division of the London League; and our only team still on 100% score: Hammersmith 3 on the Central London League – and more!

9 of our teams currently lead their divisions

The irregular scheduling of matches makes some of these stats hard to compare against other clubs which might have played a much different number of games so far. But you can only count the points you’ve earned at the board! Speaking of which, the above numbers add up to 36 match-wins to 31 losses (plus 10 draws), rounding to about 53.25% (slightly better than White’s average score per game, according to Lichess stats!)

Upcoming matches

We have 22 matches in January, with spots filling up fast! I hand-picked a few of them that I think will be interesting to follow, so keep an eye on our group chats to see how we’re doing!

8th January: Hammersmith Mackenzie vs Hammersmith Cadets (London League Minor). Two of our teams facing each other for the second time this season! The young Cadets won the first match 3-1 back in September. Will Mackenzie strike back?

15th January: Hammersmith 3 vs Pimlico 4 (Central London League Division 4). We maintain a 100% record in this division and Pimlico is currently in second place. A win would be a big step towards promotion to Division 3.

20th January: London Women Hou vs Hammersmith Women 1 and Wimbledon Women vs Hammersmith Women 2 (London League Women’s). Both of our Women’s team are playing on the same night! Our respective opponents have similar playing strength to our teams, so both matches will be hard fought.

27th January: Hammersmith 1 vs Wood Green (London League Division 1). Our toughest match of the year against the perennial champions of the London League. Even though we will be the underdogs, we have defeated them in the past so it can be done again!

Good luck to all our players in the rest of the season (and don’t forget to save the scoresheets of your good wins for our annual Awards Night!) and wishing everybody a Happy 2026!
Gastón

The Year of the Horse (Knight?!)

A new year, and the chess season bursts back into life on Monday 5 January.

We’ve got 21 club matches lined up this month, with opportunities for players of every strength.

Check out the new Calendar tab, then use the new Club Matches tab to get in touch with a team captain if you’d like to be involved.

The new Club Nights tab has all the details of the Junior Hour and the Women & Girls Hour, both of  which return on Monday 12 January.

Adam’s eight-week Beginners & Improvers Course begins on Thursday 15 January, perfect if you’re starting out or getting back into the game.  To join, simply contact Adam directly.

Lastly, don’t forget our ECF-rated Rapid (10+5) tournament on Monday.

Happy New Year

David

 

New Year, New Resolution?

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The Tools We Use, And How They Shape Our Chess

January is the month when chess players make big promises.

More study.  Better openings.  Fewer blunders.  No more late-night bullet (well… maybe).

The problem isn’t enthusiasm.  The tricky part is working out what to actually use. There are now so many platforms, courses, coaches and “systems” that it’s easy to spend more time signing up for things than playing real chess.

So to start the new year, we thought we’d look at two simple questions:

1️⃣ Where do we play and study online?

2️⃣ How do we actually try to improve?

Not a review. Not a ranking. Just a practical look at four big names, and what each of them seems to encourage.

Part 1: Platforms — where we all end up playing

Almost all of us use one of these.  They dominate the online chess world, but they feel very different.

Lichess

Free, open-source, donation-funded, and wonderfully uncluttered.

You log in, you play, you analyse. No ads. No pop-ups. No pressure to buy anything. It feels like sitting down at a chessboard and getting on with it.

Lichess tends to encourage:

  • slower thinking
  • more analysis
  • more self-reliance

Brilliant if you like simple tools and doing things your own way.

Chess.com

Busy, lively, polished. And absolutely everywhere.

Videos, puzzles, bots, drills, lessons, events, streamers… there’s always something happening, and it’s easy to get swept along.

Chess.com tends to encourage:

  • lots of games
  • dipping into lessons and puzzles
  • staying engaged and entertained

Fantastic if you like structure, features, and a sense of community.

Neither is “right”. Neither is “wrong”. They just nudge you in slightly different directions.

And plenty of players happily use both.

Part 2: Coaching — how we try to get better

Once you’ve chosen where to play, the next question arrives:

How do I actually improve?

Here, two platforms often come up, and they take very different approaches.

Chessable

Courses, courses, courses.

Openings, endgames, ideas, theory — all built around spaced repetition. Learn something, repeat it, reinforce it, remember it.

At its best:

  • clear structure
  • great for openings
  • satisfying sense of progress

The risk? Collecting more material than you ever quite finish.

ChessMood

Feels closer to having a coach.

Less “memorise this line”. More “here’s how to think in this position”. There’s a big focus on decision-making, typical ideas, and staying calm at important moments.

At its best:

  • builds confidence
  • improves practical play
  • helps turn study into results

The trade-off? It’s less about ticking boxes and more about trusting the process.

Again,  neither is “the answer”. Different personalities will gravitate different ways.

But a small thought to start the year as we decide our Resolutions.

Most of us don’t need fifteen more chess apps.  We just need to be slightly more disciplined with the ones we already use.

If one of these platforms helps you enjoy chess more, think more clearly, or feel a little less lost at the board, then it’s doing its job.

And that feels like a perfectly good way to begin the year.  To everyone at Hammersmith Chess Club a Happy New Year, and see you soon in 2026.