Avatar of Hartmut Metz

Hartmut Metz FM

46tumtrah Kuppenheim Since 2020 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟
49.6%- 39.8%- 10.6%
Blitz 2247
2190W 1766L 471D
Rapid 2300
33W 17L 5D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Overview of your recent blitz games

Your latest blitz results show a willingness to press when you have the initiative, especially in solid, structure‑based openings. When the position opened into sharp tactics, you appeared comfortable extracting activity but also faced moments of time pressure and complex calculation. Overall, you’re keeping a steady balance between development, king safety, and active piece play, which is a solid foundation for fast time controls.

What you do well

  • You stick to your chosen openings and keep the pieces developing coherently, which helps you reach playable middlegames quickly.
  • Your king safety remains solid in the early to middlegame, allowing you to seek counterplay rather than rushing into risky lines.
  • You show willingness to press when you have space or an active plan, turning initiative into practical chances.
  • You perform reliably in positions where you simplify toward favorable endgames, staying mentally resilient under time pressure.

Key areas to improve

  • Time management in blitz: aim to identify two or three forcing moves or a clear plan in the first minutes of each new phase. If no clear plan exists, move to a safe, solid continuation to avoid getting tangled in deep tactics with little time left.
  • Blunder avoidance and calculation discipline: after exchanges or when a tactical sequence begins, pause briefly to check for counterplays your opponent could have. A quick sanity check (what changes if I lose a piece, or if my opponent has a direct threat) often saves a loss.
  • Endgame readiness: practice converting small advantages into wins and become comfortable with common blitz endgames (rook endings, passed pawn conversion, and king activity in simplified positions).
  • Opening diversification: your Caro-Kann family repertoire is strong, but adding one more flexible reply to 1.e4 or 1.d4 can reduce decision time and keep opponents off balance.

Opening performance and practical ideas

Your openings performance highlights the Caro-Kann family as a reliable backbone, with good results in several variations. Building on this, you can:

  • Maintain your Caro-Kann core, focusing on two main lines (for example, a solid Advance or a more flexible short variation) so you can play quickly and confidently in blitz.
  • Develop a secondary, serviceable reply to 1.e4 or 1.d4 to avoid being predictable when your opponent switches tactics.
  • Study typical middlegame plans arising from the Caro-Kann and its common alternates so you recognize key ideas faster in the moment.

If you want to see the specific opening ideas, you can explore Caro-Kann and its variations here: Caro-Kann Defense

Training plan for the coming week

  • Daily 15–20 minutes of tactics focusing on quick motif recognition (forks, pins, discovered checks) to sharpen blitz calculation.
  • Two short opening review sessions (15–25 minutes each) to reinforce two primary Caro-Kann lines and one backup plan for 1.e4 or 1.d4.
  • Endgame practice: work through 5–7 rook-and-pawn endings and simple king-and-pawn endings to improve conversion ability.
  • Post-game review: after each blitz session, identify one decision you would change and why; note a concrete improvement for the next game.
  • Play a mix of rapid games with a fixed increment to train time management and reduce reflexiveness in critical moments.

Want a deeper dive?

If you’d like, I can annotate specific moments from the recent games you shared to pinpoint exact decision points and propose concrete alternatives. You can view your profile anytime here: hartmut


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