Avatar of huy le

huy le

Username: LQHMsb2

Playing Since: 2023-10-28 (Active)

Wow Factor: ♟♟♟♟

Chess.com

Daily: 1401
14W / 1L / 1D
Rapid: 2337
26W / 9L / 2D
Blitz: 2513
910W / 928L / 121D
Bullet: 2327
17W / 13L / 2D

Overview — Huy Le (LQHMsb2)

Huy Le, who often plays online under the username LQHMsb2, is a blitz-specialist chess player known for fast intuition, long tactical fights, and a knack for endgames. Comfortable in chaotic positions and quick on the clock, Huy has built a reputation as a fearsome opponent in short time controls and a reliably creative player in rapid and daily games.

  • Preferred time control: Blitz — this is where Huy shines and spends most of his competitive play.
  • Playing identity: aggressive but methodical; loves positions that reward deep endgame technique.
  • Profile link: huy le
  • Rating trend snapshot:
    Blitz Rating20232024202525672364YearBlitz Rating
  • Peak blitz rating: 2613 (2025-10-27)

Playing Style & Strengths

Huy mixes tactical sharpness with surprisingly patient endgame play. Games tend to be long and decisive — he averages over 70 moves in wins and shows a high endgame frequency, often outlasting opponents who get complacent on time pressure.

  • Avg moves per win: ~73 — marathon finishes are common.
  • Endgame frequency: high (tends to convert small advantages into wins).
  • Comeback ability: very strong — notable comeback rate indicates resilience after setbacks.
  • Psychology: prefers late-night blitz sessions (best time-of-day trends show exceptional results around 00:00).

Notable Openings (Blitz)

Huy has worked a wide opening repertoire but shows particular success with several systems. A mix of mainstream defenses and offbeat choices keeps opponents on their toes.

Career Highlights & Patterns

Huy’s career reads like a series of blitz marathons punctuated by peak performances in online events and long winning streaks. He is particularly dangerous when playing many games in a session — volume often correlates with strong results.

  • Longest winning streak recorded: 23 games — a run that intimidated many regular opponents.
  • Most-played opponents (blitz): cabonglau, bcc_corn, lequichuan — with overwhelmingly positive records vs these names.
  • Preferred hours: strong performance in late evening and very early morning (notably high win rates around midnight and the 17–18h window).

Sample Game — quick tactical win

Here’s a short illustrative blitz game (moves provided for a viewer to replay):

(Replay this PGN to see Huy’s love for tactical complications and time-pressure finishes.)

Head-to-Head & Notable Opponents

Huy has faced many regulars on the server; a few standouts show frequent matchups and lopsided records:

  • cabonglau — very many games; Huy holds a dominant record vs this opponent.
  • bcc_corn — another frequent rival with a strong Huy record.
  • lequichuan, minhtrivn, banana_bb — repeated opponents that shaped Huy’s opening choices and practical preparation.

Fun Facts & Quirks

  • Average first capture happens around move 6 — Huy prefers a few moves of maneuvering before tactical fireworks.
  • Often plays long decisive games — draw lengths are even longer, reinforcing endurance as a strength.
  • Collects unusual wins with offbeat openings (a proud fan of the Rhamphorhynchus variation).
  • Viewer placeholders: Poisoned Pawn Variation, Alapin Variation

Quick Contact & Where to Follow

Follow Huy’s ongoing blitz adventures on his profile: huy le. For deeper study, replay the sample PGN above or check the rating chart to watch the climb and the classic streaks.


Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick summary

Nice session — you converted a complicated Catalan/closed center game into a clean tactical win, and your short-term rating slope looks positive (one‑month +25 and an improving trend). That said, a few recurring patterns cost you losses: back‑rank/king‑safety tactics and missed checks after heavy piece trades. Below are concrete, focused items to keep doing and specific fixes to bring your blitz more reliable.

Highlights — what you did well

  • Active piece play and tactical awareness in the win: you used bishops and rooks to create threats and exploited weaknesses on the kingside quickly (good use of forcing moves).
  • Willingness to simplify into favorable lines — you traded into positions where your pieces were more active than the opponent's.
  • Good short‑term trend: your recent form and one‑month slope show positive momentum — keep the training and focus consistent.
  • Opening knowledge: your repertoire produces practical, unbalanced positions where you can outplay opponents in blitz (your Alapin / Czech / Colle results show this strength).

Key mistakes to fix (from recent games)

  • King safety after trades — example: in the game vs VranesNikola, a sequence of exchanges left the f7 / back‑rank squares accessible and White delivered mate. After heavy piece trades, scan for back‑rank threats and weak flight squares before grabbing material.
  • Tactical oversights around promotions and passed pawns — in the MaxLeto game you ended up down after a promotion tactic; be extra careful when the opponent's passed pawn is close to queening (double‑check knight/queen forks on escape squares).
  • Greedy captures in unclear positions — sacrifices like grabbing pawns on the queenside (or Rxa2‑type grabs) work when calculated. If you’re not 100% sure, prefer keeping pieces active and king safe rather than one‑move material greed in blitz.
  • Time management spots — in some losses you had plenty of time earlier but allowed complex tactical sequences in the later middlegame. Try to keep 10–15 seconds in reserve for critical moments (or flag traps).

Concrete drills and study plan (next 7–14 days)

  • Daily 10–15 tactical puzzles focused on mating nets, forks, and back‑rank motifs (set target: 15–20 mins/day). Prioritize pattern recognition over speed first, then increase tempo.
  • Play three 15|10 rapid games per week and review them at 1.5× speed — pause at any tactical turning point and ask “what checks/captures/intermediates exist?”
  • Endgame micro‑work: practice basic rook and queen vs rook technique and common king + pawn races (20 mins, twice a week). Rook endings are common in blitz and forgiving conversions help win more games.
  • Opening simplification: keep your blitz opening set simple and reliable. If an opening line gets sharp, have a fallback plan (a single simple developing move) so you don’t get surprised early and waste time calculating.

Blitz checklist to use during games

  • Before capturing: verify the capture doesn’t open a decisive check or skewer on your king.
  • After major trades: pause and scan for back‑rank weaknesses, pawn breakthroughs, and promoted pawn threats.
  • When low on time: simplify if you’re slightly better; avoid crazy complications if you’re worse — look for practical counterplay instead.
  • Reserve time: save at least 10 seconds for the last 10 moves — lots of blitz losses come from being blind in the final sequence.

Short tactical homework (this week)

  • Concentrate on back‑rank mates and sacrifice checks: do 5 problems each day tagged “back rank” or “mate in 2/3”.
  • Study one loss: open the game vs VranesNikola and find the exact turning move where your king became vulnerable — write down what you missed and how to prevent it next time.
  • Replay your win vs pancser1987 and look for the move where you turned the position from equal to winning — repeat that idea in practice games.

Example: review your most recent win

Replay the game and focus on these moments:

  • How you used central pawn captures to open lines for bishops and rooks.
  • The tactical sequence that removed defender(s) of the enemy king — ask whether that sequence was tactical calculation or a positional squeeze that forced the tactic.
  • Whether any move could have been improved to increase winning chances faster (move ordering or prophylaxis).

Interactive replay (tap to open):

Opponent profile: pancser1987

Small plan for your next session

  • Warm up: 10 tactical puzzles (back‑rank and forks).
  • Play 6 blitz games (3‑minute or 5‑minute). After each game, mark one concrete mistake and one good decision.
  • Finish with one 15|10 rapid game and a 10‑minute review focusing on king safety and the final 10 moves.

Motivation & closing

Your long record shows you win a lot of games and have strong opening knowledge — small refinements in tactics and endgame technique will convert more of those close games into wins. Keep the focused drills, protect your king after trades, and use the checklist in blitz. If you want, I can build a 2‑week practice schedule tailored to the openings you play most.

Recent opponents to review: VranesNikola, Maxim Omariev, rodik_r.



🆚 Opponent Insights

Recent Opponents
lhavas 1W / 1L / 0D View
Adriano Gaspar de Lima Salguero 1W / 1L / 0D View
Polarbear1224 1W / 0L / 0D View
bearforce 0W / 1L / 0D View
enitlavoruoyknird 0W / 1L / 0D View
mikhail_rantsevich 1W / 1L / 0D View
Lalarttu86 0W / 1L / 0D View
iprevail5 0W / 1L / 0D View
trivial-time 1W / 0L / 0D View
gabber2011 0W / 1L / 0D View
Most Played Opponents
cabonglau 101W / 19L / 4D View Games
bcc_corn 37W / 15L / 7D View Games
lequichuan 40W / 0L / 0D View Games
minhtrivn 17W / 16L / 4D View Games
banana_bb 10W / 4L / 11D View Games

Rating

Year Bullet Blitz Rapid Daily
2025 2567 2337
2024 2194 2500 2251 1401
2023 2217 2364 2219 400
Rating by Year2023202420252567400YearRatingBulletBlitzRapidDaily

Stats by Year

Year White Black Moves
2025 157W / 143L / 21D 127W / 173L / 22D 77.5
2024 272W / 161L / 31D 243W / 197L / 44D 72.3
2023 217W / 135L / 18D 161W / 180L / 20D 68.1

Openings: Most Played

Blitz Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Caro-Kann Defense 90 49 34 7 54.4%
London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation 56 30 22 4 53.6%
Sicilian Defense: Najdorf Variation 54 27 26 1 50.0%
Sicilian Defense: Alapin Variation 51 30 17 4 58.8%
Czech Defense 50 33 16 1 66.0%
Scandinavian Defense 49 25 20 4 51.0%
Sicilian Defense 48 23 21 4 47.9%
Amazon Attack: Siberian Attack 45 19 22 4 42.2%
Colle System: Rhamphorhynchus Variation 43 27 15 1 62.8%
Amazon Attack 41 24 15 2 58.5%
Rapid Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Caro-Kann Defense 17 8 3 6 47.1%
Scotch Game 8 5 2 1 62.5%
Catalan Opening: Open Defense 5 4 1 0 80.0%
Sicilian Defense: Closed 4 1 3 0 25.0%
Four Knights Game 4 4 0 0 100.0%
Ruy Lopez: Brix Variation 3 0 1 2 0.0%
King's Indian Defense: Orthodox Variation 3 2 0 1 66.7%
Sicilian Defense 2 2 0 0 100.0%
Alekhine Defense: Modern Variation, Alekhine Variation 2 2 0 0 100.0%
French Defense: Exchange Variation 2 1 0 1 50.0%
Daily Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
French Defense: Classical Variation, Svenonius Variation 3 3 0 0 100.0%
French Defense: Burn Variation 2 1 1 0 50.0%
French Defense 2 2 0 0 100.0%
Scotch Game 2 1 0 1 50.0%
Elephant Gambit 2 0 2 0 0.0%
Sicilian Defense: Closed 2 2 0 0 100.0%
Sicilian Defense: Alapin Variation, Sherzer Variation 2 2 0 0 100.0%
London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation 1 1 0 0 100.0%
Italian Game: Two Knights Defense 1 1 0 0 100.0%
QGD: 4.Bg5 Nbd7 5.e3 c6 6.Nf3 1 1 0 0 100.0%

🔥 Streaks

Streak Longest Current
Winning 23 3
Losing 12 0
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