Avatar of Aakanksha Hagawane

Aakanksha Hagawane WIM

aakankshachess Since 2016 (Inactive) Chess.com ♟♟
50.6%- 43.9%- 5.5%
Bullet 2246
992W 852L 57D
Blitz 2492
314W 284L 59D
Rapid 2081
11W 7L 26D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Hi Aakanksha, here’s some tailored feedback based on your latest blitz sessions!

What you’re doing very well

  • Dynamic, forward-looking play: In many of your wins (e.g. vs. Keeper0416) you seize space and keep your pieces active. Your willingness to push pawn breaks such as …f5/…f4 (Black) or g4/g5 (White) often puts the opponent under immediate pressure.
  • Wide opening repertoire: You comfortably switch between 1.e4, 1.d4 and 1.Nf3, and as Black you employ both open-game defences (Ruy Lopez, Bishop’s Opening) and Sicilians/Scandinavian. That keeps opponents guessing and indicates healthy opening knowledge.
  • Tactical alertness: Motifs like 22…Bxf2+!! (vs. SCIM), 34.Rh8# (vs. wannabe2700) and the exchange sac …Rxd5 (vs. infinitegiantkiller) show good calculation skills and confidence in concrete lines.

Biggest improvement opportunities

  • Time management in won or equal positions. Four of the recent losses were on time in roughly equal endings. Aim to reach the final minute with a clear, simple plan so that you can pre-move safely rather than calculate fresh every move. A practical tip is to set micro-targets (e.g. 1:30 on the clock by move 25).
  • Conversion technique once ahead. In the loss to Thecourseoisildur you were up an exchange yet allowed …f4-f3 and counterplay. Try the “no counterplay” checklist: 1) stop opponent pawn breaks; 2) centralise king; 3) only then push for material gain.
  • Handling of loose pawns in flank structures. Games against Mikedannnn and Gareth-Bale11 showed b- and c-pawns becoming easy targets. Review similar structures in the Sicilian Taimanov and London-type set-ups to reinforce typical pawn placements.
  • Defensive resourcefulness under attack. When White throws the kitchen sink (g-pawn storms, sacs on h6/h7) you sometimes stick to passive moves. Studying classic games with opposite-side attacks (e.g. Polugaevsky, Topalov) will give you more “pattern memory” to hit back with counter-threats rather than pure defence.

Recent illustrative games

Model win – excellent central control & king-side expansion


Tough loss – promising position slipped away


Training plan for the next 2-3 weeks

  1. 30-minute end-game drill every day: play out 3-vs-2 and 4-vs-3 rook endings vs. an engine set to 2200. Goal: convert with >80 % success while keeping >30 seconds on the clock.
  2. Opening tidy-up: pick two “go-to” lines (one with 1.e4, one vs. 1.e4) and refresh your files. Note three “critical but practical” improvements—lines that save you 20-30 seconds in blitz.
  3. Blitz with self-commentary: record 10 games, speak your candidate moves out loud. Review to catch impulsive decisions; aim to reduce “I didn’t even look at that” moments.
  4. Tactic theme of the week: deflection on the back rank. Solve 25 puzzles with this motif and tag them for future review.

Quick reference

Peak Blitz rating: 2519 (2022-05-17)

Activity patterns:

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Keep up the great work!

Your creativity and fighting spirit are clear strengths. Sharpen the conversion and time-handling pieces, and you’ll nudge that blitz rating toward 2600+ in no time. Good luck in the upcoming events, and feel free to send any games you’d like a deeper dive on.


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