Avatar of Aisen Mestnikov

Aisen Mestnikov FM

Aisen1011 Since 2018 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟
49.1%- 46.3%- 4.7%
Bullet 2307
155W 75L 11D
Blitz 2450
284W 351L 32D
Rapid 1763
14W 1L 0D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick overview

Nice fighting spirit in your recent rapid games — you convert advantages, play active rooks, and punish opponents for loose kings. There are some recurring weaknesses (mainly king safety and tactical oversight) that, if tightened, will turn many close games into comfortable wins.

Games I looked at

  • Most recent win vs. chessmast228 — strong rook play, created and pushed a passed pawn to promotion. See an interactive replay:
  • Most recent loss vs. chessmast228 — ended with a mating net (Rh7#). Key issues: king exposure and missed defensive resources.

What you're doing well

  • Active rook play and coordination — you use rooks aggressively on open files and the 7th rank, putting real pressure on the opponent's position.
  • Converting material and passed pawns — when you obtain a passed pawn you push and support it effectively (you even promoted in the recent win).
  • Opening variety — you handle many different structures (Budapest, London Poisoned Pawn, Caro‑Kann lines) and frequently outplay opponents in the middlegame.
  • Tactical awareness in winning positions — you spot combinations to win exchanges and simplify into winning endgames.

Recurring weaknesses to fix

  • King safety and back‑rank vulnerability — your loss shows a pattern: after exchanging pieces your king can become exposed to back‑rank threats (make luft, avoid automatic pawn moves in front of your king when the back rank is tight).
  • Allowing enemy queen/knight infiltration — in one loss the opponent got their knights and queen into your camp and delivered decisive checks. Watch potential outposts (f3, e4, d4 squares) and remove or block them early.
  • Tactical oversights near the end of time — a few decisive tactics happened when clocks were low. Prioritize quick safety checks before playing a quiet-looking move under time pressure.
  • Prophylaxis and anticipating counterplay — sometimes you press forward without answering the opponent’s tactical resources (trapped pieces, checks, or pawn breaks). Before committing, ask: “What does my opponent want?”

Concrete next steps (short term)

  • Daily 15 minutes tactics: focus on mates in 1–3, forks, pins and back‑rank mates. This reduces losses from simple tactical nets.
  • King safety checklist: before every move ask (1) Is my back rank safe? (2) Are there enemy pieces that can check‑harass my king? (3) Do I need luft? — Habitual checks prevent tactical finishes like Rh7#.
  • Review 3 recent losses with an engine and annotate the one defensive moment you missed. Write down one “if I had seen X, I would have defended with Y.” That makes the learning specific.
  • Practice one opening defense against queen/knight intrusions — e.g. study typical plans to stop enemy knights and queens from reaching f3/e4/d4 squares.

Concrete next steps (weekly plan)

  • 3× per week: 30 minutes opening work. Prioritize the lines you play most: London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation and Budapest: 3...Ng4 4.e3 — get one or two concrete plans for each early pawn/marker move.
  • 3× per week: 20 minutes tactics (puzzles), mixed difficulty. Emphasize short mates and defending tactics.
  • 1× per week: 30–45 minute game review session. Pick one win and one loss and find the turning point. Save a short note for each to avoid repeating the same mistake.
  • Weekly: 15–20 minutes endgame basics (rook + pawn vs rook, king and pawn endgames). You frequently convert material — stronger endgame technique will make conversions faster and safer.

Practice drills (3 immediate drills)

  • Back‑rank drill — set up positions where your back rank is weak and practice creating luft and defending with minimal material changes.
  • Tactical alarm drill — play 10 rapid puzzles and after each one, write one sentence: “What tactic would my opponent use against me in this position?” This builds prophylactic vision.
  • One‑move rule in time trouble — during blitz or rapid training, force yourself to spend at least 3 seconds on every move and run a quick “king safety” scan if you have less than 30 seconds left on your clock.

Targeted materials & study

  • Study model games in the London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation to learn how to handle the middle game threats and avoid tactical surprises.
  • Short videos/articles on back‑rank mates and basic mating nets — 15–20 minute focused sessions will pay off quickly.
  • Review typical motifs from the Sicilian Defense and the Catalan Opening (you had mixed results there). Understand positional ideas vs concrete tactics.

Closing encouragement

You already have the building blocks — active pieces, a good eye for converting advantages, and a flexible opening set. If you shore up king safety and train a bit of tactical and prophylactic discipline, your win‑rate will climb steadily. Keep analyzing every loss with one concrete “fix” and you’ll stop repeating the same errors.

Want a short personalized tactic set or a 1‑week practice plan I can generate for you? Tell me which areas you prefer (tactics, endgames, openings) and I’ll prepare it.


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