Coach Chesswick
Hi Ruben, here’s a personalised post-tournament review
1. What you’re already doing well
- Stable White repertoire. 1.Nf3 followed by d4/Bf4 has given you a solid +3 =0 –0 score in the sample shown. You almost always reach a comfortable structure where your pieces coordinate quickly.
- Tactical alertness. Motifs such as Ng5–h7 (vs BulletCloud & roka7), f-pawn breaks (f4/f5 in several wins) and the exchange sacrifice 23.Rxf8+ against Navyblue1 show good calculation speed.
- Practical mindset. You’re not afraid to loosen your own king (g-pawn pushes, early h-pawn storms) if it yields initiative—an excellent attitude for blitz.
2. Main growth areas
- Clock control: Three of the five losses were decided by time pressure or very low time leading to blunders. In the loss to StasSB you flagged in a completely drawable rook ending.
- Defence versus flank pawns. Games against roka7 and hongnhung1234 show trouble once White advances the h- and g-pawns. You often meet it with …g6/…g5 without a clear follow-up, weakening dark squares.
- Piece activity as Black. In several Ruy Lopez/Italian losses your minor pieces were driven back (…Bb4-a5-c7 or …Bf8e7-d6-e7). Opponents then seized space with c4/d4 or a4/h4.
- Conversion technique. Even in wins you sometimes need 10–15 extra moves in won rook endings. That costs precious seconds in 3 + 1.
3. Opening snapshots
Example of excellent opening play (vs BulletCloud)
White improvements
- Add an occasional c4-break to punish early …c5. It gives you a second lever besides your standard f-pawn push.
- Prepare a surprise weapon against …c5 systems: 1.Nf3 d5 2.e3!? or a pure Torre Attack setup to avoid predictable positions.
Black improvements
- Versus 1.e4 choose one main line that you know deeply. Your Arkhangelsk/Ruy-Lopez set-up is fine, but study critical plans for White’s a4 and h4 pawns. Consider watching 3-4 model games by Karjakin or Aronian.
- Against the London/Colle you face as Black, practice the …c5 + …Qb6 system you already use with added ideas like …Nh5 aiming for …Nxg3 to eliminate the bishop pair.
4. Middlegame checkpoints
- King-side pawn storms: Ask “Do I really need …g6?” If the answer is only “to stop a knight,” look for piece solutions first.
- Minor-piece exchanges: You often trade a good bishop (…Bxf3 vs hongnhung1234) too early. Use the “replace or retreat?” rule—if the bishop has a future on the long diagonal, keep it.
- Central tension: After 12.e4 vs StasSB you captured on d5, releasing pressure. Keeping tension would have preserved the more pleasant side.
5. Endgame focus
- Review rook endgames with two connected passers vs rook. In several wins you needed extra moves; in the loss to foxmanoban you resigned in a drawn R+B vs R endgame—likely due to low time.
- Learn the Philidor and Lucena positions thoroughly. They occur frequently in 3 + 1 events.
6. Two-week action plan
- Day 1-3: Annotate all five losses without an engine, then check with an engine only to verify tactical spots.
- Day 4-7: Watch one 20-minute video on “Defending against g/h-pawn storms” and play 20 positions vs the engine where you defend the king side without …g6/…g5.
- Day 8-10: Solve 50 rook-endgame studies (~5 min each). Focus on building bridges and cutting off.
- Day 11-14: Play 30 15 + 10 games to force better time management, write one-sentence self-feedback after each.
7. Helpful indicators
Check your performance trends here:
Current peak blitz rating: 2506 (2024-06-10)
Keep going!
You’re already playing at an IM-level blitz strength. Patch the defensive loopholes and clock handling, and 2500+ blitz is well within reach.