Avatar of Володимир Максимець

Володимир Максимець

ALLTTER11 Україна Since 2023 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟
52.4%- 42.6%- 5.0%
Bullet 1333
534W 452L 41D
Blitz 1858
1219W 1069L 129D
Rapid 2104
556W 368L 53D
Daily 1114
27W 11L 1D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick summary for Володимир Максимець

Nice streak — clear upward trend and several clean finishes. Your rating graph and recent wins show you’re converting advantages and exploiting opponent mistakes. Below are concrete strengths, recurring leaks, and a focused practice plan to keep the climb steady.

What you’re doing well

  • Strong winning instinct: you convert advantages decisively (examples: the game where you finished with Nf3 mate and the resignation wins).
  • Opening strengths and variety — your win rates in Scandinavian and Barnes/Walkerling show you know good practical lines and traps: keep using those practical weapons.
  • Active piece play and tactics: you create threats and use piece activity to force simplifying advantages (captures like Bxa8 in one win demonstrate tactical awareness).
  • Pressure in time control battles — you take advantage of opponents’ time trouble and stay composed when the clock bites (you also won on time).

Recurring weaknesses to fix

  • Time management: several games show heavy time use late. Try keeping a 10–15 second reserve for complex positions to avoid rushed blunders.
  • King safety / prophylaxis: in a couple of games you reached sharp kingside positions — make one extra safety-check (where can the opponent attack?) before grabbing material.
  • Endgame technique: some wins came after opponents blundered; practice basic rook endings and king-and-pawn technique so you can convert even without tactical shots.
  • Over-reliance on traps: traps (e.g., Blackburne Shilling style games) work often at your level, but study the main plans so you’re strong when opponents avoid the trap.

Concrete things to practice (weekly plan)

  • Daily tactics — 20 minutes: focus on forks, pins, skewers, and mating motifs. Do 15–25 mixed puzzles and review mistakes.
  • Two endgame drills — 3× per week, 20 minutes: king + pawn vs king, basic rook endings (Lucena, Philidor), and simple queen vs pawn endings.
  • Opening polish — 3× per week, 20–30 minutes: pick your top 2 openings (e.g., Italian Game and Scandinavian). Study 3 typical middlegame plans for each rather than long move-lists.
  • One slow game per week (15+10 or 30|0): play and annotate it yourself before engine check — focus on planning and why a move was chosen.
  • Time-drill session — once a week: play 5 blitz games but force yourself to move with at least 4–6 seconds on the clock for each move (practice making quick safe moves and simple plans).

Concrete micro-improvements (quick habits)

  • Before every capture check: “Does this expose my king or leave a major piece undefended?” — especially in sharp positions.
  • If you have less than 30 seconds: simplify when ahead; exchange pieces and avoid long calculation lines.
  • In the opening, aim to finish development and connect rooks before hunting special material — small tempo losses add up in blitz.
  • When your opponent plays weakening pawn moves (f6/f5/f4 in one game), prioritize opening lines to the king and piece activation over grabbing pawns.

Game-specific notes

Replay your clean mate vs MaurisGambit — great handling of the kingside attack and a precise finish. Study the sequence where you pushed pawns to open lines and then immediately used rooks/knights to exploit the king’s exposure.

  • Replay the full win here:
  • Opponent reference: maurisgambit — see where they weakened the kingside (f6/f5/f4). You punished that correctly.
  • Also review the strategic trades in the Seaman062008 game — your centralization and piece coordination forced a resignation; good use of activity. seaman062008

Weekly targets (next 4 weeks)

  • Week 1: +Tactics daily, 2 basic rook endgames, 1 annotated slow game.
  • Week 2: Consolidate openings — learn 3 typical plans per chosen opening, continue tactics.
  • Week 3: Focus time management drills and play 10 blitz games with a forced reserve time rule.
  • Week 4: Review 10 recent losses and write a 2-line takeaway for each (common mistake / how to avoid).

Final encouragement

Your long-term trend and strength-adjusted win rate are both excellent — you’re improving fast. Keep the mix of tactical sharpening and endgame basics, and the rating gains will follow. If you want, I can create a 4-week training schedule tailored to the openings you prefer and prepare one annotated game per week.

Ready for a focused plan or a deep dive into a specific lost game?


Report a Problem