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?