Avatar of Yuliesky Rodriguez

Yuliesky Rodriguez

Username: AlphaZeroEuro

Playing Since: 2020-04-14 (Active)

Wow Factor: ♟♟♟♟♟

Chess.com

Daily: 1405
0W / 2L / 0D
Rapid: 2032
4W / 1L / 2D
Blitz: 2459
81W / 47L / 12D
Bullet: 2471
2996W / 2391L / 292D

AlphaZeroEuro: A Modern Chess Maverick

From a humble beginning in 2020, AlphaZeroEuro has rapidly evolved into a force to be reckoned with in the fast-paced world of online chess. Initially emerging as a promising Bullet player with ratings that surged from 1602 to peaks exceeding 2600 within a few short years, his relentless drive and tactical ingenuity have propelled him to the upper echelons of competitive play.

Over the years, his journey is marked by steady improvement across multiple time controls. While his expertise in the Bullet format is evident from his impressive record—marked by thousands of wins and a sharp upward trend in his rating—he has also honed his skills in Blitz and Rapid formats, demonstrating a versatility that speaks to his deep understanding of the game. His gradual ascent in ratings, with notable milestones in 2022 and 2024, highlights a career built on constant self-improvement and strategic evolution.

AlphaZeroEuro is not just about raw speed; his chess style is a blend of proactive endgame mastery and creative opening choices. Known for his extensive opening repertoire—from the English Opening and Caro Kann Defense to various Sicilian and Reti variations—he reveals a player who is equally at home in tactical skirmishes and positional battles. This sophisticated approach is complemented by a high endgame frequency and a disciplined mindset, as shown by his impressive comeback rate and resilience even after adverse positions.

Beyond the numbers and ratings, AlphaZeroEuro’s profile reflects a player with a remarkable psychological balance. With a careful management of tilt and a strategic adaptation to varying time controls, his performance varies thoughtfully by day and hour, underscoring a level of self-awareness and preparation that sets him apart. His story is one of continuous growth, determination, and the relentless pursuit of excellence on the chessboard.

As he continues to challenge top-tier opponents and refine his game, AlphaZeroEuro remains an inspiring example of modern chess innovation—a true maverick whose career is as dynamic as the game itself.


Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick summary

Yuliesky — nice fight in those recent bullet sessions. Your rated play shows strong opening knowledge and the ability to create practical chances, but the recurring theme in the losses is time trouble and a couple of avoidable simplification/endgame decisions. Small, targeted fixes will turn many of those close losses into wins.

What you’re doing well

  • Opening familiarity: you’re comfortable in multiple systems and often reach playable middlegames (see strong results in Australian Defense and London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation).
  • Tactical alertness: you win material and create mating/decisive threats frequently — your instincts in complications are sharp.
  • Active piece play: when the clock allows, you centralize pieces and use rooks aggressively on open files.
  • Resilience under pressure: you keep fighting in inferior positions instead of instantly resigning — that’s how many comebacks happen in bullet.

Key issues from the recent games

  • Time management / flagging. Multiple games ended “won on time” for the opponent. In bullet the clock is often the deciding factor — not just the position.
  • Trading into unclear pawn/rook endgames when low on time. In the game vs nidohorsey you simplified into a rook‑and‑pawn ending and the clock and precise technique cost you (extract below for reference).
  • Late-game king/play decisions. You sometimes delay an active king or miss the simplest path to activate it at the right moment in endgames.
  • Pre-move/premature simplification. In a few games you accepted trades that reduced practical winning chances when a complex position would have been better for a short clock.

Example position (critical phase from the NIdoHorsey game):

[[Pgn|26.Rd7|e6|27.Ra7|Kg7|28.Rxa6|Kf6|29.Ra4|Ke5|30.Rc4|Kd5|31.f4|f5|32.e4+|fxe4|33.Kf2|c5|34.Ke3|e5|35.fxe5|Ra8|36.a4|Kxe5|37.Rxc5+|Ke6|38.Kxe4|Kd6|39.Rd5+|Ke6|40.Rg5|Kf6|41.Rb5|Re8+|42.Kf4|Re1|43.Rb6+|Kf7|44.a5|Rf1+|45.Kg5|fen|8/5k2/1R4p1/P5Kp/8/1P4P1/7P/5r2 b - - 2 45|orientation|black|autoplay|false]

Concrete things to work on (short list)

  • Clock-first checklist (before each game): set intent for the first 10 moves (safe development / easy plans), decide whether you’ll pre-move in obvious captures, and pick a "reserve plan" if the opponent blitzes out moves.
  • Endgame drills: practice 5–10 minute sessions of common bullet endgames — rook vs rook+pawn, king+pawn endings, simple queen endings. Aim for speed: 10 practice positions, 3 minutes total to play them out.
  • Pre-move discipline: allow pre-moves only when the opponent has a single obvious capture or reply. Wrong pre-moves cost games and time when you have to unpick them.
  • Convert winning positions with speed: when ahead in material, simplify smartly — exchange down to a winning pawn endgame only if your clock still gives you winning practical chances.
  • Build a go-to bullet repertoire: keep 2–3 reliable opening systems for White and Black that lead to simple plans (your wins in the London/Colle/Australian show these work well). Use London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation and Australian Defense as anchors.

Practical training plan (this week)

  • Session A — 20 minutes: 3×5-minute endgame drills (rook endings, king+pawn races). Focus on getting the winning route in 1–2 moves rather than perfect play.
  • Session B — 15 minutes: play 20 bullet games but force yourself to pause 1 second before each move in positions where your clock is above 10s. Train the muscle of quick accuracy.
  • Session C — 10 minutes: opening blitz — play 10 games picking just one opening as White and one as Black to reinforce typical move orders and simple plans.
  • Post-session — 5 minutes: review one lost-on-time game and mark the exact move when the clock decision changed the result. Make a one-line rule to avoid repeating it.

Behavioral & psychological tips

  • When you’re losing on the clock, switch your goal from “best move” to “safe practical move” — keep the game messy if you have less time.
  • Avoid tilt: after a loss on time, take 60 seconds away from the screen before the next bullet game.
  • Use increment if you can for short sessions; if not, adapt by making less risky moves with more time investment early on.

Next steps & checkpoints

  • In two weeks: aim to cut “loss on time” frequency by half. Track how many games end by flag vs checkmate/resign.
  • In a month: keep practicing endgames and try to raise your short-term slope (your 1‑month change is +28 — push that up by eliminating flag losses).
  • If you want, send one specific loss you care about (PGN or link) and I’ll give a 3‑move checklist and a short annotated plan to avoid the same outcome.

Useful quick links (click to jump)

Final note

You have the skills — your ratings history and opening win rates show that. Tightening time management and drilling high-frequency endgames will give you the most immediate rating/score gains in bullet. If you want, I can produce a 10‑position endgame drill set tailored to your mistakes next.



🆚 Opponent Insights

Recent Opponents
amirali85 3W / 1L / 0D View
Steve Papaux 2W / 0L / 0D View
guru_2804 3W / 2L / 0D View
frogo_1980 1W / 0L / 0D View
nidohorsey 0W / 1L / 1D View
mathnerd55 3W / 5L / 1D View
eamonmont 0W / 1L / 0D View
Bui Tuan Kiet 0W / 1L / 0D View
zombie596 1W / 0L / 0D View
mm_132 4W / 5L / 1D View
Most Played Opponents
Dragon84 55W / 39L / 1D View Games
desousa-leonardo 40W / 19L / 4D View Games
Socrates 25W / 27L / 6D View Games
JohnsonXi 23W / 31L / 3D View Games
elseres 33W / 21L / 2D View Games

Rating

Year Bullet Blitz Rapid Daily
2025 2554 2459
2024 2531 2390 2032
2023 2516 2343 1405
2022 2426 2405 2030 1464
2021 2247 2393
2020 2281 2151 1646
Rating by Year20202021202220232024202525541405YearRatingBulletBlitzRapidDaily

Stats by Year

Year White Black Moves
2025 338W / 259L / 27D 299W / 291L / 27D 86.7
2024 155W / 103L / 21D 138W / 123L / 21D 87.9
2023 303W / 203L / 29D 263W / 239L / 31D 86.4
2022 682W / 460L / 59D 585W / 559L / 60D 84.2
2021 149W / 90L / 11D 134W / 99L / 18D 80.5
2020 38W / 10L / 1D 36W / 14L / 3D 69.7

Openings: Most Played

Blitz Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
QGD: Albin, 3.dxe5 8 3 3 2 37.5%
Sicilian Defense: Closed 6 3 2 1 50.0%
London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation 6 2 2 2 33.3%
Döry Defense 6 5 1 0 83.3%
Bird Opening: Dutch Variation, Batavo Gambit 6 4 2 0 66.7%
Amazon Attack 4 1 3 0 25.0%
QGD: Chigorin, 3.cxd5 4 4 0 0 100.0%
Slav Defense: Alekhine Variation 4 3 0 1 75.0%
Semi-Slav Defense Accepted 4 1 3 0 25.0%
Caro-Kann Defense: Exchange Variation 3 0 3 0 0.0%
Bullet Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation 354 197 141 16 55.6%
Colle System: Rhamphorhynchus Variation 336 186 126 24 55.4%
Australian Defense 218 133 72 13 61.0%
Amar Gambit 211 115 87 9 54.5%
Amazon Attack 190 100 83 7 52.6%
Döry Defense 177 98 69 10 55.4%
Sicilian Defense: Closed 152 73 72 7 48.0%
Benoni Defense: Benoni Gambit Accepted 129 73 52 4 56.6%
Bird Opening: Dutch Variation, Batavo Gambit 125 66 57 2 52.8%
Sicilian Defense 122 46 69 7 37.7%
Daily Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Philidor Defense 1 0 1 0 0.0%
QGD: Albin, 3.dxe5 1 0 1 0 0.0%

🔥 Streaks

Streak Longest Current
Winning 14 3
Losing 12 0
🐞 Report a Problem