Avatar of Igor Spiric

Igor Spiric FM

anpospan Since 2020 (Closed) Chess.com ♟♟
48.0%- 41.4%- 10.6%
Rapid 2347 53W 29L 29D
Blitz 2456 2022W 1762L 431D
Bullet 2263 25W 23L 4D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Hi Igor Spiric!

Great work keeping your blitz rating around and playing a broad mixture of openings. Below is some personalized feedback based on your latest games.

What You’re Already Doing Well

  • Tactical Awareness – Your recent win against Valeriy Grinev featured a crisp mating net starting with 24.Qxb7! followed by an accurate king-hunt. You regularly spot resources such as the deflection on 24.e6!! ( win PGN ) and the decisive overload 38. Rh6+ in the 21-Aug game.
  • Dynamic Opening Choices – As White you steer positions into familiar territory (Reti/Larsen systems, Exchange QGD, Nimzo-Indian Sämisch), keeping opponents out of theory and into middlegames you understand well.
  • Converting the Initiative – In multiple wins you maintain pressure with consistent tempi-gaining moves (e.g. Nb5, Qf3, Rae1) and rarely let the opponent consolidate once you seize space.
  • Activity over Material – Sacrifices such as 19.d6!! or 17.Nxb5! demonstrate healthy respect for piece activity and passed pawns.

Growth Opportunities

  • Time Management – Two of the last five losses were on time despite winning or equal positions. With a 2-second increment you can usually avoid flagging if you pre-move obvious recaptures and trust your intuition in winning endgames.
  • King Safety with the Nimzowitsch Defence – The loss to Anastasiia Hnatyshyn exposed recurring issues: early …Nc6, …e5 left the king on f8, and the h-pawn advance created dark-square holes. Consider a sturdier reply to 1.e4 (Caro-Kann, French, or even sticking to the Nimzowitsch but studying the main 4.Nf3 lines).
  • Endgame Technique – In the defeat against myinthan1962 you allowed a passed b-pawn to queen after missing defensive resources like 39…Rh8. A short daily dose of technical endgames (rook vs pawn, rook & pawn vs rook) will pay off quickly.
  • Pawn Discipline – Several losses stemmed from pawn storms (g- and h-pawns) that left your own king airy (e.g. 23…h5?! 28…g4?!). Before advancing flank pawns, do a quick “KSC” of open files and long diagonals.

Action Plan for the Next 4 Weeks

  1. Opening Repair (3 hrs)
    • Pick one solid defence to 1.e4 and build a concise repertoire file.
    • Study first 10 moves only; annotate with plans, not variations.
    • Add a rescue line when the opponent avoids theory (e.g. 1.e4 d6 2.d4 Nf6 3.Nc3 e5 transposes to a Philidor you already know).
  2. Clock Discipline Drills (15 min/day)
    • Play 3-minute no-increment games focusing solely on moving under 5 seconds per turn.
    • Review only the moves made with <2 seconds on your clock to see if intuition holds up.
  3. Endgame Routine (10 puzzles/day)
    • Cycle through rook-endgame themes: Lucena, Philidor, Vancura (see Vancura).
    • After each session, verbalize the drawing/winning method in your own words.
  4. Self-Review Session (once per week)
    • Download your top five games of the week, run a quick blunder check, then spend most of the time annotating critical decision points without an engine.
    • Tag each game “Opening,” “Tactics,” “Endgame,” or “Time Trouble” so you can measure progress later against the trend.

Quick Reference Cheat-Sheet

Common IssueMemory TriggerFix in 5 sec OTB
Loose king after pawn push“Two squares behind” ruleIf both squares are same color, reconsider g/h-push
Time pressure“Force capture = pre-move”Queue the recapture, then think on opponent’s time
Trading into worse endgame“Count outsiders”If your far-passed pawn is slower, avoid mass trades

Stay Motivated

Your aggressive style is fun to watch and tough to face. Small tweaks to time handling and defensive technique can easily convert 1-2 extra games each session, pushing you beyond your current peak. Keep the initiative flowing, and good luck in your next climbing spree!

— Coach GPT


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