Avatar of Ataliba2019

Ataliba2019

Playing Since: 2019-03-22 (Active)

Wow Factor: ♟♟♟♟♟

Chess.com

Rapid: 1673
12W / 18L / 1D
Blitz: 1760
1225W / 1171L / 105D
Bullet: 1640
13W / 12L / 2D

Profile: Ataliba2019

Meet Ataliba2019, a passionate chess enthusiast who has been storming the online blitz and rapid arenas since 2019. With a blitz peak rating close to 1780 and a rapid personal best touching just under 2110, Ataliba2019 plays with both heart and a splash of mystery—after all, their favorite opening is a rather elusive Top Secret, keeping opponents guessing at every turn.

With over 3,900 blitz games played spanning six years, and a fairly balanced win/loss record (1239 wins to 1177 losses), Ataliba2019 embodies the spirit of resilience. Their comeback rate is a staggering 81.45%, and if they lose a piece, opponents better watch out: Ataliba2019 boasts a 98.82% win rate after such setbacks. Clearly, giving up early is not in their style—the early resignation rate is a modest 2.49%.

This player’s longest winning streak is an impressive 17 games, proving that once in the zone, Ataliba2019 becomes a force to be reckoned with, though they currently ride a shorter, but promising, 2-game streak.

Fun fact: this chess warrior prefers playing with white pieces slightly more successfully (49.69% win rate) than with black (48.34%), showing some flair for setting the pace right from the start. Most battles unfold over about 67 moves—talk about a marathon match, not a sprint!

Their psychological fortitude is tested sometimes with a tilt factor of 9, reminding us all that even chess computers might shed a virtual tear when under pressure. Still, their games are mostly played seriously, with a rated-versus-casual win difference of about -20%, showing a competitive edge when it really matters.

A peek at daily habits shows Ataliba2019 is a late afternoon and evening player, shining brightest between 10 AM and 11 PM game hours, but beware the 9 AM games—win rate dips below 30% then!

Noteworthy Opponents and Rivalries

  • muradcabuloso: 16 games played, an 87.5% win rate—clearly a favored matchup
  • chiari1: 9 games, though only an 11% win rate—time for a revenge match?
  • cpestana: 8 games with 62.5% success, showing solid performance

In bullet and rapid and blitz formats alike, Ataliba2019 prefers the thrill of fast chess, darting through moves with a strategic mind that blends patience and tactical sharpness.

Whether it’s decoding the mysterious Top Secret openings or staging legendary comebacks from lost material, Ataliba2019 is a name to watch on any chess clock—no time to relax, no time to surrender, only moves, counter-moves, and the endless quest for checkmate.

Keep an eye on this player—there’s always a surprise behind that username!


Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick review — recent games

Nice energy in your last wins: you convert active rooks and passed pawns into practical pressure, and you punish opponents who allow piece trades that favor your activity. In losses you tend to run into time trouble and occasionally allow decisive queen checks or unstoppable pawn promotions. Below are focused, practical steps to improve your bullet results.

Open the winning game vs Pomidore to replay the final position:

pomidore

Replay final position:

What you're doing well

  • You find tactical shots and active rook play — many wins come from bringing rooks to open files and creating passed pawns.
  • You use checks and forcing sequences to gain time on the clock and create practical pressure in the endgame.
  • You have a handful of openings with good results — use those as your bullet “go-to” lines to save time in the opening phase.

Key weaknesses to fix (fast wins)

  • Time management: you often reach severe time trouble. In 1‑minute games you must simplify decisions — prioritize safe, intuitive moves instead of long calculations.
  • Allowing back-rank/queen infiltration and checks: avoid loose king positions and undefended squares near your king. When you trade into an unclear king-and-pawn ending, always check for enemy checks and promotion threats first.
  • Poor responses to passed pawns: in several losses your opponent’s pawn march decided the game. Practice basic promotion-blocking and opposition ideas so you can stop or trade passers more reliably.

Concrete bullet-specific advice

  • Simplify your opening: pick 2–3 reliable systems you know well. The goal in bullet is quick, playable positions — choose lines that give you piece activity without huge theory. Favor the openings you're already winning with (for example, keep using Scandinavian Defense or the Barnes Defense lines that score well for you).
  • Pre-move smartly: pre-move captures or recaptures where there’s no tactical risk. Don’t pre-move into unknown checks or promotions.
  • If you have the initiative, trade into a simple winning endgame early — rooks + passed pawn is easier to handle than complex middlegames under time pressure.
  • When your opponent offers simplification (exchanges), consider taking it if you're short on time and the resulting position is easy to play.

Practical drills (daily routine)

  • 10–15 minutes tactics puzzles (focus on mates, forks, skewers, promotion tactics). This improves pattern recognition so you spot tactical wins in 1–2 seconds.
  • 10 minutes of endgame basics: king + pawn vs king, rook + pawn endgames, and common promotion-cutting themes.
  • Play 10–20 1|0 games but force yourself to follow a plan each game (opening goal, piece coordination, simplify when ahead).
  • Review 2 lost games per week: identify the exact moment your evaluation swung (time, blunder, missed defense). Don’t try to analyze every move — find the turning point.

Opening & repertoire suggestions

  • Stick to simple, active openings in bullet. If a line gives you piece activity and easy plans, keep it as your main weapon — for example, continue with the Scotch Game ideas when you get them (you scored well there).
  • Avoid highly theoretical, slow maneuvering systems in 1‑minute games. If an opening requires long preparation to find plans, it increases your chance to misplay under time pressure.
  • Prepare one fast queenside plan and one kingside plan for common defenses so you don’t spend clock time deciding in move 6–8.

Typical move and plan checklist for a bullet round

  • Move 1–6: get pieces developed and king safe. If you’re under 20s on the clock, play the most natural developing move, not the “best” long-forced line.
  • When ahead in material: exchange major pieces and simplify to an endgame you know (rook + pawn endings, simple passed pawns).
  • When behind: create complications and maximum checks — in bullet an opponent can lose on time or miscalculate in chaos.
  • Before committing a pawn push that opens lines to your king, check for opponent checks and queen infiltration.

Short training plan for the next 4 weeks

  • Week 1: Tactics daily + 10 bullet games where you force yourself to play only your chosen openings.
  • Week 2: Add 10 minutes endgame study (rook endings and promotion races) + review 4 losses to find turning points.
  • Week 3: Play mixed time controls (5|0 and 3|0) to practice decision-making with slightly more breathing room.
  • Week 4: Pick the two opening lines that felt easiest and keep using them; reduce variety to avoid wasting clock on move choices.

Parting tips

  • Fix one time-management habit first (for example: stop thinking more than 6 seconds on non-tactical moves). Small rule changes have big effects in bullet.
  • Use your wins as templates — replay them and note the typical plans you used (rook to open file, create passer, simplify).
  • If you want, paste one loss here and I’ll point to the exact moment and a short defensive idea you can use next time.

Play review offer

If you’d like, I can annotate one of the games move-by-move (short, bullet-focused notes). Paste the PGN you want reviewed and tell me whether to focus on tactics, endgame, or time management.



🆚 Opponent Insights

Recent Opponents
amb_anjrulona 0W / 1L / 0D View
sammyzy 0W / 1L / 0D View
azrobota 1W / 0L / 0D View
quincyr 0W / 1L / 0D View
Most Played Opponents
muradcabuloso 14W / 1L / 1D View Games
chiari1 1W / 5L / 3D View Games
Cláudio Pestana 5W / 3L / 0D View Games
Tavka Tavka 4W / 2L / 0D View Games
abcedefgh 3W / 1L / 0D View Games

Rating

Year Bullet Blitz Rapid Daily
2025 1760
2024 1727 1673
2023 1741
2022 1640 1765 1700
2021 1669 1885
2020 1728
2019 1636
Rating by Year201920202021202220232024202518851636YearRatingBlitzRapid

Stats by Year

Year White Black Moves
2025 12W / 9L / 0D 10W / 9L / 0D 68.2
2024 61W / 51L / 4D 56W / 58L / 5D 67.8
2023 81W / 82L / 6D 83W / 79L / 4D 71.4
2022 121W / 119L / 12D 123W / 111L / 12D 67.8
2021 169W / 174L / 16D 181W / 172L / 21D 70.4
2020 161W / 135L / 7D 134W / 151L / 13D 65.9
2019 45W / 40L / 3D 46W / 33L / 8D 69.8

Openings: Most Played

Blitz Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Sicilian Defense 168 88 76 4 52.4%
Sicilian Defense: Alapin Variation 91 46 43 2 50.5%
Bird Opening: Dutch Variation, Batavo Gambit 79 31 42 6 39.2%
Amazon Attack: Siberian Attack 72 35 36 1 48.6%
Australian Defense 70 36 33 1 51.4%
English Opening 67 29 34 4 43.3%
Sicilian Defense: Alapin Variation, Sherzer Variation 63 29 32 2 46.0%
Döry Defense 61 28 31 2 45.9%
French Defense 53 24 25 4 45.3%
London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation 50 28 22 0 56.0%
Bullet Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Scandinavian Defense 6 4 1 1 66.7%
Alekhine Defense 2 1 1 0 50.0%
Sicilian Defense 2 1 0 1 50.0%
Amar Gambit 2 0 2 0 0.0%
Barnes Defense 2 2 0 0 100.0%
Modern Defense 1 0 1 0 0.0%
Czech Defense 1 0 1 0 0.0%
Scotch Game 1 1 0 0 100.0%
English Opening: Anglo-Indian Defense 1 0 1 0 0.0%
English Opening: Anglo-Indian Defense, Hedgehog System 1 0 1 0 0.0%

🔥 Streaks

Streak Longest Current
Winning 17 0
Losing 9 2
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