What stands out in your recent blitz games
You play with energy and look for concrete chances to seize the initiative as Black. Your games show you are comfortable navigating sharp, tactical positions and you often generate pressure on the king’s side and in the center. When you keep the position dynamic, you tend to make your opponent defend actively rather than patiently build a plan.
Strengths to keep sharpening
- Active piece play: you bring pieces into aggressive posting spots and look to coordinate attacks on open files.
- Comfort with tactical motifs: you recognize forcing lines and seek practical chances even in complex middlegames.
- Resilience in messy positions: you don’t shy away from complications and keep fighting for practical chances until the end.
Key areas to improve
- Time management in blitz: try to avoid spending too long on a single branch early in the game. Develop a simple, forcing plan and only explore deeper lines when the position clearly justifies it.
- Trade planning and endgames: when you’re ahead or equal, aim to simplify to positions you can handle in blitz. Be cautious about trading into endgames where your opponent has activity or perpetual chances.
- Consistency in opening setups: you operate in dynamic lines across several openings. Consider consolidating a solid Black repertoire and focusing on a few core middlegame plans that arise from those openings.
- Blunder risk vigilance: in blitz, a single tactical oversight can swing a game. Build a quick, repeatable habit to check for loose pieces, back rank issues, and hanging pawns at key moments.
Practical drills and plan for the next 2 weeks
- Daily 15–20 minute tactical puzzles focusing on patterns like back-rank motifs, discovered attacks, and typical knight maneuvers in common Black structures.
- Two short opening sessions per week (30–40 minutes): pick a robust Black repertoire (for example Caro-Kann or a solid Anti-Sveshnikov setup) and study 2–3 typical middlegame plans from each line.
- 2 blitz practice games per week followed by a quick 5–10 minute post-mortem to identify one or two decision points you would do differently next time.
- Endgame quick drills: practice rook endings and king + pawns versus king endings to feel confident about converting or holding in blitz.
Opening guidance and plan
Your recent games show comfort with dynamic, unbalanced structures. A focused Black repertoire can help you play more quickly and confidently. Consider emphasizing one or two solid defenses and build familiar middlegame plans around them, rather than jumping between many systems. For example, you could base your core on the Caro-Kann or Philidor family of setups, each offering clear pawn structures and common strategic ideas. This helps you translate your tactical instincts into reliable, repeatable middlegame plans.
Post-game review options
If you want, I can annotate one of your recent games move-by-move to highlight critical decision points, missed tactical cues, and better alternative plans. I can also generate a focused training PGN that targets the key themes from your last few games.
Quick reference: return to your profile
For a quick glance at your recent activity and games, you can review your games here: Baku1963.