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Blues

Minnesota Since 2022 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟
59.9%- 33.9%- 6.2%
Bullet 2151
9656W 4784L 992D
Blitz 2009
2007W 1662L 245D
Rapid 1712
498W 393L 52D
Daily 1204
295W 212L 11D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

What Blues is doing well in blitz

You show willingness to take the initiative and enter sharp, tactical lines. Your readiness to complicate positions can put pressure on opponents who aren’t fully prepared for dynamic middlegames. You also demonstrate resilience in time pressure by continuing to seek active plans rather than settling for passive defenses.

  • Comfort with aggressive plans that challenge the opponent's setup and king safety.
  • Ability to generate practical chances in middlegame messes, keeping fights alive.
  • Decisive willingness to press when you sense chances to win material or create threats.

Key improvement areas

  • Time management under blitz: when the clock tightens, aim to simplify and seek solid, forcing moves that reduce the number of remaining candidate lines. Develop a quick three-move thinking pattern for mixed positions to avoid getting stuck in long calculations.
  • Endgame readiness: practice common rook and king endgames, and basic pawn endgames, so you can convert advantages more reliably and avoid overextensions in the middlegame that lead to rough transitions later.
  • Opening navigation for blitz: you enjoy sharp lines, but in rapid games a few well-mastered setups with clear middlegame plans help you keep the initiative without getting tangled in forced lines. Pick 1-2 go-to openings you understand deeply and stick to their core ideas.
  • Pattern recognition and traps: build a short repertoire of recurring tactical motifs you tend to encounter in your favorite lines, and learn quick checks to spot them so you don’t miss critical resources for or against you.

Practical plan for the next week

  • Focus on two main openings you enjoy in blitz (for example, the Caro-Kann Defense and the Vienna Game) and learn their typical middlegame plans. Practice translating those plans into quick, safe moves when your clock is ticking.
  • Daily endgame drills: 15 minutes working through rook endings and king activity with pawns on both sides to improve conversion and practical decision-making.
  • Tactical pattern blocks: 15 puzzles per day that emphasize forcing moves, checks, and material grabs. After solving, annotate one takeaway you’ll apply in your next game.
  • Time-check habit: after each critical moment, quickly reassess the clock and switch to a safer, simpler continuation if you’re near time trouble rather than staying in a long calculation loop.

Opening ideas you’ll want to consider

You’ve shown you handle a range of sharp lines. For consistency in blitz, balancing aggression with reliable structure can help you convert more positions. Consider anchoring on a couple of solid setups and learn the typical middlegame ideas that arise from them. For quick reference, you can review these openings: Caro-Kann Defense and Vienna Game.

If you want to review your personal profile and history with these lines, see Blues.

Ready-made practice ideas

  • Play 10–15 blitz games focusing on your two main openings, then analyze one representative game to extract a clear plan you can apply next time.
  • Work on identifying 3 quick checks you can perform before committing to a tactic: (1) is my king safe, (2) is there an immediate threat, (3) can I simplify without losing material or position.

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