Avatar of Andrew Zheng

Andrew Zheng NM

bravehorse Maryland Since 2012 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟♟
54.2%- 39.2%- 6.6%
Bullet 2742
413W 166L 21D
Blitz 2700
8370W 6183L 1075D
Rapid 2533
95W 60L 8D
Daily 1603
679W 499L 53D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Hi Andrew! đź‘‹

You have built an impressive blitz portfolio – congratulations on reaching . Below is a condensed report based on the games you played on 2025-06-02 → 2025-06-06.

What you’re doing well

  • Consistent structure-first openings. Whether you begin with 1.d4/1.Nf3 (Catalan setups) or the English–style fianchetto as Black, you reach familiar pawn skeletons quickly and outplay many strong opponents (see the win against lecomtedemontekristo).
  • Tactical alertness. Several victories feature accurate piece-sac tactics (e.g. …Nxf2!! vs Tchebytchev), showing good calculation under 3-minute pressure.
  • Practical mentality. You are willing to steer games into messy positions that maximise the opponent’s error rate – exactly what a strong blitz player should do.

Priority improvements

  1. Time management & conversion.
    • Two of your four most recent losses (vs kaustubh85 and romasymbelov) were on time in won or equal endings.
    • You often enter endgames with <10 s yet with extra material.
    Action plan: play 20-game sessions where you must keep ≥20 s after move 30. This develops a “time buffer reflex”.
  2. Premature pawn thrusts in the Scandinavian & Closed Sicilian losses.
    • Moves like 12.h5 and 22.g5 (White) or 9…b6 & 18…Ne4 (Black) created static weaknesses before development finished.
    Action plan: add a “king-safety checkpoint” to your pre-move routine: Are all my pieces in play? If not, postpone the pawn storm.
  3. Queen activity in the early middlegame.
    • In the loss to vojit Black’s queen bounced from d8→d6→d5→d7 and finally got traded while you fell behind in development.
    Action plan: aim for a ≤2-move rule with the queen before move 15 unless you win concrete material.
  4. Endgame conversion technique.
    • The resignation vs Предраг Радибратовић arose from a winning rook + pawns ending that slipped into zugzwang for you.
    Action plan: daily 5-minute drills on rook-and-pawn basics (Lucena, Philidor). Use the “Practice” tab on Chess.com or any engine-generated set.

Opening lab

Quick glance at your clean Catalan win

Key takeaway: you understood the c-file tension and neutralised Black’s initiative with accurate trades. Try to replicate this patience in your Scandinavian games as White.

Progress tracker

Hover or tap the charts for patterns:

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Next-week homework

  • Play 10 blitz games starting the clock with 2:30 + 5 s increment instead of 3|0 to practise finishing technique.
  • Analyse each loss for one missed tactical resource and one strategic decision. Keep the notes in a single document – review weekly.
  • Watch any ~15-minute video on the Yusupov-Rubinstein System (A46) to patch the line that vojit used.

Keep up the great work, Andrew – small, targeted tweaks will push you well beyond your current ceiling. Feel free to share your annotated games for deeper feedback anytime.

— CoachBot 🤖


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