What you’re doing well
You show a willingness to fight for active play in complex positions and you don’t shy away from tactical chances in blitz. Your games demonstrate solid endgame awareness in several finish cases, where you managed to convert or salvage material situations. Your long-term rating trend has been positive, indicating that with continued practice you’re building a stronger overall game. In addition, you’ve experimented with a few dynamic openings and kept your options flexible, which can be useful in fast time controls.
Key areas to improve
- Time management in blitz: avoid deep, multi-minute calculations on the first several moves. Develop a quick, reliable evaluation method for the early middlegame and allocate your seconds more efficiently when the position is still balanced.
- Opening consistency: build a compact, practical repertoire for blitz. Pick 1-2 Black responses to common White setups (for example, a solid Dutch-style system or a flexible Indian/queen’s pawn setup) and 1-2 White setups you’re comfortable facing. The goal is to reach good, playable middlegames with clear plans, not to get bogged down in unfamiliar lines under time pressure.
- Tactical pattern recognition: devote a little regular practice to puzzles that emphasize checks, captures, and forcing sequences. This helps you spot threats and opportunities quickly during quick games.
- Endgame technique: some blitz results show the need for sharper conversion of minor material advantages. Practice rook endings, king activity, and simple pawn endgames so you can push winning chances home when the game simplifies.
- Post-game analysis habit: after each blitz session, pick one instructive game and write a short note about the turning point, what you could have done differently, and one concrete plan to test next time.
Practical improvement plan
- Build a small opening funnel: choose 1-2 openings for Black that you like against 1.d4 and 1.e4, focus on the core plans and pawn structures, and learn the typical middlegame ideas that arise from them. This helps you reach solid positions quickly in blitz.
- Daily blitz training routine (about 30–40 minutes): - 5–7 minutes of quick tactical puzzles to sharpen reaction time - 10–15 minutes of focused opening study on your chosen repertoire - 10–15 minutes of endgame practice (rooks, pawns, and king activity) - 3–5 minutes of clock management drills so you finish games without extreme time pressure
- Implement a 1-2 move check-in during games: before committing to a plan, ask yourself “What is the immediate threat, and what is my best forcing move” to avoid dropping tempo in critical moments.
- Weekly self-review: identify one critical middle-game decision and one endgame conversion you can improve, then test a concrete alternative plan in your next games.
Blitz-friendly practice ideas
- Focus on a small set of solid structures and plans you already handle well in the openings you prefer. If a line gets too sharp, switch to a safer variant that leads to a familiar middlegame.
- Incorporate a simple endgame drill: when you have rook and pawns versus rook and pawns, learn the key technique to activate your king and create a passed pawn.
- Practice quick evaluation: after each move, say in your head what the piece activity looks like a few moves ahead, and check if your plan aligns with the position’s pawn structure.
Next steps
Would you like me to tailor a 4-week blitz improvement plan for you, with a daily schedule and practice tasks that reflect your preferred openings and your current strengths and weaknesses? I can align the plan with your recent game experiences and help you turn momentum into consistent results.