César Frank Talledo Lagos (cesart22) — Overview
César Frank Talledo Lagos, better known online as cesart22, is a fast, fearless chess player who prefers the electric pulse of Blitz. Quick hands, quicker tactics, and a surprising fondness for long endgames make him both entertaining to watch and tricky to prepare for.
Keywords: César Frank Talledo Lagos chess, cesart22 profile, Blitz specialist, online chess openings, chess biography
Career highlights
cesart22 climbed the online ladders by playing enormous volumes of games and refining a compact arsenal of opening ideas. He racks up wins in short time controls and has produced some impressive peak months.
- Preferred time control: Blitz — pragmatic, aggressive and tuned for decisive fights. Blitz
- Massive game volume year-to-year with streaks that intimidate opponents.
- Plays best on Saturdays and during mid-afternoon sessions (14:00 local peak).
Style & strengths
He’s a tactical player who doesn’t shy from complications. While many Blitz specialists flag in the long game, cesart22 frequently steers battles into extended endgames and converts advantages there.
- High comeback rate — comfortable turning games around from worse positions.
- Endgame-oriented: above-average frequency of long decisive games (50–70 moves).
- Psychological resilience: relatively low tilt and fast recovery after losses.
- Plays aggressively with paradoxical patience — the recipe for many spectacular wins.
Openings to watch
Expect a mix of classic systems and sharp gambits. He favors setups that create practical chances and invite complication — ideal for blitz chaos.
- London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation — a go-to for tactical play. London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation
- Amar Gambit and Amazon Attack: Siberian Attack — high-risk, high-reward choices.
- Australian Defense and Caro-Kann — structural, reliable counters when he wants solidity.
- Preparation tip: be ready for unexpected sidelines and sudden tactical fireworks.
Sample Blitz flash (replay)
A short, clean example of a lightning finish — Scholar's Mate in miniature. Replay to see how quick advantages become fatal at Blitz pace.
Streaks, rivals & habits
cesart22 has posted marathon winning runs and faces a handful of familiar opponents often. Studying those rivalries gives a glimpse into his evolving prep and favorite tactical motifs.
- Longest winning streak: 54 games — yes, really.
- Frequent rivals: Sundram Kumar and Alek appear often in his match history.
- Top playing hours: strong mid-afternoon and early evening performance; Saturdays are particularly fruitful.
Fun facts & quick SEO-ready stats
- Online alias: cesart22 — the handle opponents love to hate.
- Peak moments across Bullet and Blitz — 2537 (2025-10-11) is a standout.
- Average decisive game length in Blitz is long for the time control; he often outplays opponents in the endgame.
- Tactical resilience: strong win rate after material loss and a healthy comeback percentage.
Try searches like "cesart22 Blitz specialist", "César Frank Talledo Lagos openings", or "cesart22 London System games" for more.
Parting note
Fast, creative and occasionally merciless, César Frank Talledo Lagos plays like he ordered his chess with extra spice. Challenge him in Blitz if you dare — and bring coffee, because the finish may come quicker than you expect.
Quick summary
Great energy in these blitz sessions — you pressed with pawn storms, created and converted passed pawns, and used active rooks and queens to finish games. A few quick, recurring weaknesses cost you time or material in sharper lines. Below are focused, actionable points to keep the wins coming.
Recent game highlights (click to inspect)
- Win vs kocham_edgara123 — excellent creation and promotion of a passed pawn on the c‑file, good rook activity and decisive centralization.
- Win vs Serhii — strong tactical awareness: exploited back‑rank/king exposure with coordinated queen + rook threats.
- Win vs laionel_66 — converted an outside passed pawn into a queen and used it efficiently.
- Loss vs ماهان فرجی — opening over‑extension (early pawn storm) let Black punish with tactical counterplay; game ended quickly after central break.
What you’re doing well
- Creating and converting passed pawns — your games show a reliable instinct for advancing connected pawns and forcing promotions.
- Active major pieces — you use rooks and queens energetically (invasions, checks, simplifying into winning endgames).
- Practical tactics under time pressure — you find mating nets and forks quickly in blitz, which turns pressure into wins.
- Opening success in several systems — your opening repertoire contains high‑yield lines (for example London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation), so you start many games with confidence.
Consistent problems to fix
- Early pawn over‑extensions — the g4 idea in the loss was aggressive but left squares and a knight outpost for the opponent. Against well‑timed counterplay this becomes a tactical liability.
- Tactical backfire in sharp openings — when you push pawns or start attacks before development is finished, opponents often reply with tactical strikes (knight forks, pinned pieces). Watch for quick exchanges that flip the initiative. Think: does this pawn move create holes or hanging pieces (LPDO)?
- Transition judgement — sometimes you simplify into an endgame without ensuring your passed pawn path is fully protected or your king safe. Double‑check whether exchanges help or help your opponent first.
- Pre‑move and time habits — in blitz, a confident pre‑move is useful, but avoid risky pre‑moves in tactical positions. A single misclick or mouse slip in a tactical melee can cost the game.
Concrete drills (daily 20–40 min blitz practice)
- 15 minutes tactics: focus on knight forks, queen+rook mates, and decoy/deflection motifs. Aim for high volume and review mistakes immediately.
- 10 minutes endgame drills: queen vs rook scenarios, king + pawn vs king, and conversion of outside passed pawns. Practice the technique of queening and avoiding stalemate traps.
- 10 minutes opening review: pick 2 recurring lines (example: London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation and a Philidor/anti‑Philidor response). Learn typical plans and one tactical trap per line.
- Play 5–10 blitz games with a focused goal each time (e.g., "no premature pawn pushes", or "avoid pre‑moves in the middlegame").
Blitz‑specific tips
- When you have initiative, simplify only if you’re certain the resulting endgame is winning. If in doubt, keep pieces on to maintain attacking chances.
- Avoid risky pre‑moves in sharp positions. Use pre‑moves mainly for quiet captures or forced recaptures in simplified positions.
- Look for one defensive resource before every capture: one small check or intermezzo can reverse evaluation in blitz.
- Manage the clock: if you trade into an endgame with a passed pawn, spend an extra second to ensure your path to promotion is clear. Tiny pauses often avoid conversion blunders.
- After a quick loss, do a 2‑minute replay of the critical position and ask: “What single move changed the evaluation?” That habit builds pattern recognition fast.
Study plan for the next 4 weeks
- Week 1: Tactics marathon + 10 annotated blitz games (mark two turning points per game).
- Week 2: Endgame fundamentals — queen vs rook, outside passed pawn conversions, opposition and key squares.
- Week 3: Opening sharpening — pick two of your best performing openings and drill typical middlegame plans and one trap to avoid.
- Week 4: Mixed practicals — 30 minutes daily blitz with one post‑mortem per day focusing on mistakes and time management.
Next steps (actionable right now)
- Review the loss vs ماهان فرجی and find the exact moment the opening slipped — mark that move and learn the defensive reply.
- Pick one recurring weakness (e.g., early pawn storms) and force yourself to avoid it for the next 10 games — compare results.
- Record one win where you promoted a pawn (like vs kocham_edgara123). Annotate the path to promotion — this reinforces the right technique.
Motivation & final notes
Your rating trend shows strong ability to improve — use the same practical, tactic‑first approach that wins blitz games but temper it with quick safety checks in the opening. Keep doing short, focused reviews — they yield fast gains in blitz.
When you want, I can produce a 10‑game tactical workout or annotate one of the games above move‑by‑move. Which game would you like to drill first: the quick loss vs ماهان فرجی or the promotion win vs kocham_edgara123?
🆚 Opponent Insights
| Recent Opponents | ||
|---|---|---|
| kocham_edgara123 | 2W / 0L / 0D | View |
| Serhii | 25W / 2L / 2D | View |
| ماهان فرجی | 6W / 12L / 1D | View |
| laionel_66 | 3W / 1L / 0D | View |
| Sundram Kumar | 98W / 186L / 57D | View |
| polish_rook | 1W / 0L / 0D | View |
| bonnyfog | 1W / 0L / 0D | View |
| aliabadi1388 | 1W / 0L / 0D | View |
| queenmariah92 | 0W / 0L / 1D | View |
| godfather1305 | 2W / 0L / 0D | View |
| Most Played Opponents | ||
|---|---|---|
| Sundram Kumar | 98W / 186L / 57D | View Games |
| Alek | 131W / 154L / 13D | View Games |
| Miller Rojas | 49W / 36L / 27D | View Games |
| levz | 44W / 63L / 3D | View Games |
| Gonzalo Rojo | 19W / 19L / 55D | View Games |
Rating
| Year | Bullet | Blitz | Rapid | Daily |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 2633 | 2413 | 2043 | 1421 |
| 2024 | 2415 | 2415 | 2042 | 1175 |
| 2023 | 2392 | 2263 | 2042 | 1200 |
| 2022 | 2357 | 2218 | 2033 | |
| 2021 | 2217 | 2185 | ||
| 2020 | 2189 | 2135 | 1665 | |
| 2019 | 1272 | 2052 |
Stats by Year
| Year | White | Black | Moves |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 2816W / 1007L / 360D | 2659W / 1182L / 323D | 58.7 |
| 2024 | 4215W / 1324L / 317D | 3958W / 1553L / 343D | 63.1 |
| 2023 | 1549W / 601L / 162D | 1472W / 744L / 151D | 62.5 |
| 2022 | 533W / 266L / 76D | 509W / 282L / 74D | 66.3 |
| 2021 | 30W / 17L / 1D | 30W / 18L / 4D | 69.6 |
| 2020 | 141W / 48L / 15D | 139W / 53L / 13D | 65.3 |
| 2019 | 48W / 13L / 3D | 36W / 23L / 7D | 69.2 |
Openings: Most Played
| Bullet Opening | Games | Wins | Losses | Draws | Win Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation | 1038 | 759 | 226 | 53 | 73.1% |
| Australian Defense | 969 | 704 | 234 | 31 | 72.7% |
| Czech Defense | 676 | 483 | 175 | 18 | 71.5% |
| Modern | 644 | 428 | 194 | 22 | 66.5% |
| Unknown Opening* | 604 | 448 | 143 | 13 | 74.2% |
| Pirc Defense: Classical Variation | 536 | 339 | 174 | 23 | 63.2% |
| Amar Gambit | 444 | 334 | 92 | 18 | 75.2% |
| Amazon Attack: Siberian Attack | 418 | 325 | 77 | 16 | 77.8% |
| Caro-Kann Defense | 373 | 290 | 68 | 15 | 77.8% |
| East Indian Defense | 328 | 227 | 84 | 17 | 69.2% |
| Blitz Opening | Games | Wins | Losses | Draws | Win Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation | 1162 | 717 | 346 | 99 | 61.7% |
| Amazon Attack: Siberian Attack | 679 | 414 | 204 | 61 | 61.0% |
| Unknown | 624 | 376 | 246 | 2 | 60.3% |
| Modern | 546 | 296 | 210 | 40 | 54.2% |
| Caro-Kann Defense | 407 | 239 | 122 | 46 | 58.7% |
| Australian Defense | 395 | 256 | 111 | 28 | 64.8% |
| Amar Gambit | 366 | 267 | 77 | 22 | 73.0% |
| Döry Defense | 360 | 205 | 129 | 26 | 56.9% |
| Czech Defense | 352 | 188 | 137 | 27 | 53.4% |
| Amazon Attack | 347 | 201 | 116 | 30 | 57.9% |
| Daily Opening | Games | Wins | Losses | Draws | Win Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Unknown | 8 | 8 | 0 | 0 | 100.0% |
| Sicilian Defense | 5 | 3 | 0 | 2 | 60.0% |
| Petrov's Defense | 4 | 4 | 0 | 0 | 100.0% |
| Colle System: Rhamphorhynchus Variation | 4 | 3 | 1 | 0 | 75.0% |
| Italian Game: Two Knights Defense | 4 | 3 | 1 | 0 | 75.0% |
| Czech Defense | 3 | 1 | 2 | 0 | 33.3% |
| Bird Opening: Dutch Variation, Batavo Gambit | 3 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 100.0% |
| Amar Gambit | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 66.7% |
| Caro-Kann Defense | 3 | 1 | 2 | 0 | 33.3% |
| Modern | 3 | 3 | 0 | 0 | 100.0% |
| Rapid Opening | Games | Wins | Losses | Draws | Win Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Evans Gambit Accepted, 5.c3 | 180 | 88 | 34 | 58 | 48.9% |
| Four Knights Game | 176 | 98 | 35 | 43 | 55.7% |
| Caro-Kann Defense | 117 | 92 | 19 | 6 | 78.6% |
| London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation | 115 | 95 | 12 | 8 | 82.6% |
| Sicilian Defense: Accelerated Dragon, Exchange Variation | 115 | 80 | 20 | 15 | 69.6% |
| Blackburne Shilling Gambit | 106 | 74 | 14 | 18 | 69.8% |
| Sicilian Defense: Najdorf Variation | 91 | 68 | 16 | 7 | 74.7% |
| Scotch Game | 90 | 76 | 11 | 3 | 84.4% |
| Hungarian Opening: Wiedenhagen-Beta Gambit | 85 | 53 | 21 | 11 | 62.4% |
| Italian Game: Two Knights Defense | 83 | 59 | 14 | 10 | 71.1% |
🔥 Streaks
| Streak | Longest | Current |
|---|---|---|
| Winning | 54 | 2 |
| Losing | 10 | 0 |