Avatar of checkraiseturn

checkraiseturn

Location: NYC

Playing Since: 2020-02-10 (Active)

Wow Factor: ♟♟♟♟♟

Chess.com

Daily: 2225
2W / 0L / 0D
Rapid: 2231
31W / 14L / 5D
Blitz: 2576
4762W / 4913L / 1026D
Bullet: 2340
2421W / 2243L / 296D

Chess Player Profile: checkraiseturn

Meet checkraiseturn, a formidable tactician in the world of online chess with a flair for blitz that could make even grandmasters sweat! Known for an aggressive playing style and an unyielding spirit, this player thrives in fast-paced arenas yet holds a respectable record in rapid and bullet formats as well.

Performance & Ratings

Since 2020, checkraiseturn has climbed the rankings steadily, peaking impressively with a blitz rating over 2600—a rating that whispers “danger” to opponents. Bullet dreams? Achieved a peak of 2425, and even in rapid play, showed skillful precision with a peak north of 2200.

Playing Style & Psychology

Known for a blend of strategic patience and sharp tactical awareness, checkraiseturn packs an average of 54 moves per win—because perfection takes time. The player’s comeback rate is a gutsy 60%, proving resilience when the chips are down, although the early resignation rate teeters at a humble 30%, reminding us even heroes know when to bow out gracefully.

A bit of a morning bird? Their best time to strike is around 6 AM, where win rates soar highest—perfect for those early risers who fancy checkmating before breakfast.

Memorable Battles

Checkraiseturn's latest recorded victories showcase mastery in the Sicilian Defense Fianchetto and the King's Indian Attack variations, winning not just by skill but occasionally by forcing their opponents to admit defeat (resignation). Their most recent win was so convincing it ended with a dramatic checkmate, the online crowd going wild!

Opponents & Rivalries

With over 12,000 blitz games played, checkraiseturn has faced off against the usual suspects and unexpected challengers alike. Some opponents turn into recurring nemeses, while others become favorite targets, providing a varied battlefield that always keeps this player sharp and ready for the next move.

Fun Fact

Despite the serious nature of chess, checkraiseturn has maintained a win rate around 47-50% against unknown openings — proving they don't always play by the book. It's like watching a wizard cast spells out of a mysterious grimoire!

In essence, whether it’s blitz, bullet, or rapid, checkraiseturn commands respect on the digital battlefield — fearless, strategic, and sometimes a little cheeky. Keep an eye out: their next move might just be the checkmate you didn't see coming.


Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick recap

Thanks — nice fight in a sharp Sicilian game versus FrostYM. You reached a messy middlegame with opposite-side play and a passed pawn race, but the game turned when White created a decisive kingside passed pawn and you couldn't stop its promotion. Below are concrete, practical takeaways to help your blitz results.

Key moments & what to remember

  • Opening: you played a Sveshnikov-style setup (event ECO B33). The ...b5/...b4 pawn thrusts earned space on the queenside — that plan is OK, but it came at the cost of kingside weaknesses after recapturing with gxf6 early.
  • Midgame tactic: after White sacrificed on g6 (Ng6+ → Bxg6 → hxg6) you let a dangerous passed pawn appear on the g-file and later on the f-file. Once that pawn started advancing, it became the main deciding factor.
  • Counterplay choice: 26...f4 and 27...Qg4 were active attempts to generate counterplay, but they left decisive tactical targets on your back rank and failed to neutralize the advancing pawn. The sequence ended with White promoting on f8.
  • Time: clock use was reasonable for blitz but the position required a quick tactical check — missing a few defensive resources under time pressure cost the game.

What you did well

  • You followed standard Sveshnikov ideas: space on the queenside and a thematic ...b4 break to chase White's knights.
  • You tried to create active counterplay with pawn breaks and queen activity instead of passivity — good practical instinct in blitz.
  • You kept fighting and looked for tactical complications rather than immediately resigning to a worse endgame.

Concrete mistakes and how to fix them

  • Weakening the kingside structure: recapturing on f6 with the g-pawn (gxf6) gives you doubled f-pawns and opens lines toward your king. In many Sveshnikov structures this is common, but you must be ready to neutralize kingside pawn storms — prioritize piece coordination and king safety before expanding on the queenside.
  • Underestimating the passed pawn: once White sacrificed to open the g-file (hxg6) you needed a clear plan to stop the pawn’s march (trade queens, blockade, or sac material for the pawn). Look for quiet defensive resources or forcing trades after such a rupture instead of mainly chasing counterplay.
  • Timing of counterplay: 26...f4 and 27...Qg4 looked active but allowed tactical shots like Qxe4 and later Qxf3. Before launching a counterattack, ask: does it remove my opponent's most dangerous piece/pawn or give me immediate winning chances? If not, prefer simplification.
  • Tactical oversight near promotion: when a passed pawn threatens promotion, calculate short forcing lines (checks, captures, promotions). In blitz, spend an extra second to check "Can my opponent queen next move?" and whether I have forcing defenses.

Concrete training plan (4 weeks, blitz-focused)

  • Week 1 — Tactics quick hits: 10–15 minutes/day on motifs: promotion tactics, back-rank mates, discovered checks, and removing the defender. Solve 5–10 sharp puzzles focused on promotion/back-rank themes.
  • Week 2 — Typical Sveshnikov structures: review a few model games in the Sveshnikov/Sicilian (Sicilian Defense). Learn typical piece placements and how Black handles kingside threats after gxf6. Aim for understanding plans, not memorizing long lines.
  • Week 3 — Practical blitz drills: play 10 blitz games with the specific goal of converting/defending passed pawns. After each game, quickly note one tactical error and one strategic lesson (30–60 seconds review).
  • Week 4 — Short calculation and simplification rules: practice choosing between counterplay and simplification. Play training positions where a pawn storm vs queen trade decision must be made — train the habit to trade queens when you are losing on the kingside and cannot stop a passed pawn.

Blitz-specific practical tips

  • When your king is exposed and opponent has a pawn storm, aim to trade queens quickly — that often kills the opponent’s attack and gives you practical chances on the queenside.
  • Use 1–2 extra seconds to calculate forced promotions. In blitz, that small pause saves lost games where you miss a queening tactic.
  • Keep standard defensive patterns ready: blockade squares in front of the pawn, active piece sacrifices to eliminate the pawn, or forced queen trades. Memorize 2–3 motifs so they come to mind under time pressure.
  • Pre-moves: avoid pre-moving in tactical middlegames. Save pre-moves for clear endgame recaptures or forced sequences only.

Opening notes

Your opening choices show confidence in complex Sveshnikov-ish positions — that suits your style. A couple of focused adjustments:

  • Prep simple defensive resources in the lines you play: after gxf6 and queenside play, know the standard regrouping move to bring a defender back to the kingside if needed.
  • Study one model game where Black survives a kingside assault in the Sveshnikov — seeing the plan in a full game helps recognition under time pressure.

Review this game quickly with the move list here (tap to replay):

Next steps after this session

  • Run a 5–10 minute tactical session focused on promotion/back-rank motifs before your next blitz run.
  • Pick one Sveshnikov model game and extract 3 defensive ideas to keep in your pocket (bring the rook to the seventh, trade queens, or blockade the pawn).
  • In your next 20 blitz games, track one metric: how many times you traded queens when behind on the kingside. Aim to increase that rate — it reduces losses from fast attacks.

If you want

I can:

  • Underline 2–3 specific moves in this game that changed the evaluation and show defensive/alternative continuations.
  • Create a short 7–10 puzzle pack based on motifs from this game (promotion, discovered check, removing the defender).
  • Recommend 2 model Sveshnikov games that match your level and style.


🆚 Opponent Insights

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masterbrainy 0W / 1L / 0D View
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Bob Weisse Dame 4W / 1L / 0D View
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peixe64 3W / 3L / 1D View
aragorn_ii_twitch 1W / 0L / 0D View
Most Played Opponents
sacrificethegift 101W / 15L / 1D View Games
stalyansky 39W / 69L / 5D View Games
otgon 47W / 63L / 0D View Games
canonicalmodule 39W / 61L / 0D View Games
wyatt176 28W / 39L / 5D View Games

Rating

Year Bullet Blitz Rapid Daily
2025 2333 2599 2231
2024 2306 1921 2225
2023 2319 2555 2199
2022 2298 2511 2195
2021 2289 2520 2130
2020 2180 1977 2150 2225
Rating by Year20202021202220232024202525991921YearRatingBulletBlitzRapid

Stats by Year

Year White Black Moves
2025 1142W / 1051L / 178D 1027W / 1160L / 178D 74.5
2024 351W / 330L / 60D 288W / 367L / 77D 78.6
2023 360W / 363L / 84D 334W / 392L / 64D 80.8
2022 384W / 394L / 75D 359W / 432L / 56D 76.0
2021 911W / 815L / 127D 869W / 828L / 138D 69.9
2020 2436W / 2093L / 170D 2344W / 2101L / 183D 38.7

Openings: Most Played

Blitz Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Unknown 6017 3093 2886 38 51.4%
Dresden Opening: The Goblin 859 460 310 89 53.5%
Sicilian Defense: Four Knights Variation, Cobra Variation 713 322 311 80 45.2%
Sicilian Defense: Nyezhmetdinov-Rossolimo Attack, Fianchetto Variation 608 265 285 58 43.6%
Sicilian Defense: Alapin Variation 552 236 254 62 42.8%
Caro-Kann Defense 520 244 236 40 46.9%
Sicilian Defense: Closed, Anti-Sveshnikov Variation, Kharlov-Kramnik Line 431 200 197 34 46.4%
Sicilian Defense: Closed 391 152 199 40 38.9%
Modern 346 152 165 29 43.9%
Sicilian Defense 319 149 145 25 46.7%
Bullet Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Modern 336 150 166 20 44.6%
Amar Gambit 247 121 109 17 49.0%
Scandinavian Defense 227 119 98 10 52.4%
Dresden Opening: The Goblin 194 119 65 10 61.3%
Caro-Kann Defense 173 78 84 11 45.1%
Sicilian Defense: Four Knights Variation, Cobra Variation 172 81 79 12 47.1%
Colle System: Rhamphorhynchus Variation 171 93 71 7 54.4%
Sicilian Defense: Closed 170 79 77 14 46.5%
Sicilian Defense: Alapin Variation 168 85 73 10 50.6%
Barnes Defense 165 84 72 9 50.9%
Daily Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Four Knights Game: Spanish Variation 1 1 0 0 100.0%
Sicilian Defense: Closed 1 1 0 0 100.0%

🔥 Streaks

Streak Longest Current
Winning 20 0
Losing 17 6
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