Coach Chesswick
Coach’s Feedback for Oksana Gritsayeva
Your Current Profile
• Peak blitz strength: 2501 (2020-07-01)
• Typical session rhythm:
• Weekly consistency:
What You Already Do Well
- Flexible opening repertoire. As Black you switch comfortably between the Caro-Kann, Bogo-Indian and Symmetrical English structures, while with White you vary between Panov-style e4 play and Catalan/English setups. This makes you hard to prepare for.
- Central control & tactical alertness. In the win against Ivanovic Dragutin FM you seized the initiative with …dxc4/…c5 and later converted a piece-up ending by spotting the neat 30…Ne3+! fork (see fragment below).
- Practical fighting spirit. A large share of your victories come from converting sharp middlegames when both clocks are low, showing confidence under pressure.
Main Areas to Strengthen
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Time management.
Three recent defeats (vs امیررضا کردگار and vs Scorpionic7, among others) were on time in roughly equal or even favourable positions.- Adopt a “40 | 40 | 20” rule: aim to have ≥40 % of your time left after the opening, ≥40 % entering the middlegame’s critical phase, and at least 20 % for the technical conversion.
- Use forced or book sequences to pre-move when safe (e.g. recaptures) and avoid thinking in the opponent’s time.
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Defensive alertness & prophylaxis.
In several losses you allowed powerful piece invasions on dark squares (…Qd3!, …Nf4-e2 forks, etc.). Before each move ask: “What is my opponent’s next threat?” This simple prophylaxis drill will save several half-points per session. -
End-game technique.
When you reach winning positions quickly (often with an extra pawn/piece) you sometimes spend time hunting for “mate in 3” instead of choosing the cleanest technical path. Work on fundamental rook endings (Lucena, Philidor) so you can finish on autopilot and spare the clock.
Opening-Specific Recommendations
- Black vs the English (Symmetrical, …e6 systems): After 6…d4 you occasionally end up with an isolated pawn and no development. Consider the calmer 6…exd5 7.Nf3 d4 only after …Nc6 and …Be7 so your king is safe before pushing.
- Caro-Kann Two-Knights (…Nf6 line): You handled the middlegame fine but burned time against early Ng5/Nh3 ideas. Memorise one reliable antidote (…h6 & …d6 or the sharper …c5 break) so the first ten moves cost you seconds, not minutes.
- White vs Indian Defences: The fashionable 3.a3 line you use scores well, but after 7…dxc4 8…c5 you sometimes give Black a free Benoni. Try the alternative 8.Qc2 or 8.dxc5 followed by e4 to keep the structural edge.
Training Plan (4-Week Micro-Cycle)
- Day-to-day: 15 tactical puzzles, 5 minutes each, focusing on forks, skewers and discovered attacks.
- Weekly: annotate one of your own games without an engine, then compare with engine suggestions to hone evaluation skills.
- Sparring: play two 10 + 5 games per week to practise converting with slightly longer time controls.
- End-games: 20 minutes on fundamental rook- and pawn-endgame drills every Sunday.
Critical Moment Example
From your loss to امیررضا کردگار (Black, move 21): after 21…Rd2? you grabbed a pawn but missed White’s exchange sacrifice idea and lost the thread.
Try the simple 21…Re5! consolidating the seventh rank; you keep an extra pawn with no risk.
Study positions where activity > material — a recurring theme in your games.
Replay the fragment:
Next Steps
Keep leveraging your dynamic style, but pair it with sharper time discipline and a dash of prophylaxis. Small improvements in those two areas should convert several “almost-wins” into points and push you beyond your current peak.
Good luck, and enjoy the journey! — Coach