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Dmitry Minko FM

DIMONBANAN Since 2016 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟
49.3%- 42.0%- 8.7%
Daily 1525 5W 0L 0D
Rapid 2385 31W 9L 6D
Blitz 2680 2330W 1939L 404D
Bullet 2707 2166W 1916L 388D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

What went well in your recent blitz games

You demonstrated a willingness to enter sharp, tactical waters and to keep pressing when the position opened up. In your winning game, you converted complex middlegame play into a decisive endgame, showing good calculation and resourcefulness under time pressure. Your willingness to dive into active lines can be a useful weapon in blitz when you sense your opponent isn’t fully solidified in the early middlegame.

  • Active piece play and eagerness to create practical chances in dynamic positions.
  • Ability to capitalize on opponents’ overextensions and to pursue promotion or decisive material activity when the position allows it.
  • Resilience to stay in the fight and find the winning plan even after several exchanges, which is valuable in fast time controls.

Key areas to improve for stronger blitz results

  • Time management and a predictable thought process: In blitz, avoid long, multi-branch calculations on non-critical moves. Develop a quick, repeatable checklist for each move: (1) is my king safe? (2) what are the forcing moves (checks, captures, threats)? (3) what is the simple plan over the next 3–4 moves?
  • King safety and structural awareness in open/ragged positions: Some lines in your recent games led to exposed kings and tactical risks. Prioritize keeping king safety and solid structure, especially in opposite-side attack scenarios.
  • Endgame technique under pressure: You’ve shown you can reach endings with chances, but blitz ends can be won or lost on a few precise rook/sharing-pawn decisions. Practice rook endings and pawn race scenarios with a focus on keeping the winning plan simple and precise.
  • Opening depth and discipline for blitz: In very sharp lines, it’s easy to become too ambitious. Build a compact, reliable opening plan for your go-to systems, so you don’t get overwhelmed by unfamiliar middlegame ideas in rapid time controls.
  • Pattern recognition and defensive instincts: Regularly scan for back-rank weaknesses and common mating nets in your chosen openings. Quick pattern recognition helps you avoid unnecessary tactical losses or overextension.

Opening notes and practical plan

Your openings show strength in aggressive, tactical setups (for example, Sicilian Najdorf and Italian Two Knights variations). A practical next step is to pick 1–2 lines to specialize in deeper, especially for blitz. Build a compact set of plans for the middlegame in each line, including typical pawn breaks and key square weaknesses to watch for. This reduces decision fatigue and helps you stay focused during the clock.

If you want a quick reference, consider studying a structured outline for your preferred lines and mapping it to common middlegame plans. This can help you convert pressure into clear advantages more consistently.

Practical drills and a weekly plan

  • Daily tactics: 15–20 minutes focusing on patterns that frequently appear in your openings (forks, skewers, back-rank motifs, and forced trades).
  • Endgame practice: 15 minutes per day on rook endings and king activity with pawns; aim to convert simple edge positions into a win.
  • Opening study: 2–3 short sessions per week to reinforce 1–2 lines per opening family you use most; write down a simple plan for the first 8–10 moves.
  • Post-game review: after each blitz session, write down 1–2 critical moments where you felt unsure and plan a cleaner alternative line for next time.
  • Blitz-specific drills: play a controlled set of games with a consistent time control (e.g., 3+1) and use a 5-second pre-move rule for non-critical turns to keep pace.

Recommended weekly plan snapshot

  • Mon: tactic set focused on your main openings (15–20 minutes), plus 1 targeted endgame drill.
  • Wed: opening deep-dive for 2 lines, including common middlegame plans and typical tactical motifs to watch for.
  • Fri: 10 blitz games with a strict time budget, followed by quick post-game notes on any recurring mistakes.
  • Sun: review the week’s games and consolidate a short “blitz checklist” for king safety, plan, and time management.

Next steps and quick tips

Implement a simple blitz checklist before every game: secure king safety, identify forcing moves, pick a concise plan, and monitor time so you remain in a balanced zone throughout the game. Consider pairing this with a brief opening guide for your go-to lines to reduce cognitive load in the early moves.

If you’d like, I can tailor a 2-week drill plan around your most-used openings and typical endgames. You can also review the games we discussed using a lightweight after-action review to pinpoint 1–2 concrete improvements per game.

Extras

Want a quick reference to your profile for follow-up practice? dmitry_minko


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