Avatar of Aleksandr Kasyan

Aleksandr Kasyan IM

dreamanarchy Tashkent Since 2017 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟
50.4%- 43.8%- 5.8%
Bullet 2357
16W 13L 0D
Blitz 2593
685W 597L 81D
Rapid 2300
2W 0L 0D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick summary for Aleksandr Kasyan

Nice upward momentum — your rating jump (+173 recently) and a positive win rate show you’re improving fast in bullet. You convert concrete advantages and spot promotion chances, but recurring issues with pawn breaks and time pressure cost you close games. Below I’ll point out what you did well in the latest win, the key problems from recent losses, and bite‑sized fixes to apply right away.

Game highlight — last win (critical ideas)

Your last win showed textbook ideas: open files for rooks, advance a passed pawn, and coordinate queen + rook to finish. You created a passed pawn on the queenside, invaded on the second rank and then pushed to promotion — forcing simplifications that made the queen decisive.

  • Opponent: thetabasco
  • Opening: Modern (B06)
  • Short replayable sequence (opening → early middlegame):

What you’re doing well

  • Active rook play — you seize open files and second‑rank targets quickly, which is perfect for bullet.
  • Promotion instincts — you push connected passed pawns with purpose and calculate queening threats efficiently.
  • Practical decisions — you simplify into winning endgames rather than overcomplicating when short on time.
  • Strong upward trend — your recent +173 shows your training is working; keep the habits that got you here.

Recurring mistakes to fix

These patterns showed up across recent losses and are addressable with focused practice.

  • Pawn breaks on the queenside (c‑file): in the English/Caro‑Kann style game vs Sameh Sadek the opponent’s c‑pawn became a dangerous passer. Prioritize blockading or exchanging that pawn early.
  • Trade timing: you sometimes trade into positions where the opponent’s pawn majority or passed pawn becomes decisive. Before an exchange, quickly ask: “who benefits from the resulting pawn structure?”
  • Time trouble in complex positions: several games ended under severe time pressure. When your clock dips, prefer simple forcing moves or trades that reduce calculation load.
  • Missed defensive resources: there were moments where a small interposition or an exchange would have neutralized the opponent’s threats — look for single-move defenses before assuming the position is lost.

Concrete bullet fixes (apply immediately)

  • Pre-move rules: allow pre-moves only for safe recaptures or obvious checks. Turn them off in unbalanced positions.
  • Two‑move plan under 12s: when your clock is low, switch to a 1–2 move plan — trade a piece, push a pawn twice, or force a simplification.
  • Block the c‑pawn: in structures with c4/c3 breaks, keep a knight or rook available to block the square or trade the c‑pawn off early.
  • Daily micro‑drills: 10–15 tactics focusing on promotion motifs, forks and back‑rank themes — these win or save many bullet games.
  • Limit opening variety in bullet: pick 1–2 trusted setups for White and Black so you play the first 6–8 moves instantly and save time for decisions later.

Opening practice — where to spend 15 minutes

  • Modern (B06): review typical pawn breaks and how to use the b‑ and c‑files to create passed pawns.
  • French Exchange / Advance: study the plans after early pawn trades — focus on minority attacks and blockades.
  • English / Caro‑Kann structures: practice blockading and trading the c‑pawn; have one standard plan when the opponent pushes c4→c3.
  • Cut the number of different openings you play in bullet — familiarity buys time and avoids early tactical pitfalls.

Practical 2‑week training plan

  • Daily (10–15 min): Tactics — emphasis on promotion tactics, forks, skewers, and back‑rank mates.
  • Alternate days: 20 bullet games using the same opening choices; after each loss, write one sentence: “Why did I lose?”
  • Weekly: 3 slower games (10|0 or 15|10) to practise deeper decision‑making without extreme time pressure.
  • Post‑game review: pick one loss per day, find the one move that changed the evaluation, and memorize the 1‑move fix for next time.

Stats & encouragement

  • Strength‑adjusted win rate ≈ 54% — that’s solid in bullet and shows you’re outperforming expectation.
  • Recent rating trend: +173 — you’re on a steep positive slope. Keep the training and discipline.
  • Record snapshot: Win 16 / Loss 13 — close games are winnable once you tighten the pawn‑break and time‑management leaks.

Next‑game checklist (5 items)

  • Play a familiar opening so you save time in the first 6 moves.
  • Identify opponent’s potential pawn break (c or b file) as soon as pieces get exchanged.
  • If below ~12s, switch to a two‑move plan: trade, push, or check — avoid long calculations.
  • Use pre‑moves for safe recaptures only; avoid them in complicated positions.
  • After the game, jot one sentence about the turning point to build pattern recognition.

Useful drills / links (placeholders)

  • Replay your win vs thetabasco to study the final invasion and pawn promotion path.
  • Study the English/Caro‑Kann loss vs Sameh Sadek focusing on stopping the c‑pawn advance.
  • Drill idea: set up positions with an opponent pawn racing to promotion; practice the fastest way to stop or queen first (10 repeats).

Final note

Great traction, Aleksandr — you have the core skills for strong bullet play. Tighten pawn‑break defense, tidy exchange timing, and manage the clock better in complex positions and you’ll convert this momentum into higher, steadier results. If you’d like, send one loss and I’ll annotate the exact critical move and give a one‑move improvement you can memorize for next time.


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