Quick summary for Kaan Kucuksari
Nice energy in these blitz sessions — you’re creating messy, tactical positions and converting material chances. You also have a recent positive short-term rating trend, which means your training is paying off. Below are targeted observations and a short practice plan to convert your strengths into a steadier, higher win rate in blitz.
Example game to review (win)
Good model: you handled a chaotic middlegame well, used knight forks and piece activity to win. Replay it, look for the turning moments and the opponent’s tactical oversights.
- Replay the final phase:
- Opponent: Dejan Stojanovski — inspect how they reacted under pressure.
What you’re doing well
- Creating tactical complications — you steer games into double-edged positions where your calculation pays off.
- Spotting local tactics (knight forks, captures on the b-file, back-rank weaknesses) and converting material advantage.
- Playing actively with the king when the center opens — you use king activity pragmatically in simplified positions.
- Good opening variety — you keep opponents uncomfortable by playing many different systems.
Recurring problems to fix
- Sweet spots in tactics but occasional tactical oversights: a few losses show you left queens or rooks vulnerable to infiltration (queen checks, back-rank mates). Slow down half a second and scan for checks and captures before finalizing the move.
- Endgame technique under time pressure: lost games display missed outpost control and knight maneuvering in late middlegames. Practice typical knight vs pawn and knight maneuvering themes.
- Premature simplification: trading into endings where your opponent’s knight activity or passed pawns decide the game. Evaluate whether the simplification actually reduces their counterplay.
- Time management in critical moments — many games reach sub-30 second phases where accuracy drops. Preserve a reserve of ~30–40 seconds for the last 10 moves in blitz.
Concrete drills and study plan (weekly)
Short, focused practice will give big improvement quickly in blitz.
- Daily (15–25 minutes)
- 15 tactical puzzles emphasizing forks, skewers, discovered checks and back-rank mates. Prioritize puzzles with knight forks and intermezzo themes.
- 10 minutes of fast endgame work: king + knight vs pawns, basic rook endgames, opposition and outposts.
- 3 sessions/week (30–45 minutes)
- Play 5+5 or 3+2 rapid games but force yourself to spend 10–15 extra seconds on every critical capture or queen move. Review only the critical moments afterwards.
- One annotated review: pick one won and one lost game and write 3 turning moves and why they mattered. Use the win vs Dejan Stojanovski as the “what to repeat” model.
- Weekly (1 hour)
- Opening tune-up: pick your 3 most-played openings and learn 2 typical tactical motifs or a common trap for each. Focus on avoiding the tactical pitfalls that cost you material.
Practical in-game tips for blitz
- Before you move, ask three quick questions: "Is my king safe?", "Is any piece hanging?", "Does my opponent have a check or tactic?" Pause even half a second to answer them.
- When ahead, trade only if the resulting position is clearly winning — avoid simplifying when opponent’s knights become active or there are outside passed pawns.
- Avoid auto-promotion of pre-moves in unclear positions. Use pre-moves only when completely safe.
- In time trouble, simplify to positions where you can rely on pattern recognition (clear passed pawns, simple king+rook vs king). Don’t trust calculation alone under 10–15 seconds.
Short tactical checklist (to memorize)
- Look for forks on e5, d5, f5, c5 and squares near the opponent king.
- Always scan for opponent queen or rook checks before moving a piece near your king.
- When a pawn capture opens a file, calculate simple x-ray and back-rank motifs.
Study resources & next steps (quick)
- Puzzle rush or timed tactic sets: 10–15 minutes daily to sharpen lightning calculation.
- One endgame video per week (rook endings, knight outposts) — apply one idea in your next three games.
- After each playing session: 5-minute review. Note one repeatable success and one repeatable mistake to fix next time.
Final notes — motivation & focus
Your recent short-term trend shows you can climb quickly when you polish tactical awareness and time management. Keep the same fighting style but reduce the small, repeatable errors: patching those will give you a big boost in blitz conversion rate.
- Win model to emulate: Dejan Stojanovski (the win above).
- Loss models to study: Petros Trimitzios and Felix Kuznetsov — learn what allowed their infiltration and how to avoid it.
If you want, I can prepare a 2-week drill schedule built around your favorite opening systems or create a short video-style annotated review of one of these games — tell me which game you want to dissect first.