Avatar of Kaan Kucuksari

Kaan Kucuksari IM

eagleclaw07 Since 2020 (Inactive) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟
49.9%- 42.1%- 8.1%
Bullet 2771
18W 4L 2D
Blitz 2793
1110W 964L 175D
Rapid 2477
48W 17L 13D
Daily 1433
0W 8L 0D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

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.

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.


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