Avatar of edizkAb

edizkAb

Since 2022 (Closed for Fair Play Violations) Chess.com
53.6%- 42.1%- 4.4%
Bullet 1787
1193W 1045L 91D
Blitz 2023
323W 214L 33D
Rapid 2146
116W 22L 9D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Personalised Coaching Report for Ediz Kabaca

Current peak blitz rating: 2110 (2025-06-18)   •   See your performance trends:

01234567891011121314151617181920212223100%0%Hour of Day
 
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun100%0%Day of Week

What You Are Already Doing Well

  • Dynamic opening choices. You routinely steer the game into sharp Sicilian, Benoni and Scotch structures, forcing opponents to calculate early.
  • Tactical alertness. Your recent miniature against bachesski shows that you spot resourceful tactics even with under a minute on the clock (Nd4!, …Qd1+, Rxd1#).
  • Piece activity over material. In multiple wins you sacrificed pawns for rapid development, a sign of mature chess understanding.
  • Conversion of clear attacks. When the enemy king is exposed you normally finish the job efficiently – see the mating net below.

Biggest Improvement Targets (next 2 weeks)

  1. Time management. 4 of your last 6 losses were on the clock while the position was still playable or even equal. Adopt a “30-20-10” rule: keep ≥30 s by move 20 and ≥10 s for the ending. Blitz is a clock game as much as a board game.
  2. Early king safety. Games vs matthewtfarley and rileyjacked1 show that moves like 6.Ke2 or delayed castling invite trouble. Make it habit to ask “Can I castle next?” every three moves until you do.
  3. Prophylaxis & quiet moves. Your attacking style is excellent, but sometimes you miss a calm defender (e.g. h3, a3, Re1) that would defuse counter-play. Work on recognising moments for prophylaxis.
  4. Clean end-game technique. In winning rook/end-games you occasionally push pawns before activating the king, giving counter-chances. Ten minutes of rook-ending drills per day will add “free” rating points.

Illustrative Moments

A textbook tactical finish (you were Black)


• 25…Rd8! lured white’s knight;
• After 28…Qd1+ you used a forcing sequence of checks – a perfect example of taking the initiative and never letting go. Note the final rook lift on a full board.

An instructive early-king error (you were White)


Leaving the king on e1 would keep both castle options; 6.Ke2 stepped into pins and destroyed pawn cover. Before making an unusual king move ask: “Is this really safer than castling?” 80 % of the time the answer is no.

Recommended Training Plan

  • Daily 15-minute calculation set. Solve three medium tactics without moving pieces to improve internal visualisation – vital for converting sharp Sicilians.
  • End-game ladder. Work through 20 basic rook vs pawn endings; strive to convert each within 15 seconds so it becomes muscle-memory in blitz.
  • Opening audit. Trim your White repertoire to two main lines (e.g. Scotch & c3-Sicilian). Depth matters more than breadth at 1800-1900.
  • Self-analysis first, engine second. After every session pick one win and one loss, jot three improvement points, then verify with an engine – this keeps learning intentional.

Practical Over-the-Board Checklist

  1. Is my king safe? Can I castle next move?
  2. What is my opponent’s forcing threat (checks, captures, zwischenzug)?
  3. Do I have at least 2 seconds per remaining move? If not, simplify.

Keep the fighting spirit, Ediz! Your tactical eye is already a strength; once you tame the clock and tighten king safety you will break the 2000 barrier.


Report a Problem