Biografía de Emilio Hernandez
Emilio Hernandez, conocido en la escena online como emiliochess, es un jugador de ajedrez con el título National Master, otorgado por National. A lo largo de años de torneos y streaming, ha dejado huella con rapidez de cálculo, nervios de acero y un humor que hace más ligero el reloj cuando la partida aprieta.
Su historia en el tablero es un viaje entre tácticas fulminantes y estructuras que se desarman con una jugada sorprendente. A sus seguidores les encanta su forma de convertir el blitz en una experiencia doble: aprendizaje y entretenimiento al mismo tiempo.
Estilo de juego y repertorio
El Blitz es su terreno favorito, donde su rapidez y precisión encuentran su mejor expresión. Emilio combina intuición afilada con un enfoque pragmático, buscando ataquesurprendentes y cambios de ritmo que desequilibran al rival antes de que el reloj se agote. En su repertorio destacan líneas como London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation y Amazon Attack, que ha trabajado para sacar ventajas rápidas incluso en posiciones complicadas. Para explorar más sobre estos sistemas, consulta el término London System y Amazon Attack.
Entre sus números, una racha de 30 victorias consecutivas en secuencias de alto ritmo destaca como una de sus marcas personales. También es conocido por su capacidad de mantener la presión en el blitz con decisiones audaces y un estilo que inspira a sus seguidores a pensar en soluciones creativas bajo la presión del tiempo.
- Título: National Master (National)
- Tiempo preferido: Blitz
- Logros de repertorio: London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation; Amazon Attack
- Racha ganadora destacada: 30 juegos
Presencia en línea y legado
Además de competir, Emilio comparte su conocimiento con la comunidad a través de streaming y análisis de partidas. Su canal refleja una personalidad que toma el juego en serio, pero siempre con buen humor y cercanía. Para ver su perfil y seguir sus transmisiones, visita su página de perfil: Emilio Hernandez.
Si quieres ver un snippet de su estilo en formato PGN, prueba este ejemplo breve:
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Quick summary
Nice evening — solid conversion and good tactical instincts in your recent blitz run. You won two cleanly (including a game where the opponent flagged) and converted material advantages well, but one game shows a recurring weakness against connected passed pawns and promotion races. Below I highlight concrete moments, patterns to work on, and a short training plan you can start tonight.
Interactive example — key position from your most recent win
Replay the tactical sequence where you won activity and forced simplifications (you went into a favorable rook/queen/endgame and your opponent ran out of time):
Tip: use the viewer to step through 16.Bxc6+ and 17.Rxc6 — those trades gave you active rooks and targets on the queenside.
What you're doing well
- Picking tactical shots: you find active captures and forks (examples: 16.Bxc6+ / 17.Rxc6 in the win vs andres_p0). That wins material or forces favorable simplifications.
- Converting material into simplified positions: when ahead you trade down and remove counterplay — e.g., trading queens or rooks when the opponent has no counterplay.
- Endgame awareness: in the wins you converted passed pawns and used a newly promoted queen or active knight effectively (see the game vs tomioka784 where a passed pawn promotion ended the game).
- Opening consistency: you stick to the London/related set-ups and get positions you know — that's helping you reach middlegame tactics quickly. (See London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation performance stats.)
Key areas to improve (concrete)
- Stopping connected passed pawns earlier — in your recent loss vs papuchotumatador the c‑pawn queened after Black built a free passer. When the opponent’s pawn break is obvious, prioritize a plan to block or trade it off (rook activity or king approach) instead of chasing small gains elsewhere.
- Don't rely on the clock win alone. Winning on time (one game ended by flag) is fine, but try to reduce dependence on opponent time pressure by simplifying safely once you have a clear edge — keep a step-by-step conversion plan: fix a weakness, exchange one defending piece, then restrict king mobility.
- Improve defensive technique vs promotions: practice the motif "rook behind vs rook in front" and active blockading. In the loss the passed pawn marched to promotion with too little resistance — placing a rook on the file or using the king earlier would have bought time.
- Watch tactical backfires after queen adventures. In the first win Black's early queen grabs (Qxb2/Qc3 etc.) gave you targets — be careful when you are the side doing the grabbing. If you grab material early, ensure escape squares and don't fall behind in development.
Practical blitz checklist (use during games)
- First 10 moves: finish development and castle. If ahead in development, look for a simple tactical break — don't go hunting queens unless safe.
- When your opponent creates a passed pawn, ask: can I block it? Exchange it? Attack its base? If not, activate a rook behind it.
- If you gain material, aim to trade down to a won endgame — exchange queens when opponent has counterplay only if it eliminates the counterplay.
- Time buffer: keep at least ~15–20 seconds in reserve in 3-minute games for conversion and unexpected tactics.
Short practice plan (2–3 weeks)
- Daily (20–30 min): 15–20 tactics puzzles focusing on forks, skewers, and promotion tactics (target puzzles with passed pawns and queen promotions).
- 3× week (30 min): endgame drills — rook vs rook + pawn races, stopping passed pawns, basic queen vs rook/pawn techniques. Practice "rook behind the pawn" and Lucena basics.
- Weekly (1 game): a slow 15|10 or 10|5 game where you consciously practice "how to stop a passer" — annotate one loss/win and note the exact moment the pawn became unstoppable.
- Opening (15 min/week): pick 1-2 move orders in your London setup to avoid early queen traps for both sides. Keep the repertoire short and practical for blitz. Use the opening strengths you already have (your London lines have high win rate).
Targeted drills (start tonight)
- 10 puzzles in a row: only ones where the tactic involves a passed pawn or promotion.
- Rook vs pawn endgame practice: set up a king + rook vs king + pawn (passed on the 7th) and play both sides until you can force a stop or convert.
- Play a small match of 5×3' with the explicit aim: “If opponent gets a passed pawn, my plan is X” — practice switching plans under time pressure.
Quick notes & reminders
- Continue using your opening shape — it gives you playable middlegames fast. Keep simplifying when you get the advantage.
- Be mindful of pawn breaks that create connected passers on the c‑/b‑files; these are recurring in the sample games.
- If you want, I can analyze one full game move-by-move (I'll mark critical mistakes and suggest alternative moves). Reply with which game (give the opponent name or paste the PGN).
Opponent references: andres_p0, kxv1n, tomioka784, papuchotumatador.
Pattern to remember: when an opponent’s queen goes hunting (early Qxb2/Qc3 style) — treat it as a potential weakness: attack the queen with tempo or fix the weaknesses it leaves behind. See Loose Piece.
🆚 Opponent Insights
| Recent Opponents | ||
|---|---|---|
| u13065636607 | 1W / 0L / 0D | View |
| ar_ltc | 0W / 1L / 0D | View |
| Viktor Parfenov | 0W / 1L / 0D | View |
| Maria Teresa Jimenez Salas | 1W / 0L / 0D | View |
| Most Played Opponents | ||
|---|---|---|
| migarte | 170W / 154L / 33D | View Games |
| NeoPawn | 62W / 53L / 9D | View Games |
| zetitasaurio | 83W / 32L / 6D | View Games |
| Jorge Herrera | 71W / 35L / 10D | View Games |
| AlejoChessYT | 45W / 44L / 8D | View Games |
Rating
| Year | Bullet | Blitz | Rapid | Daily |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 2517 | 2253 | 1489 | |
| 2024 | 2527 | 1597 | 2193 | 1489 |
| 2023 | 2561 | 2410 | 2201 | 1533 |
| 2022 | 2511 | 2323 | 2188 | 1478 |
| 2021 | 2378 | 2074 | 1875 | 1578 |
| 2020 | 2415 | 2367 | 1985 | |
| 2019 | 2211 | 2331 | 1501 | |
| 2018 | 2289 | 2255 | 1140 | |
| 2017 | 2165 | 2134 | ||
| 2016 | 2097 | 1976 | 1816 | 1218 |
| 2015 | 1591 | |||
| 2014 | 1467 | 1591 | 1139 | |
| 2013 | 1493 | 1386 | 1126 | |
| 2011 | 1219 | 1415 | 1046 |
Stats by Year
| Year | White | Black | Moves |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2025 | 16W / 25L / 1D | 24W / 20L / 2D | 49.4 |
| 2024 | 652W / 491L / 66D | 608W / 544L / 55D | 65.2 |
| 2023 | 1709W / 849L / 134D | 1535W / 1001L / 132D | 70.7 |
| 2022 | 1790W / 855L / 161D | 1682W / 969L / 160D | 71.7 |
| 2021 | 1579W / 798L / 142D | 1462W / 880L / 156D | 73.3 |
| 2020 | 130W / 90L / 16D | 106W / 108L / 17D | 85.3 |
| 2019 | 200W / 187L / 18D | 180W / 187L / 32D | 79.1 |
| 2018 | 93W / 66L / 14D | 68W / 90L / 11D | 80.3 |
| 2017 | 58W / 62L / 8D | 58W / 63L / 11D | 79.2 |
| 2016 | 101W / 60L / 9D | 85W / 72L / 8D | 78.6 |
| 2015 | 0W / 2L / 0D | 1W / 3L / 0D | 68.2 |
| 2014 | 20W / 12L / 0D | 16W / 15L / 2D | 61.4 |
| 2013 | 7W / 6L / 0D | 6W / 7L / 0D | 65.8 |
| 2011 | 2W / 6L / 0D | 6W / 2L / 0D | 56.4 |
Openings: Most Played
| Blitz Opening | Games | Wins | Losses | Draws | Win Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amazon Attack: Siberian Attack | 1318 | 837 | 420 | 61 | 63.5% |
| London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation | 1198 | 800 | 339 | 59 | 66.8% |
| Caro-Kann Defense | 898 | 562 | 294 | 42 | 62.6% |
| Amazon Attack | 878 | 566 | 273 | 39 | 64.5% |
| Unknown | 508 | 266 | 239 | 3 | 52.4% |
| Australian Defense | 506 | 306 | 177 | 23 | 60.5% |
| Amar Gambit | 385 | 246 | 113 | 26 | 63.9% |
| Caro-Kann Defense: Exchange Variation | 329 | 214 | 89 | 26 | 65.0% |
| French Defense | 256 | 152 | 94 | 10 | 59.4% |
| Scandinavian Defense | 209 | 131 | 72 | 6 | 62.7% |
| Bullet Opening | Games | Wins | Losses | Draws | Win Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation | 907 | 507 | 358 | 42 | 55.9% |
| Amazon Attack: Siberian Attack | 876 | 453 | 357 | 66 | 51.7% |
| Australian Defense | 724 | 369 | 297 | 58 | 51.0% |
| Amazon Attack | 658 | 358 | 265 | 35 | 54.4% |
| Caro-Kann Defense | 527 | 278 | 217 | 32 | 52.8% |
| Caro-Kann Defense: Exchange Variation | 281 | 154 | 107 | 20 | 54.8% |
| Amar Gambit | 276 | 164 | 102 | 10 | 59.4% |
| Benoni Defense: Benoni Gambit Accepted | 264 | 153 | 93 | 18 | 58.0% |
| East Indian Defense | 226 | 122 | 90 | 14 | 54.0% |
| Scandinavian Defense | 223 | 122 | 93 | 8 | 54.7% |
| Rapid Opening | Games | Wins | Losses | Draws | Win Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Caro-Kann Defense | 312 | 247 | 54 | 11 | 79.2% |
| Amazon Attack | 215 | 179 | 24 | 12 | 83.3% |
| London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation | 116 | 83 | 25 | 8 | 71.5% |
| Amazon Attack: Siberian Attack | 95 | 62 | 28 | 5 | 65.3% |
| Australian Defense | 77 | 69 | 8 | 0 | 89.6% |
| Caro-Kann Defense: Exchange Variation | 51 | 41 | 9 | 1 | 80.4% |
| Caro-Kann Defense: Classical Variation | 31 | 27 | 4 | 0 | 87.1% |
| Amar Gambit | 21 | 21 | 0 | 0 | 100.0% |
| East Indian Defense | 20 | 14 | 4 | 2 | 70.0% |
| Slav Defense | 16 | 13 | 2 | 1 | 81.2% |
| Daily Opening | Games | Wins | Losses | Draws | Win Rate |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amazon Attack | 31 | 21 | 10 | 0 | 67.7% |
| Unknown | 29 | 17 | 12 | 0 | 58.6% |
| Amazon Attack: Siberian Attack | 24 | 14 | 9 | 1 | 58.3% |
| Australian Defense | 19 | 11 | 7 | 1 | 57.9% |
| London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation | 17 | 9 | 8 | 0 | 52.9% |
| Caro-Kann Defense | 14 | 9 | 4 | 1 | 64.3% |
| Barnes Defense | 12 | 5 | 7 | 0 | 41.7% |
| French Defense: Advance Variation | 6 | 3 | 3 | 0 | 50.0% |
| Scandinavian Defense | 6 | 5 | 1 | 0 | 83.3% |
| Amar Gambit | 5 | 4 | 1 | 0 | 80.0% |
🔥 Streaks
| Streak | Longest | Current |
|---|---|---|
| Winning | 30 | 1 |
| Losing | 13 | 0 |