Avatar of Paulo Bersamina

Paulo Bersamina IM

fastestmindalive Manila Since 2013 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟
55.6%- 36.3%- 8.0%
Bullet 2830
1075W 795L 99D
Blitz 2813
975W 614L 167D
Rapid 2435
254W 65L 71D
Daily 1837
102W 97L 11D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick summary for Paulo Bersamina

Nice mix of sharp attacking wins and some painful tactical losses. Your instincts in the attack are excellent — you open lines, lift rooks and hunt the king well. The main leak is a handful of tactical oversights and occasional time mismanagement that cost material or the game in bullet. Below are focused, practical fixes you can apply immediately.

What you did well

  • Sharp attacking sense — you consistently create kingside storms (pawn pushes, rook lifts, queen/rook batteries) and convert when the opponent’s king is exposed.
  • Active piece play — you put rooks on open files, use bishops on long diagonals and look for outposts for knights quickly in the middle game.
  • Flagging and practical pressure — you use the clock as a weapon (forcing repetitive checks and complications when the opponent is low on time).
  • Opening repertoire suited to you — good results with Caro‑Kann and East Indian lines show you know your systems and get playable middlegames out of the opening. See: Caro-Kann Defense and Pirc Defense.

Main mistakes to fix (bullet-focused)

  • Speculative sacrifices without concrete follow-up. In one loss you grabbed material/created tactical complications but then missed the clean reply that refutes the idea — avoid “hope chess” in bullet.
  • Loose pieces / hanging tactics after forcing moves — double-check captures that open ranks or leave pieces unprotected (common pattern: capture then opponent plays a central check or rook infiltration).
  • Poor reserve on the clock. You win by flag sometimes, but also lose on time in complex endgames. Keep a 10–12 second buffer for moves that require calculation.
  • Too many repeated checks instead of converting an advantage. When you are better, swap into a simple winning endgame or use a plan to improve pieces rather than perpetual checking patterns that waste time.

Concrete, short-term drills (for bullet)

  • Tactics sprint: 5–10 minutes of 1–2 minute puzzles on pattern recognition (forks, discovered checks, back rank). Aim for speed + accuracy, not 100% solutions.
  • Pre-move hygiene drill: play 20 blitz/bullet positions where you intentionally only pre-move safe recaptures and pawn pushes. Train the habit: pre-move only when the opponent has no forcing check or tactic.
  • 10 games of 60s (not hyperbullet) focusing on one decision each game: “Keep at least 12s in reserve” or “never initiate a speculative sac without a forced continuation.”
  • Endgame quickies: 5 minutes of basic rook endgames and king+pawns vs king conversions. In bullet, technical wins are often decided by simple patterns.

Game patterns to practice

  • Pawn storms on the kingside: you create strong attacking chances with g4/g5/g6 and h4/h5. Practice the timing: open one file, bring a rook to the 7th/8th rank and avoid premature piece trades.
  • Rook lifts and back rank awareness: your wins showed excellent rook lifts to invade (rook to the 7th/8th and lateral swings). Counterpoint — always check for Back rank mate weaknesses when you trade off defenders.
  • Simplification when ahead: trade into a winning rook+bishop vs rook or winning king+pawn endgame instead of hunting flashy mates that cost time.

One-page training plan (this week)

  • Day 1 — 15 min tactics sprint (focus: forks, pins, X-ray, discovery) + 10 bullet games with the “12s reserve” rule.
  • Day 2 — 10 min rook endgames + 20 tactics (long diagonals & back-rank motifs) + 8 games 60s (no pre-move except captures of pieces that are hanging).
  • Day 3 — Play 15 bullet games but force yourself to decline speculative sacrifices; mark 3 losses and analyze 5 minutes each for recurring tactical misses.
  • Day 4 — Review 5 of your winning games (identify converting moments) and 5 of your losses (spot the exact tactical oversight). Make short notes of patterns.

Key moment — a model win (reviewable)

Study this clean attacking game: note pawn storm timing, rook lift and the final mating net. Use it as a template for how you like to play.

Final checklist for your next session

  • Before each game: pick one practical goal (save time, avoid speculative sacs, convert a small advantage).
  • In-game: when you see a capture, ask quick 2-question test — “Is my piece left hanging?” and “Does opponent get a check or fork after I move?”
  • After the session: review 3 critical positions (2 losses, 1 win) and write the one pattern you must not repeat.
  • If you want, I can analyze any single game in depth — paste the PGN and I’ll give a 6–8 move tactical/strategic post‑mortem.

Also, if you want to quickly pull up the opponent from these games, here’s a profile link: Alexander Velikanov.


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