Avatar of FL0RIAN0P0LIS

FL0RIAN0P0LIS GM

Since 2021 (Closed) Chess.com
43.9%- 44.8%- 11.4%
Bullet 2730
5W 6L 2D
Blitz 2874
1919W 1961L 497D
Rapid 2225
2W 0L 0D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Hi FL0RIAN0P0LIS, here’s some targeted feedback based on your latest blitz session!

What you’re already doing well

  • Flexible opening repertoire. With White you steer the game into a quiet Réti/English setup and are comfortable shifting into Catalan-style structures. As Black you alternate between the King’s Indian/Grünfeld complex and the French, giving you practical variety.
  • Dynamic piece play. Several wins featured the pawn‐storm & exchange-sac motif (20.Rxd5!! against mind1mover, game three) showing good tactical alertness under time pressure.
  • Endgame grit. Your time-scramble technique is strong: even slightly worse endings (e.g. vs DarkwingDuck98) were defended until the flag fell.

Three areas to focus on next

  1. Time-management discipline
    In the last 10 games you flagged twice and won three times on your opponent’s flag. Relying on the clock is risky at 3|0. Try the “40 | 20 | 10” rule: spend ≤40 s to leave the opening, ≤20 s navigating the early middlegame, and keep ≥10 s for every endgame you enter.  Tip: play a few 3|2 games to practise thinking during the increment.
  2. Smoother middlegame planning in the Grünfeld / King’s Indian
    Your loss to mind1mover (Grünfeld, D90) shows tempo drift: …Nc6–a5–c6–a5–c6 consumed five moves while White improved pieces and expanded on the queenside.
    • After 12…Rab8 consider the thematic …e5 break or early …c5 to hit the centre.
    • Review typical plans in the Flohr-Mikenas system (…c5, …Nc6, …Bg4) to avoid ‘‘shuffling’’.
    A mini-exercise: set up the position after 15.Bf3 (game D90) and let an engine play Black vs. itself for 20 moves. Observe how it generates counterplay without wasting tempi.
  3. Dark-square resilience when you fianchetto
    In both the Catalan loss (vs rezamahdavi2008) and the O’Kelly Sicilian loss (vs mbojan) the opponent’s queen infiltrated via q-b-5/b-4 onto dark squares you could no longer guard.
    • Adopt the habit ‘‘If I push the f- or g-pawn, what keeps d4/e5/h4 dark squares safe?’’
    • Re-watch any King’s Indian lesson on …Bg4 / …Bf5 to appreciate how exchanging dark-square bishops too early magnifies this weakness.

Illustrative tactic you missed

After 19…Bxe5? in the French Two-Knights (vs mind1mover) you walked into 20.Nxd5! winning a pawn and the exchange. Replay it here:

Action plan for the coming week

  • Drill 15 puzzles/day focused on fork-themes and overloaded pieces (the motifs that cost you material in the losses).
  • Analyse two of your own wins without an engine first; write down why your plan worked, then turn the engine on and compare. This trains self-diagnosis, not just computer-checking.
  • Play five 3|2 games, aiming to finish each one with ≥15 s on the clock; review moves where you spent >10 s and ask “Did the position really need it?”
  • Watch one GM game in the Grünfeld Flohr line and one in the Réti g3 line; summarise the main pawn breaks in a notebook.

Your dashboard snapshot

Peak blitz rating: 2960 (2023-12-26)
Hour-to-hour performance:

012345678911121314151617181920212223100%0%Hour of Day

Day-of-week boost:
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun100%0%Day of Week


Keep up the creative play, sharpen your time use, and those 2900-plus peaks will become your new normal. Good luck at the board!


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