Avatar of Federico Perez Ponsa

Federico Perez Ponsa GM

Genghis_K Buenos Aires Since 2015 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟
50.7%- 40.2%- 9.2%
Rapid 2481 39W 38L 30D
Blitz 2933 1658W 1062L 377D
Bullet 3034 3693W 3174L 570D
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Coach Chesswick

Overview of your recent blitz play

Federico, you show a strong willingness to fight for initiative in blitz, especially when playing tactical, sharp lines. Your wins demonstrate a readiness to seize the moment with active piece play and direct attacks. The losses highlight the pressure that can arise in fast time controls, and the draws show resilience and stubborn defense under fire. Overall, your style is energetic and results-oriented, which suits blitz well, but there are clear avenues to tighten up for more consistent outperformance.

What you do well

  • You actively seek initiative and tactical chances, especially when entering sharp Sicilian-related structures. This approach puts pressure on opponents and creates practical winning chances even in blitz.
  • You coordinate heavy pieces on active files and squares, often generating strong threats against the enemy king. This capacity to mobilize rooks and the queen in attacking sequences is a real strength in fast time controls.
  • You are comfortable taking calculated risks when the calculation line is forcing, which can lead to spectacular tactical finishes and material gains when your opponent missteps.
  • You adapt your openings to stay out of comfortable preparation for your opponents, using dynamic lines that keep opponents guessing and off balance.

Areas to improve

  • Time management in blitz: there are moments when decisions become hurried or overly long as the clock runs low. Develop a quick, reliable plan for the critical phase of the game (opening idea, middlegame plan, and a target endgame) to avoid clock-related inaccuracies.
  • Endgame technique: several positions in blitz head toward tough endings. Strengthen rook endgames and simplified knight/bishop endgames so winning chances convert cleanly into points rather than drifting into draws or losses.
  • Defensive discipline: there are times you push too hard and create vulnerabilities in your own king’s surroundings. Practice prophylaxis—identify and parry the opponent’s immediate threats earlier, especially in open positions with opposite-side attack possibilities.
  • Move-order precision: in some sharp lines, a minor miscalculation or suboptimal exchange order can waste momentum. Focus on crisp, consistent move orders in your main repertoires to maintain pressure without giving counterplay.

Opening focus and repertoire suggestions

Your openings show strong results in aggressive Sicilian lines and solid alternatives. Consider the following approach to sharpen consistency and maximize blitz results:

  • Primary weapon: Sicilian Defense — Najdorf Variation. This line already appears frequently and yields substantial winning chances when you execute the typical attacking plans and piece coordination. Deepen your understanding of the main tactical motifs and the common middlegame ideas (pawn storms on the kingside, knight jumps to c4/e5, and timely rook lifts on the seventh rank).
  • Secondary options for 1.e4: Sicilian Defense variants like the Moscow and Alapin lines, which your data show with solid performance, can serve as flexible backups. Build comfort with the typical middlegame plans in these lines to avoid being overwhelmed in blitz.
  • Solid alternative: Caro-Kann Defense. This provides a calmer contrast to your main sharp lines and helps you win more tough, move-by-move games when opponents steer into quieter positions.
  • Against 1.d4, consider East Indian/related ideas as practical reinforcements when opponent avoids mainline defenses. These can broaden your practical toolbox in blitz.

Tip: pick two primary openings (e.g., Sicilian Najdorf as the main weapon and Caro-Kann as a solid alternative) and a single flexible response for 1.d4. Master the key plans, typical middlegame ideas, and common endgames that arise from those lines to increase consistency under time pressure.

Practice plan to boost progress

  • Daily tactics: 15–20 minutes focusing on motifs that frequently appear in your openings (sharp sacrifices, back-rank ideas, and piece coordination nets).
  • Weekly opening deep-dive: 1–2 focused sessions on your two main Sicilian lines and the Caro-Kann, emphasizing move orders, typical middlegame plans, and common endgame endings.
  • Endgame warmups: 10 minutes daily on rook endings and rook+minor piece endings to improve conversion of advantages in blitz.
  • Post-game review: after each blitz session, annotate at least one turn where you could have improved time management or chosen a safer plan, and one tactical miss or overpush to learn from it.

Would you like deeper, move-by-move annotations?

If you want, I can provide concrete, move-by-move feedback on the three most recent games you shared, highlighting exact moments to improve time management, defensive decisions, and key endgame transitions. I can also suggest alternative lines and study references tailored to your preferred openings.


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