Coach Chesswick
Quick overview — recent win vs nonikakisparyan
Nice game — you converted a small space and piece-activity advantage into a decisive king hunt and mating net. The way you coordinated rooks and pushed the kingside pawns showed good practical sense in blitz: you traded into a position where your active pieces and pawn storm left Black with no counterplay.
- Replay the full game here:
- Key moment to study: the rook sacrifice / exchange sequence that opened lines against Black’s king and allowed a decisive pawn push to g6 and the sacrificial capture on h6.
What you did well — strengths to keep
- Active piece play: you consistently placed rooks and queen on open/semi-open files and used them to invade — a repeatable strength. (Keep this pattern in your blitz toolbox.)
- Conversion technique: once you had an edge you avoided unnecessary risks and traded into a winning structure — strong endgame intuition for quick games.
- Opening repertoire returns: your success with the Sicilian Defense and Caro-Kann Defense shows you have reliable, high-performing lines you can rely on in blitz.
- Prophylactic pawn pushes when appropriate: pawns g4/g5/g6 in the win were well-timed to open lines and restrict the enemy king.
Main areas to improve — targeted and practical
These are small, high-impact improvements that will raise your blitz performance almost immediately.
- Time management in complex moments — don’t spend too long early only to blitz critical middlegame tactics. Aim for a 10–20 second standard per move in the opening so you have time for sharp decisions later.
- Tactical consistency under time pressure — practise short tactical bundles (3–5 puzzles) with a 1–2 minute clock to simulate blitz nerves; this reduces the occasional missed defense or mate-in-one oversight.
- Rook and pawn endgames & king activity — you convert nicely, but a small amount of targeted endgame drilling (Lucena, simple rook endings, king + pawn races) will make conversions cleaner and faster.
- Watch for back-rank and mating patterns from the opponent — a few of your losses stem from allowing a mate sequence or fork after a forced series; add a short daily check (30s) for common patterns to your warm-up.
Concrete 4-week plan (blitz-focused)
- Daily (10–15 min): 20 timed tactics — focus on mates, forks, and discovered attacks.
- 2× per week (30–45 min): endgame session — 1 rook ending + 1 pawn race practice. Run through 5 typical positions and play them out vs engine at low depth.
- Weekly (30–45 min): review 3 recent losses — annotate: what you missed, a better candidate move, and an actionable pattern to remember.
- Before each blitz session (5 min): warm up with 5 tactical puzzles and one quick review of your main opening hits (lines you play in the next 20 moves).
Practical tips for your next blitz session
- When ahead, simplify smartly — trade minor pieces if it removes opponent counterplay and speeds conversion.
- If the position becomes chaotic with little time left, swap a small material or spatial advantage for concrete threats (checks, pins, back-rank motifs).
- Use one “safe” opening move as an automatic time-saver when you’re low on clock (a move that keeps your setup intact and avoids tactics).
- Keep a short cheat-sheet of 6–8 typical endgame moves/patterns on your phone to glance at during breaks between games.
Next steps — immediate actions
- Replay your win above and annotate the two critical decision points (where you decided to push pawns vs trade rooks).
- Do a 7-day blitz micro-challenge: 20 puzzles/day + one loss-review per day.
- Pick one opening to deepen (you already excel at Sicilian Defense): add one novelty or refresh the main 10–15 move lines so you save time in the opening.
Want a short follow-up?
I can:
- Annotate this specific win move-by-move in plain English (quick post-mortem).
- Prepare a 2-week personalized blitz training routine based on your openings and common mistakes.
- Extract three recurring tactical motifs from your last 20 games and make you a 10-problem drill.
Tell me which one and I’ll prepare it. Good work — your conversion and opening choices are already a big edge in blitz; a small focused routine will make that edge much sharper.