Avatar of Vladimir Kizov

Vladimir Kizov

giza1 Skopje Since 2015 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟♟
46.7%- 49.1%- 4.1%
Bullet 1851
44W 56L 3D
Blitz 2194
11346W 11920L 1006D
Daily 400
1W 0L 0D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Your blitz strengths

In quick games, you tend to stay active and look for practical chances. You often press when you have tactical opportunities and are willing to complicate the position rather than settle for small, dry advantages. This energy is a real asset in blitz, where surprises and sharp ideas can tilt the game quickly in your favor. You also show a willingness to fight for dynamic chances even from the start of the game.

Key improvements to focus on

  • Endgame conversion: When you gain a material or positional edge, practice converting it cleanly to a win. In blitz, a small edge can quickly evaporate if you don’t methodically simplify and coordinate your pieces.
  • Time management: In tight clocks, small delays add up. Build a simple plan to allocate time per phase of the game (opening, middle game, endgame) and avoid spending too long on single decisions in the early moves.
  • Defending against tactical shocks: Blitz invites tactical shots. Improve your check- and threat-detection for 1-2 moves ahead, especially in sharp openings where your opponent’s threats appear quickly.
  • Opening choices and recall: Solidify a compact, reliable blitz repertoire. Favor lines that you understand deeply and can execute rapidly, reducing the chance of getting into trouble in the opening or early maneuvers.
  • Safe planning in the middle game: When you have initiative, balance aggressive ideas with solid, concrete plans. Avoid overextending without a clear follow-up, which can invite counterplay in blitz.

Practical takeaways from your recent games

  • When you succeed, you often coordinate pieces to create pressure on key lines or weak squares. Keep reinforcing those ideas: align your rooks on open files, use queen and minor pieces to bend the opponent’s king shelter, and trade only when it reinforces your plan.
  • In losses, look for moments where tactical counterplay or a forced sequence shifted the balance. In future games, train to recognize a few common tactical motifs (double attacks, back-rank threats, and overloaded defenders) so you can spot them sooner.
  • Drawn games often hinge on the exact moment you can switch from a defensive stance to a precise, compact plan. Work on small, repeatable endgame transitions (rook endgames, or knight vs bishop endgames) so you can convert draws into wins when you have a tiny edge.

Two-week practice plan

  • Daily tactical training (15–20 minutes): focus on patterns like forks, pins, skewers, and simple mating nets. Use targeted drills to reinforce these motifs in quick time controls.
  • Endgame drills (2–3 times per week, 20–25 minutes): rook endgames, then basic king and pawn endings. Learn a few reliable conversion methods and typical rook manoeuvres.
  • Opening study (3 times per week, 20 minutes): reinforce your top blitz lines and learn the typical middlegame plans for those openings. Create quick reference notes for the first 8–12 moves so you don’t stall in blitz.
  • Blitz practice with review (2–3 sessions per week): play 6–10 blitz games, then spend 5–10 minutes reviewing each game focusing on one improvement area (timing, miscalculation, or a missed plan).
  • Goal-oriented sessions: pick one pattern to improve this week (for example, back-rank awareness or piece coordination on open files) and drill it in 3 focused practice sets.

Opening notes and repertoire direction

Based on your openings performance, you benefit from a compact, reliable blitz repertoire. Consider continuing to develop the high-viability lines that lead to dynamic but understandable positions, such as the Nyzhmetdinov-Rossolimo structures in the Sicilian family or solid development routes in the Pirc/Caro-Kann families. Build quick-reference checklists for the critical middlegame plans in these openings so you can act decisively in blitz once the position clarifies.

Next steps

Practice with intention over the next two weeks, focusing on converting advantages and avoiding over-ambitious tactics when they aren’t clearly sound. When you review your games, write a single takeaway for each game (one thing to repeat or avoid). This makes your learning actionable and easy to apply in your next session.

Extras

Keep track of your progress with a short summary after each session. Placeholder for your profile: vladimir%20kizov


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