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Angelo Etienne FM

GM-MamaPenny Since 2020 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟♟
40.8%- 51.3%- 7.9%
Daily 1473 3W 3L 0D
Rapid 2308 98W 119L 29D
Blitz 2729 6695W 8285L 1373D
Bullet 2694 4268W 5497L 751D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Overview of your recent blitz performance

Your blitz results show solid momentum in the short term with notable activity in the games against strong opposition. The one‑month and three‑month rating changes are positive, indicating you’re trending upward in the near term, while the longer 12‑month slope is modest. Your strength‑adjusted win rate sits around the mid‑forties to high‑forties, suggesting there is room to improve conversion and consistency in mixed positions. With focused practice, you can push your results above 50% in blitz more reliably.

What you do well

  • Active piece play and pressure in the middlegame. You often create concrete threats with active rooks and queen coordination that test your opponents’ defenses.
  • Resilience after mistakes. In several games you fought back from difficult positions, showing mental toughness and perseverance.
  • Agency in the opening phase. You choose sharp lines and keep the initiative, which can yield winning chances when your opponent overpresses.
  • Ability to convert opportunities when opponent missteps. In some of your wins you capitalized on tactical chances and maintained momentum to convert.

Areas to improve

  • Time management in blitz. With only a few minutes per game, ensure you allocate time for critical decisions and avoid rushed moves in the middle game. Consider a simple time budget per phase (opening, middlegame, endgame) to reduce last‑minute pressure.
  • Consistency in conversion. Work on turning advantages into concrete advantages (material, space, or position) rather than letting the position swing back. Practice identifying clear plan goals after gaining a small edge.
  • Endgame technique. Many blitz losses come from not converting or mishandling simplified positions. Build a small endgame toolkit (rook endings, rook and pawn endings, and king activity) and practice them regularly.
  • Pattern recognition in common structures. Your openings are strong, but reinforcing standard plans for the resulting middlegames (pawn breaks, piece coordination, and typical pawn structures) will help you convert more consistently.

Opening considerations and ideas

Your data shows varied results across openings. Some lines with decent win rates include certain London System variations, while others are tougher. A focused approach can yield bigger gains: pick 2–3 openings you handle well and study their typical middlegame plans and common tactical motifs. This will help you avoid overpressing in unfamiliar middlegame positions and improve your conversion rate in blitz.

If you’d like, we can map a compact, practical repertoire around your preferred style and build a short reference checklist for each chosen line. For example, you might emphasize solid development and controlled pawn breaks in one line, and sharp, tactical lines in another to keep your options open.

Focused training plan (next 2–4 weeks)

  • Time management drills: practice with a fixed per‑move time budget in short sessions (e.g., 2–3 minutes per game, with a 10–15 second per move target). Review timing after each game to identify where you spent too long or moved too quickly.
  • Endgame practice: dedicate 2 sessions per week to rook endings and rook + pawn endings. Use simple endgame puzzles and quick drills to reinforce technique.
  • Tactical pattern drills: 15–20 minutes daily solving focused blitz puzzles that feature the themes you encounter most often in your games (knight outposts, back‑rank themes, and common fork motifs).
  • Opening repertoire refinement: commit to 2 openings you enjoy and study 2–3 typical middlegame plans for each, plus common counterplay from opponents. After 10–15 games, reassess and adjust as needed.
  • Post‑game review routine: after every blitz game, write down 3 lessons learned and 1 concrete improvement to implement in the next game.

Next steps and quick wins

  • Share a recent game for a detailed, move‑by‑move review with specific improvement points.
  • Try implementing a two‑opening mini‑repertoire and track your win rate over the next 20 blitz games to measure impact.
  • Use a simple endgame drill routine to steadily improve conversion of advantages in late middlegame and endgames.

Reference and placeholders

Profile reference: angeloetienne


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