Avatar of Maka Purtseladze

Maka Purtseladze IM

GMaka Since 2019 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟♟
45.1%- 47.4%- 7.5%
Daily 1765 23W 8L 1D
Rapid 2257 20W 8L 5D
Blitz 2628 982W 975L 183D
Bullet 2551 4605W 4918L 745D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Overview of your blitz play

You show strong ability to seize the initiative and keep pressure on the board when you have the advantage. In your recent win, you maintained activity and used open files to create meaningful threats, converting the middlegame initiative into a win. Your opening choices, especially in the Nimzo-Larsen style structures, have given you comfortable, dynamic play with clear plans. There are opportunities to tighten time management and reinforce consistent plans in longer, trickier middlegames so your advantage doesn’t slip away on the clock.

What you’re doing well

  • You keep pressure on the opponent when you control the initiative, often coordinating rooks and minor pieces on active files or diagonals.
  • Your piece activity remains high in many middlegame transitions, which helps you create practical chances and convert advantages.
  • You handle certain standard building blocks in your preferred openings (for example Nimzo-Larsen Attack ideas) with solid development and clear plans rather than ad-hoc moves.
  • You show resilience in chasing dynamic chances and finding tactical resources when the position is unbalanced.

Key areas to improve

  • Time management in blitz. In the loss, a high time pressure made accurate calculation harder. Practice pacing so you can keep a consistent tempo even in sharp lines.
  • Plan discipline in the middlegame. After the opening, aim for a concrete plan (e.g., targeting a pawn structure, king safety, or a clear file). Avoid drifting into moves that only look forcing without a long-term idea.
  • Endgame clarity. When exchanges reduce material, sharpen your endgame technique, focusing on how to convert even small advantages (like a pawn or a better rook activity) into a win.
  • Defensive calculation under pressure. In some complex middlegames you can overestimate threats or miss subtle counterplay. Build a habit of a quick, two-step check: (1) what is my opponent threatening? (2) what is my simplest, safe plan to neutralize it?

Opening plan and ideas

Your openings show a strength in solid, flexible structures with good piece play. A few practical notes:

  • The Nimzo-Larsen Attack style you’ve used has yielded you comfortable, dynamic positions. Lean into that setup when you want calm middlegames where you can press from the pawn center and piece activity rather than chasing immediate tactical skirmishes. Consider labeling and reviewing a couple of go-to lines in this family to stay sharp under time pressure.
  • Your results in solid defenses like Caro-Kann indicate you can reach sturdy endgames. Use this as a reliable fallback when you need to simplify to a favorable endgame rather than chasing complications in blitz.
  • Avoid highly speculative lines (for example, some less-traveled gambits) when you’re pressed for time or if you’re facing opponents who thrive on sharp, tactical play. Prioritize lines you understand well and can execute with a clear plan.

For quick reference, you can think of your repertoire as two pillars: Nimzo-Larsen Attack for White to keep control and flexibility, and Caro-Kann or related solid systems for Black to reach solid endgames. If you want, I can tailor a short, two-opening plan you can study over the next few weeks. Maka Purtseladze

Practical training plan (next 2 weeks)

  • Daily 15–20 minute blitz session with a brief post-game review. Write a 2–3 sentence summary: what you planned, what happened, and what you will change next time.
  • Two focused endgame drills per week, starting from rook endings and simple minor-piece endings. Practice keeping activity up and converting small advantages.
  • Two tactical puzzle sets per day, focusing on patterns that commonly occur in the openings you use (for example, motifs from Nimzo-Larsen and Caro-Kann structures).
  • Time-management drill: play a 3-minute game and impose a rule to always make a move within the first 25 seconds for the first 20 moves. This builds a steady tempo and reduces time trouble risk.
  • Review at least one loss game and one win game by extracting one concrete lesson each (e.g., “I should play plan X after move Y” or “I should avoid line Z because it creates a risky endgame”).

If you’d like, I can prepare short annotated snippets from your recent games to highlight key moments and suggested revisions.


Opportunity highlights from your recent games

  • Your win demonstrated strong initiative and the ability to convert pressure into material gains. Keep looking for forcing lines where you can activate rooks on open files and create threats to destabilize your opponent’s king safety.
  • Your loss on time points to a need for steadier time usage. In critical middlegame moments, aim to identify the plan within two or three candidate moves and commit to one, so you don’t get flustered by tactical flourishes.
  • Your draw shows you can maintain balance in dynamic positions; continue cultivating patience in positions where concrete advantages aren’t immediately visible, and look for small, safe improvements that accumulate over the game.

Notes and placeholders

For quick reference to specific games or opponents, you can review: Maka Purtseladze, Rhys Arnold, Uwe Kleibel, Nimzo-Larsen Attack, Caro-Kann Defense, and French Defense as general ideas. If you want, I can pull out concrete positions from the games you shared and annotate them with concrete improvements.


Report a Problem