Avatar of Vijay Srinivas Anandh

Vijay Srinivas Anandh NM

GoodOldBell Since 2020 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟
51.5%- 39.3%- 9.2%
Bullet 2800
2197W 1709L 385D
Blitz 2705
805W 601L 156D
Rapid 2159
41W 12L 4D
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Coach Chesswick

Quick post‑game snapshot — Vijay Srinivas Anandh

Nice conversion in your most recent bullet win: you kept rooks active, created passed pawns and converted under time pressure. Your recent losses reveal a few recurring themes — back‑rank/king safety and tactical oversights — that are straightforward to fix with focused drills.

What you did well

  • Active rook play and passed‑pawn play: you placed rooks on open files and pushed connected pawns to force defensive concessions.
  • Practical simplifications: you often traded into positions where your remaining pieces were more active than your opponent’s — great for bullet wins.
  • Good clock management in winning game: you used the clock advantage effectively to turn small edges into a win.

Recurring mistakes to address

  • Back‑rank and king safety — several losses ended in mate or decisive tactics against an undefended king. Make luft and watch moves that open files toward your king.
  • Tactical oversights — hanging pieces and missed forks appear in rapid sequences. A quick check for forks/pins before capturing will cut blunders.
  • Unfavourable simplifications — avoid trading into endgames that favor your opponent’s pawn structure or passed pawn unless you’re sure it’s winning.
  • Premove risk — premoving in sharp positions led to punishable replies. Reserve premoves for forced recaptures or completely safe moves.

2‑week drill plan (practical & time‑efficient)

  • Daily (10–15 minutes): Tactics sets focused on back‑rank mates, forks, pins and rook tactics. Goal: 12–15 puzzles at accuracy ≥ 90%.
  • Every other day (15 minutes): Short endgame practice — rook vs rook with a passed pawn, opposition, and basic lucena/phalanx ideas.
  • Twice weekly (10 minutes): Opening tidy‑up — pick one line you play and learn the key middlegame plans (not long theory). Use King's Indian Attack or similar as anchors.
  • Weekly simulation: 10 × 1‑minute games with NO premoves to build clean tactical awareness under time pressure.
  • Post‑block review: after each 10‑game block, annotate 2 losses and 1 win. Identify the single turning move in each game.

Micro‑tips to apply every game

  • Before each capture: do a 2‑second scan for forks, pins, and back‑rank threats.
  • Create a luft when opponent has heavy pieces — one pawn move often stops back‑rank mates.
  • Activate rooks early and look for open files. If you trade rooks, ensure the pawn structure favors you.
  • Use premoves only when the reply is forced or the move is completely safe.

Replay the decisive phase from your recent win

Replaying this phase helps lock in the conversion pattern: rooks to open files, push connected pawns, force the enemy king into passive squares and convert on the clock.

Checklist between moves (instinctive)

  • Any of my pieces hanging or en prise?
  • Is my king safe for one more move? (back‑rank, open files)
  • If I capture, what tactical reply can the opponent give?
  • If I trade, who benefits from the resulting endgame?

Run through this checklist automatically and your blunder rate will drop quickly.

Next step

If you want, I can prepare a 2‑week drill schedule tailored to your favourite openings and the specific tactical themes from these games. Or tell me which loss (opponent name) to deep‑annotate and I’ll mark the critical moves.


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