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haman mottaghi

hamanm12 Since 2020 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟
49.2%- 45.3%- 5.5%
Blitz 2293
15356W 14133L 1722D
Rapid 2050
1W 0L 1D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

What’s going well in your blitz play

You regularly choose active, flexible openings and push for dynamic middlegames. In recent games you’ve shown willingness to seize the initiative and create pressure through piece activity, especially when your rooks and minor pieces coordinate on open files and diagonals. Your openness to trying slightly offbeat setups (for example, Nimzo-Larsen style ideas) indicates a healthy curiosity and a readiness to keep opponents off balance in the blitz format.

  • Creative opening choices that lead to sharp, tactical chances where you can press for mistakes.
  • Good initiative in several middlegames, using piece activity to compensate for any material imbalance.
  • Solid handling of straightforward development in quieter positions, which helps you avoid early structural concessions.

Areas to focus on for improvement

  • Improve time management in critical middlegame moments. Blitz games reward fast, accurate decisions in sharp positions; build a habit of identifying forcing moves and key tactical threats quickly.
  • Enhance tactical pattern recognition and calculation depth. Regular puzzles focusing on forks, pins, skewers, and back-rank motifs will help you spot winning ideas more reliably in blitz.
  • Strengthen endgame technique. When positions simplify, converting small advantages into a win becomes crucial. Practice common rook endgames and king activity in simplified endings to improve conversion rates.
  • Solidify a compact opening repertoire. You’ve shown strength with Nimzo-Larsen Attack and Owens-Defense-like structures, but some lines lead to tough middlegames. Pick 1–2 lines for White and 1–2 for Black to study deeply, focusing on typical middlegame plans and pawn structures instead of memorizing moves alone.
  • Review and learn from your losses with a structured post-game process. Identify the turning point, check for missed tactical shots, and note one improvement you’ll apply in the next game.

Opening performance and plan

Your data shows a robust engagement with a Nimzo-Larsen Attack family and related structures. This style tends to lead to flexible middlegames where quick, active play and solid development are key. You also experimented with other lines (such as Owens-Defense variants) that can become risky in blitz if you are not precise in the early middlegame.

  • Recommendation: narrow your opening choices to 1–2 White plans and 1–2 Black replies that fit your natural style (calculated risk, piece activity, and clear middlegame plans).
  • For the chosen lines, write a short “middlegame blueprint” listing typical piece placements, pawn structures, and common strategic ideas. This helps you navigate the transition from opening to middlegame under time pressure.
  • When studying, pair each line with a few representative pawn structures and typical tactical themes so you have ready-made plans instead of memory-only play.

How this could look in practice: select Nimzo-Larsen Attack as your White choice and a compact, solid Black setup (inspired by Owens-Defense ideas) to ensure you have a reliable, understandable path in most positions. haman mottaghi

Practical training plan

  • Daily tactical practice: 15–20 minutes of short, targeted puzzles focusing on common blitz motifs (forks, pins, skewers, back-rank ideas).
  • Opening study: 2–3 sessions per week, 30–45 minutes each, focusing on 1–2 White lines and 1–2 Black replies. Build a simple reference with typical middlegame plans and key pawn structures.
  • Post-game reviews: after each blitz session, review 1–2 critical moments from your games. Identify the turning points and write down one concrete improvement to apply next time.
  • Endgame practice: spend 15–20 minutes weekly on basic rook and king endings, plus simple minor piece endgames to improve conversion and save-draw chances.
  • Time-management drill: in training games, set a personal rule to identify at least one forcing candidate move within the first 20–25 seconds of thinking in each critical position.

Next steps and goals

Short-term (2–4 weeks): consolidate 1–2 opening lines, improve calculation depth in tactical positions, and establish a simple post-game review routine. Aim to reduce unforced mistakes in the middlegame and to keep a consistent, manageable pace in the later stages of blitz games.

Medium-term (1–3 months): broaden your practical understanding of the chosen openings by linking typical middlegame plans to common pawn structures. Practice endgame conversion more regularly to convert advantages into wins rather than settling for draws.

Optional quick references

For a quick glance at your profile and recent opening choices, you can use the placeholder link: haman mottaghi.


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