Avatar of Petar Djuric

Petar Djuric

hektor20 Kranj Since 2012 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟
43.7%- 48.7%- 7.6%
Bullet 2308
28W 14L 3D
Blitz 2390
5180W 5781L 901D
Rapid 2510
2W 0L 0D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Overview of your recent bullet games

Your recent bullet play shows a willingness to go for concrete, tactical lines and to keep the initiative under very tight time control. You have some clean wins where you converted small advantages into a decisive attack, and a few losses where fast pressure and tactical shots from your opponents overwhelmed you. In draws, you navigated complex positions but could benefit from tightening decision making in the most time-pressured moments.

What you do well

  • Aggressive piece activity: you often develop quickly and seek active coordination between rooks and minor pieces, creating immediate problems for your opponent.
  • Sharp tactical mindset: you spot forcing sequences and are comfortable calculating several moves ahead when the position is tactical.
  • Resilience under time pressure: you maintain pressure even when the clock is short, which helps you convert threats into winning chances.
  • Opening willingness: you explore dynamic openings and keep lines unbalanced, which can yield practical chances in bullet games.

Areas to improve

  • Time management and move selection: in some games you spent too long on complex lines or repeated moves near the time control. Build a simple, reliable plan for the first 10–12 moves and use a quick check for obvious tactical threats from your opponent.
  • Material discipline and simplification: when ahead, aim to simplify to clean endgames or clear winning combinations rather than chasing tangles. When behind, seek practical chances rather than risking heavy material loss.
  • Endgame technique in bullet: practice straightforward rook endgames and pawn endgames so you can convert winning positions or hold draws more reliably when seconds are ticking down.
  • Safety checks on moves: in the heat of a bullet game, it’s easy to miss a lurking tactic. Develop a quick habit of asking: “What is my opponent threatening right now?” before making a move.

Opening performance snapshot

Your openings show comfort with dynamic, attacking structures—Bird Opening, the King’s Indian Attack family lines, and certain Sicilian ideas have yielded good results. This suggests you thrive in positions with piece activity and imbalances. Consider pairing this with a simple, reliable reply to the most common defenses you face, so you can avoid early confusion under time pressure.

Practical training plan for the next two weeks

  • Drill a compact opening repertoire: choose 2–3 lines you like (one aggressive, one solid, one flexible) and practice them until you can reach a clear plan by move 8 in most games.
  • Bullet-specific time management: play daily 15–20 bullet games focusing on a fixed plan for the first 12 moves; after 12 moves, switch to quick, safe moves if you’re still equal or better.
  • Endgame routines: study common rook endings and simple king-and-pawn endings; practice converting even small advantages in clean endings.
  • Post-game review habit: after each game, write down the two turning points and one alternative move you could have chosen, plus a one-sentence reason why.
  • Pattern recognition drills: work on spotting three typical tactical motifs (forks, pins, skewers) and one counter-tactic (defending against a direct attack) in short puzzles daily.

Takeaway

You have a solid offensive instinct and perform well under pressure. By tightening time management, focusing on safe conversion in winning positions, and reinforcing endgame technique, you can convert more of your sharp opportunities into consistent results in bullet games.


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