Avatar of Henrique Pontara

Henrique Pontara

hpontara Since 2019 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟
48.2%- 47.3%- 4.4%
Bullet 1178
240W 220L 8D
Blitz 1130
1192W 1193L 124D
Rapid 1478
9W 3L 0D
Daily 1292
2W 0L 0D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick summary

Nice work, Henrique — you’re turning advantages into wins in bullet and you’ve got some go-to openings that score well for you. Your recent win vs thibautvanderbeken shows good tactical awareness (the knight jump into c7/a8) and the ability to finish when the opponent runs low on time. Your losses highlight recurring themes: king safety, getting simplified into bad endgames, and a few tactical oversights when under time pressure.

Replay: key winning sequence (review)

Study this critical stretch from your last win — the knight sacrifice/jump and the follow-up that won material and simplified to a winning endgame. Play it through and ask: could I have finished faster, or forced mate earlier?

  • Interactive replay:

What you’re doing well

  • Spotting tactical opportunities quickly — your knight jump to c7/a8 was the kind of lightning tactic that wins bullet games.
  • Converting advantages rather than over-complicating — when you get material, you tend to trade into a clearly winning endgame instead of chasing illusions.
  • Having a practical, focused opening set. Continue using lines that consistently give you playable middlegames (for example your success with Caro-Kann Defense and the Drill lines in the English Opening).
  • Resilient under time pressure — you win on opponent timeouts when you keep the pressure on and don’t panic with the clock.

Recurring issues to fix

  • King safety: in several losses your king became exposed after simplifications or pawn pushes. In bullet, avoid risky pawn storms if the king becomes open — prioritize one tidy pawn move or a quick tuck instead.
  • Tactical oversights in time trouble: simple hanging pieces and missed checks occur when the clock gets low. Train pattern recognition so you see common forks/skewers instantly.
  • Opening consistency: you have a lower return from some sharp or trapty lines (watch out for traps like the Blackburne Shilling Gambit if you play blitz players who love tricks). Stick to a short reliable repertoire in bullet.
  • Endgame technique under the clock: a few games simplified into rook + pawn endgames where precise moves were needed. A small set of endgame templates will pay off (rook endings, king + pawn races).

Practical drills to do (10–20 minutes each)

  • Tactics sprint: 5–10 minutes of fast mate/fork/pin puzzles (Puzzle Rush or 1‑2 minute sets). Focus on forks, skewers and back-rank patterns you’ve missed recently.
  • Pre-move discipline: play 10 bullet games where you force yourself to use 0 premoves — then 10 with controlled premoves. Learn when a premove is safe (no captures possible) and when it’s a trap.
  • Mini endgame set: practice 10 positions of rook vs rook+pawn and simple king+pawn races. Learn Philidor/Lucena basics — they save time and points in bullet.
  • Opening refinement: pick 2 openings (one for White, one for Black). Play 20 blitz/bullet games with only those lines to internalize typical plans and tactical motifs. Double down on lines that already score well for you (keep using the Drill Variation you like).

Quick checklist to use during bullet games

  • 1–2 second rule: before every move, glance: “Is any piece hanging?” If yes, fix it or exchange — don’t move on autopilot.
  • If you are +material: trade pieces to reduce counterplay and simplify to a won endgame. Avoid speculative attacks when ahead.
  • When low on time: prioritize safe king moves and exchanges over fancy tactics that rely on long calculation.
  • Use premoves only when the reply is forced or when you’re not giving away a capture/tempo.

Openings and study targets

Keep playing the lines that give you consistent wins and avoid drifting into unfamiliar gambits in bullet. Useful links to review:

  • Solid kingside fianchetto plans — study the ideas behind the Reti/Kingside fianchetto structures you face and play.
  • Focus study: Caro-Kann Defense middlegame plans and a compact English setup you play often (English Opening).
  • Trap awareness: review the most common cheap tricks (e.g. Blackburne Shilling Gambit) so you don’t drop material early.

Next 2-week plan

  • Week 1: Daily 10–15 min tactics + 20 bullet games with fixed openings. Review 3 lost games and note the decisive error in a one-sentence log.
  • Week 2: 3 sessions of focused endgame practice (15 min each) + experiment with a premove policy in 20 games. Keep a short list (3 items) of “don’t do” habits you’ll actively avoid.

Want me to drill a specific game?

Tell me which game to analyze (use the opponent name or the link). Example: review the loss vs the7blundersoftheworld or the win vs thibautvanderbeken and I’ll highlight the exact move-by-move turning points and suggest concrete alternative moves.


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