Avatar of Irina Berezina

Irina Berezina IM

iberezina Sydney Since 2017 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟
48.5%- 42.2%- 9.3%
Bullet 2024
101W 90L 11D
Blitz 2299
592W 518L 122D
Rapid 2389
5W 0L 1D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Overview of your recent blitz play

Your blitz games show a strong willingness to duke it out in dynamic middlegames and to press when activity is available. You navigate complicated positions with confidence and keep your pieces coordinated on open files. In several recent games you demonstrated tenacity and the ability to generate counterplay even when you’re under time pressure.

For growth, the focus should be on tightening decision making in sharp moments and sharpening exact calculations when tactics appear. Blitz often rewards quick, confident plans, so aligning your thinking to faster, clearer choices will help you convert more opportunities into wins.

Key improvement areas and practical steps

  • Improve speed and clarity in tactical moments. Practice short, focused tactic sets (for example 15–20 puzzles daily) that emphasize forks, pins, skewers, and discovered attacks. As you train, time yourself to build a habit of recognizing forcing moves within 1–2 seconds.
  • Improve time management and planning in the opening phase. In blitz, aim to reach a healthy, simple middlegame structure by move 15. If no clear plan emerges, choose a safe, flexible structure and stick with it rather than chasing deep theory.
  • Strengthen endgame conversion. In several games you reached endgames with chances to convert small advantages. Practice rook endings and minor-piece endgames with a basic plan: activate the rooks along open files, keep pawns connected, and target the enemy king’s position.
  • Reduce risk from over-ambitious recombinations. When you’re ahead, seek simplifications that maintain the advantage instead of complicating unless you have a concrete winning idea. When behind, look for solid, practical chances rather than forcing a tricky tactical line.

Opening choices and how to align them with blitz goals

Your recent openings show you’re comfortable in active, flexible structures that lead to rich middlegames. For blitz, consider reinforcing a compact, reliable repertoire that you know well, and couple it with a couple of flexible, less theory-heavy options you can reach quickly.

  • Limit heavy theoretical lines in blitz. Favor practical middlegame plans and piece activity over deep preparation that can eat into your clock.
  • Standardized responses: pick 1–2 solid setups for White and 1–2 for Black and drill the typical middlegame plans from them so you can play faster with confidence.
  • Explore strength-friendly branches such as familiar piece play and quick development ideas in your top openings. For example, you can study a well-contained line from a flexible defense and a dynamic, but manageable, counterattacking setup.

Useful opening notes to consider for study cues: King’s Indian Defense: Fianchetto Variation, Delayed Fianchetto and Gruenfeld: 5.Bg5 c6.

Blitz-specific practice plan (next 2 weeks)

  • Daily tactic training: 15–20 minutes focused on common blitz patterns (forks, pins, discovered attacks, and quick mates).
  • Endgame drills: two 20-minute sessions per week practicing rook endings, and king and pawn endgames with a pawn majority on one side.
  • Opening solidification: choose 1 White and 1 Black mainline that you’re comfortable with; study the typical middlegame plans and common tactical motifs from those lines.
  • Post-game analysis: review every blitz game within 24 hours, write down the one decisive moment and one improvement idea.

Suggested next steps and learning targets

To build consistency, aim for a simple, repeatable blitz workflow: quick calm at the start, a known plan in the middlegame, and a clear endgame concept. Use slower training to reinforce the fast decisions you’ll need in blitz, then apply those patterns in live games.

Optional study references

If you’d like, you can review specific openings and middlegame ideas with targeted materials. See the following placeholders for quick access to structured ideas:


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