Avatar of Illia Nyzhnyk

Illia Nyzhnyk GM

Illia_Nyzhnyk Saint Louis Since 2011 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟
72.2%- 19.1%- 8.7%
Bullet 2968
396W 156L 37D
Blitz 2827
883W 192L 108D
Rapid 2590
28W 7L 10D
Daily 1894
52W 5L 8D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick summary

Nice run — you win the large majority of your daily games and show reliable technique in many different structures. Many of your wins come from solid opening choice, good piece activity, and the ability to convert small advantages. Below I focus on concrete ways to keep improving while preserving what already works.

What you’re doing well

  • Reliable opening toolkit: you score very well with the Caro-Kann Defense and several sicilian/english lines. That gives you predictable, winning middlegame structures to play for.
  • Conversion and technique: multiple wins end by resignation or decisive material gain — you don’t panic when ahead and you simplify correctly.
  • Tactical awareness: you find concrete sequences to win material in the middlegame rather than relying purely on long-term pressure.
  • Practicality in daily games: you use time effectively in long games and exploit opponents who flag or make big errors in time trouble (example opponent: dosefacekilla).
  • Versatility: you switch between Caro-Kann, Sicilian, and English systems comfortably — that breadth is an asset.

Key areas to improve

  • Don’t rely on flag wins as your primary path to victory — sometimes the position still required precise play (your most recent short game ended on opponent time). Work on finishing techniques when the opponent still has resources.
  • Middlegame planning: in a few games you had the better structure but lacked a clear plan to increase the advantage. Turn plans (pawn breaks, piece reroutes, target squares) into a checklist during analysis.
  • Lines with weaker results: the QGD line around 3.Nc3 Bb4 has been a weak spot in your database — study the typical pawn structures and plans in that line rather than memorizing only moves.
  • Pawn-structure nuances: several games show isolated or doubled pawns arising — be stricter about when to accept structural concessions and how to create counterplay for them.
  • Time management across controls: you do well in daily, but some timestamps show very long thinking on non-critical moves. Develop faster pattern recognition for routine positions so you keep energy for critical moments.

Concrete 4-week practice plan

  • Week 1 — Tactics & pattern sharpening: 20–30 mixed tactics a day with emphasis on forks, pins, and back-rank motifs. After each puzzle, write one sentence why the tactic works (helps pattern retention).
  • Week 2 — Endgames and conversion: 30 minutes on basic rook endgames, Lucena, and simple queen vs. pawn endgame patterns. Practice the “convert when ahead” routine: trade down into a won endgame when it’s available.
  • Week 3 — Opening plans (not just moves): pick 2 recurrent openings where you score well (for you: Caro-Kann Defense and a Sicilian line) and make a one-page plan: typical pawn breaks, ideal squares for knights/bishops, and one middlegame plan to aim for.
  • Week 4 — Focus on problem lines: spend targeted time on the QGD 3.Nc3 Bb4 structures and one other line where you’ve seen draws/losses. Build 5 model games (annotated) showing typical plans and typical tactical shots.

Game-specific notes & exercises

Example: your 2025-03-09 game (English/Sicilian-type structure) shows good tactical finishing — you traded to win material and then simplified to an endgame. Replay the critical sequence and ask: what was the turning move for the opponent? Build 3 training puzzles from that sequence.

Replay link placeholder for the full game sequence to practice pattern recognition:

Practical tips to use during games

  • When you have a small edge, ask: “Can I simplify to a won endgame?” If yes, steer trades to simplify.
  • Create a short mental checklist for each middlegame: king safety, piece activity, pawn breaks, weak squares. Tick them off in that order.
  • If the opening becomes unfamiliar, slow down on move 10–15 to form a plan instead of blundering into an awkward pawn structure.
  • After every loss/draw spend 10–15 minutes doing a quick human-first postmortem before the engine: what did I expect, what changed, which plan failed?

Next steps

  • Pick one losing/drawing opening (start with the QGD 3.Nc3 Bb4) and add two model games to your annotated repertoire each week.
  • Keep the daily tactics habit and add two short (15–30 minute) endgame drills per week.
  • Every 10 games, do a short trends review: recurring mistakes, time usage, and which middlegame plans you missed.

With your win‑first mindset and strong conversion skills, tightening middlegame planning and a tiny bit of structure-focused study will yield real rating gains. If you want, send one recent loss or a close game and I’ll make a move-by-move checklist for improvement.

Placeholders / Things I can show next

  • Annotated replay of any one game you pick (dosefacekilla shown as example).
  • Targeted tactics set built from your mistakes.
  • Mini repertoire sheet for your top two openings: Caro-Kann Defense and a Sicilian line of your choice.

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