Quick summary
Nice run lately — your rating has climbed strongly and your blitz results show concrete strengths in aggressive, piece‑active systems (you play Bf4 lines a lot). You're winning by tactics, mating nets and time pressure. Keep that momentum but tighten a few habits so you convert more cleanly and avoid unnecessary risks in time trouble.
Example: most recent win
Win vs sarcofagueh — key ideas you used: central knight jump to e5, opening the f‑file with pawn captures, and a clean tactical finish removing the enemy knight on h5 then checking the exposed king. Good pattern recognition.
- Recreate the game:
- View opponent: sarcofagueh
What you're doing well
- Opening choice and consistency — you repeatedly play Bf4 / London/Amazon type setups and get comfortable positions quickly. See your strong results in the Amazon Attack and French Defense lines. (Amazon Attack)
- Tactical awareness — many wins come from tactics: forks, sacrifices and attractive mating ideas (you converted several quick mates like Qf7# and delivered decisive checks).
- Exploiting opponent weaknesses — you punish premature pawn pushes (g5/g4, f5) and open lines to the enemy king effectively.
- Momentum and confidence — the rating trend and big month gains show you’re learning fast and applying lessons from recent games.
Where to focus (biggest levers for faster improvement)
- Time management in 3|0: several wins were on time or quick mates. That’s useful, but relying on flags is unstable. Practice making safe automatic moves faster (simple recaptures, forced replies) and save time for critical moments.
- Tactical calculation depth: you spot patterns well, but occasionally overextend (pushing b4 or aggressive pawn storms) without always checking opponent replies. Before pushing pawns, ask: does this create holes or targets near my king?
- Endgame technique and conversion: when you get material or positional edges, prioritize simplification and bring rooks/queens to active files. Study basic rook endgames and simple queen vs minor decisions so you can convert under time pressure.
- Avoid repeat tactical blunders in time trouble: when the clock dips, your error rate rises. Build a habit: if below ~30s, play safe moves unless there’s a forcing win pattern.
Concrete drills & training plan (next 2–4 weeks)
- Daily tactics: 8–12 puzzles/day with an emphasis on forks, pins, discovered checks and sacrifices. Focus on accuracy, not speed.
- 3× per week: 15–20 minutes of focused opening study. Pick 2 main replies you meet often (e.g., the typical Bf4 lines you play) and learn 2‑3 concrete plans for middlegame pawn breaks and piece placements. Use the variation London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation as a reference for typical ideas you face.
- Time control practice: play 10 blitz games at 3|0 but force yourself to keep 20–30s on the clock after move 10. If you see repeated flag‑wins, switch to 5|0 for slower decision practice.
- Weekly post‑mortem: pick 3 recent wins and 3 losses. For each, answer: what was my plan, where did I miscalculate, and what pattern cost or gained me material?
- Endgame basics: 2 short sessions on king + pawn vs king and basic rook endgames. Convert simple edges without needing long calculation.
Concrete in‑game tips (apply immediately)
- Before a pawn push (b4, c3, g4), check ‘Who gets an outpost?’ — if it helps an enemy knight or opens a file to your king, pause and recalc.
- When you have an attacking motif (knight to e5, pressure on f‑file), prioritize opening lines (exchanging pawns or sac) only after verifying the tactical consequences.
- If you’re down to 20–30 seconds, default to one of three safe moves: consolidate (protect piece), simplify (trade queens/rooks), or check the opponent king if forcing — avoid long forcing calculations under extreme time pressure.
- Use premoves only for absolute recaptures or forced mate sequences — a bad premove will cost you more than a few seconds.
Openings: tuneups
Your best openings (by win rate) are the Amazon Attack and several French lines. Make small, concrete improvements:
- Pick one Amazon/London line as your primary: learn 4 typical middlegame plans (pawn breaks, good knight squares, when to trade bishops).
- Study common responses to g5/g4 and f5 pushes — practice the defensive resources and counters so you’re not surprised when opponents overextend.
- Keep an opening notebook: save 8 positions that repeat often in your games and write the “correct idea” next to each — review before each session.
Helpful starting points: Amazon Attack and the London System resource above.
Small changes that give big returns
- Five extra seconds early in the game: play a few ultra‑slow rapid games (5|5) where you train to spend a bit more time in the opening. That improves your later speed decisions in blitz.
- Post‑game check: immediately mark one critical moment (move that changed evaluation) and write a one‑line note. Over months this builds pattern memory.
- Track which opponent responses cause you the most grief (e.g., early g5/g4). Then target practice specifically for those replies.
Motivation & next milestone
Your upward slopes and recent +170 in one month are excellent. Short‑term milestone: aim for consistent 1,000–1,050 blitz by repeating the training plan and eliminating a couple of time‑pressure errors. Keep the improved habits and you’ll hit it.
Want a personalized session?
If you like, send 2–3 games (one win, one loss, one unclear) and I’ll annotate critical moments and give move‑by‑move feedback. I can also prepare a 4‑week micro‑plan tailored to your openings.