Avatar of Jens E Ingebretsen

Jens E Ingebretsen IM

jens1102 Since 2015 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟♟
48.7%- 43.6%- 7.8%
Daily 1349 21W 39L 1D
Rapid 2226 31W 7L 3D
Blitz 2683 6241W 5687L 1026D
Bullet 2490 1102W 886L 151D
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Coach Chesswick

Blitz play: what stands out

You’ve shown a strong willingness to enter sharp, tactical positions in blitz. This helps create winning chances when calculations are accurate and your opponent misreads the threats. It also means you can turn small advantages into real chances, but it can backfire when time pressure ampifies mistakes or when the position becomes too chaotic to navigate quickly.

Strengths you’re bringing to your blitz games

  • Comfort with aggressive, initiative-rich openings that pressure the opponent from the start, which often yields practical winning chances in blitz.
  • Good use of piece activity to create concrete threats. When your rooks, queens, and minor pieces coordinate well, you generate practical winning chances even in messy positions.
  • Strong talent for spotting tactical motifs and forcing lines that put opponents under decision pressure.

Key areas to sharpen for more consistent results

  • Time management: aim to establish a simple plan by move 15–20 in most games and stick to it. Use the clock as a resource—don’t let it run away from you in complex middlegames.
  • Endgame conversion: when you gain material or activity, practice converting advantages into a win. Work on common rook and pawn endings and quick king activity patterns to avoid letting a small edge slip away.
  • Opening consistency: your blitz repertoire includes very sharp lines. Consider adding a reliable, solid alternative for when you’re lower on time or facing an unfamiliar reply, so you can quickly steer into clean, playable middlegames.
  • Defensive discipline: in some games, the attack creates weaknesses in your own position. Balance aggression with solid king safety and structural considerations.

Opening choices and practical plans

Your openings show a preference for sharp, tactical trajectories (such as aggressive gambits) that can pay off when you’re in rhythm. If you enjoy this style, continue studying those lines, but also build a small set of solid, low-variance options to fall back on when the clock is tight or when the opponent’s responses derail your main plan. Practical middlegame plans are often more reliable in blitz than deep theoretical lines you can’t finish calculating.

  • Amar Gambit and Blackburne Shilling Gambit are strong tools when you want to seize the initiative and unbalance the game quickly. Build a clear, repeatable plan for the most common responses so you can trust your first 15 moves even under time pressure.
  • Unknown or highly unbalanced lines can backfire if you’re not fluent in the typical middlegame ideas. Consider adding one or two solid, well-understood alternatives to your toolkit.
  • Pair aggressive lines with straightforward, practical middlegame targets (control of the center, active piece play, and king safety) to improve consistency across your blitz sessions.

Short interpretation of trends and what to prioritize

Your strength-adjusted win rate suggests your results are in a reasonable range given the types of positions you choose. The longer-term trend shows some fluctuation, so the goal is to build steadier momentum. Prioritize targeted practice on decision-making under time pressure and dependable endgame technique to reduce volatility.

Focused 2-week training plan

  • Time-management sprint: daily 15–20 minute drills where you must reach a reasonable, plan-based middle game by move 15, then switch to rapid calculation for the next 5–10 moves.
  • Endgame fundamentals: 20 minutes per day on rook endings, king activity, and pawn endgames. Use simple rule sets (opposition, railing, and outside passed pawns) to convert advantages reliably.
  • Pattern study: review tactical motifs from your favorite aggressive openings and commit to recognizing them within a few seconds of seeing the structure.
  • Post-game review routine: after each blitz session, pick two losses and identify one move you would adjust to keep the initiative or simplify toward a won endgame.
  • Bridge to slower practice: once a week, play a longer game (15+10 or 25+5) to reinforce patience and calculation without the extreme time pressure of blitz.

Next steps

If you want, I can tailor a concise two-week plan around your most frequently used openings and recurring time-pressure moments. You can also share a couple of recent games for a targeted, move-by-move critique.

Quick reference

Profile glance: jens%20e%20ingebretsen


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