Avatar of Jemal Ovezdurdiyeva

Jemal Ovezdurdiyeva WFM

Username: Jojo_1608

Playing Since: 2019-08-19 (Inactive)

Wow Factor: ♟♟

Chess.com

Rapid: 2192
4W / 3L / 2D
Blitz: 2384
947W / 890L / 79D
Bullet: 2273
226W / 187L / 17D

Jemal Ovezdurdiyeva - Woman FIDE Master Extraordinaire

Meet Jemal Ovezdurdiyeva, a formidable Woman FIDE Master who plays chess like Mozart composed symphonies—complex, elegant, and impossible to ignore. Whether wielding the white or black pieces, Jemal dances through the board with a strong preference for late afternoons and early mornings, especially at 6 AM, when the stars and pawns align.

Jemal’s blitz rating peaked impressively at 2392 in August 2021, proving a lightning-fast mind that strikes before opponents can even say "check!" In bullet chess, a realm where reflexes count as much as strategy, Jemal’s best was a swift 2317, demonstrating that speed and precision are a winning combo. Their rapid play maximum of 2300 adds further evidence that Jemal is comfortable across all faster time controls.

Playing nearly 1,800 blitz games and over 400 bullet matches, Jemal boasts a nearly 50% win rate in fierce, real-time duels. A tactical genius with a comeback rate soaring at nearly 80%, Jemal never backs down—even after losing a piece—and often turns the tables with dazzling plays. Fun fact: Jemal’s longest winning streak hit ten consecutive victories. Talk about going full chess ninja mode!

Known affectionately online as Jojo_1608, Jemal’s style blends endurance with creativity. They average 71 moves per win in those epic blitz battles, showing both patience and perseverance. When it comes to endgames, Jemal has a knack for squeezing out wins, engaging in them over 74% of their games—a true endgame maestro.

But don’t be fooled by the serious stats. Jemal also knows how to keep it fun. Their favorite opening is a secret only their opponents wish they knew, as it has delivered an almost 50% win rate over nearly 2,000 blitz games. Maybe Jemal just likes keeping the mystery alive, or maybe that’s just part of the winning formula.

In the last thrilling match documented, Jemal’s finesse shone brightly, defeating a tough opponent after maneuvering through an Alapin Sicilian with precision and flair, forcing resignation before the clock could tick out. Checkmate for the fans!

Off the board? Jemal's tilt factor is a modest 8, meaning they keep their cool even when the game gets spicy—no dramatic flipping of the board here. With a blend of solid tactics, mental resilience, and a streak of that cheeky chess humor, Jemal Ovezdurdiyeva continues to delight and surprise the chess world.

In short: if you see Jojo_1608 coming for you in a blitz, better bring your A-game—or just accept that chess history is about to be rewritten.


Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Hi Jemal! 🎯 Quick overview

Your current peak in blitz stands at 2392 (2021-08-31), and your overall trend (see

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) shows that you score best in the late-evening sessions. That indicates you already have a solid base—let’s polish a few specific areas so you can push through to the next level.

What you are already doing well

  • Dynamic play against the Sicilian. Your Alapin set-ups consistently neutralise …c5 and often leave you with a pleasant pawn centre.
  • Conversion of material advantages. In several wins you simplified to rook+queen endgames and finished methodically—even with < 10 seconds left!
  • Spotting tactical shots. Moves such as 20.c4!! (vs Tbeary) show good awareness of counterplay ideas and not being afraid to open lines at the right moment.

Key improvement themes

  1. Early pawn pushes can back-fire
    Games versus BongKang and JoliyRoger reveal that pushing h- and g-pawns too soon leaves dark-square holes around your king. Before advancing side pawns ask: “Do I have enough pieces behind this pawn storm?” – Try delaying h4/g4 until you have both rooks connected and at least one knight ready to jump in. – Review the concept overextension; it will help you balance aggression with safety.
  2. Handling central tension in the King’s Indian structures
    In a few losses you released the centre too quickly with …dxc4 or …e5xd4. Instead, keep the pawn on d6/d7 until you’re fully developed. Study model games by Ding Liren where Black waits, then strikes with …e5 or …c5 under favourable circumstances.
  3. Piece coordination vs knight tours
    Several positions contained knights on the rim (Nb5–c7–d5, Ng5, etc.) that looked flashy but lacked backup. • Ask yourself after every knight leap: “Is this knight on an outpost or just en-prise next move?” • Drill the ‘knight-improvement’ exercise: place both knights in the centre within 7 plies before looking for tactics.
  4. Clock management
    Your median remaining time on move 25 is under 15 seconds (data: last 20 games). • Treat moves 10-20 as “buffer building” moves—play the established theory faster to bank time. • Practise 1-minute bullet once or twice a week purely for mouse-speed; it spills over positively into blitz.

Opening focus for the next two weeks

You playAgainstAction item
Alapin (c3 vs …c5)SicilianAdd 6.d4 cxd4 7.Bc4 ideas to repertoire; they scored 75 % in your sample.
Classical set-upPirc/ModernReplace early h4 with 5.Be2 & 6.0-0; study a short Kramnik video or book chapter.
Ruy LopezBerlin/ClosedMemorise the first 10 moves so you avoid early resignations; use chessable or flash-cards for quick reps.

Mini exercise (tactics & evaluation)

Take the position after 17…f6 in your loss vs BongKang and find three candidate moves for White. What is the objective evaluation after 18. fxg4? (Use a board or Lichess study; no engine for the first 5 minutes.)

Endgame nugget

Your technique is solid, but work on rook vs passed pawn themes (side-checks, building bridges). Nunn’s Practical Endgames chapters 2 & 5 are ideal; 20 minutes a day will do wonders.

Action plan summary

  • Week 1: Re-watch 3 instructive games on the Pirc where White keeps the centre intact.
  • Week 1-2: 20 tactics per day filtered for “double-attack” motifs.
  • Week 2: Play 15 blitz games without any early flank pawn pushes unless your computer opening book says it’s theory.
  • End of Week 2: Review performance via
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    and send me the two toughest positions you faced.

Keep the energy, refine the structure, and you’ll be eyeing 2400+ blitz in no time. Good luck, Jemal!



🆚 Opponent Insights

Most Played Opponents
djordanov 14W / 5L / 0D View Games
fmartinz 10W / 1L / 1D View Games
can_u_beat_me423 3W / 5L / 2D View Games
zloygepard 5W / 5L / 0D View Games
3jioumonstr 6W / 3L / 0D View Games

Rating

Year Bullet Blitz Rapid Daily
2021 2273 2384
2020 2292 2198 2129
2019 2007 2188
Rating by Year20192020202123842007YearRatingBulletBlitz

Stats by Year

Year White Black Moves
2021 20W / 24L / 1D 17W / 24L / 2D 77.7
2020 250W / 222L / 27D 228W / 242L / 17D 71.5
2019 346W / 273L / 28D 316W / 295L / 24D 69.4

Openings: Most Played

Blitz Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
King's Indian Defense 151 68 80 3 45.0%
Sicilian Defense: Najdorf Variation 128 62 60 6 48.4%
Sicilian Defense 75 47 26 2 62.7%
Australian Defense 56 31 21 4 55.4%
Sicilian Defense: Closed 55 28 24 3 50.9%
Nimzo-Indian Defense: Normal Variation 48 27 20 1 56.2%
QGD: 3.Nc3 Bb4 47 23 21 3 48.9%
QGD: 3.Nc3 Nf6 4.e3 47 28 16 3 59.6%
Amazon Attack: Siberian Attack 44 17 27 0 38.6%
Benko Gambit 38 20 16 2 52.6%
Bullet Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
King's Indian Defense 36 23 11 2 63.9%
Australian Defense 35 21 11 3 60.0%
Sicilian Defense: Najdorf Variation 31 14 16 1 45.2%
Sicilian Defense 22 13 9 0 59.1%
Sicilian Defense: Closed 17 7 9 1 41.2%
East Indian Defense 17 9 7 1 52.9%
Bird Opening: Dutch Variation, Batavo Gambit 16 12 3 1 75.0%
QGD: 3.Nc3 Nf6 4.e3 15 9 6 0 60.0%
QGD: 3.Nc3 Bb4 14 6 7 1 42.9%
Amar Gambit 13 9 4 0 69.2%

🔥 Streaks

Streak Longest Current
Winning 10 0
Losing 8 1
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