Avatar of Aleksandr Devaev

Aleksandr Devaev FM

JoliyRoger Since 2020 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟
44.5%- 49.8%- 5.7%
Rapid 2512 2W 0L 0D
Blitz 2607 1481W 1689L 192D
Bullet 2432 82W 62L 8D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

What’s going well and how you’re growing

You’ve shown solid momentum in bullet chess, with notable strength in a compact, strategic Colle System setup (Rhamphorhynchus Variation) and in Queen’s Indian Defense structures. Your latest practice indicates you’re building a cohesive, coordinated middlegame plan from solid openings, and you’re able to convert favorable positions into wins when the tactics line up. Your rating trend over several periods also points to steady improvement, which is a good sign that your overall approach is working.

  • You handle Colle System ideas very effectively, maintaining good pawn structure and piece activity, which helps you press in the middlegame and create winning chances.
  • Your Queen’s Indian/Queen’s Indian Defense setups (for example the 3.Nc3 Nf6 4.e3 line) show solid development and a stable center, giving you clean middlegame plans.
  • In several games you found concrete, decisive chances in the late middlegame, leading to clean finishes when you gain material or create mating threats.

Openings performance highlights and what to focus on

  • Colle System (Rhamphorhynchus Variation) is a clear strength. Keep this in your core repertoire and deepen your understanding of plan ideas like timely central breaks and development with a compact king’s safety.
  • Queen’s Indian Defense family (notably 3.Nc3 Nf6 4.e3) shows strong structure. Continue refining the move order that leads to solid central control and flexible middlegame plans.
  • King’s Indian Defense: Larsen Variation has a respectable win rate but is less consistent. It’s worth keeping as a secondary option while you strengthen your main lines.
  • Caro-Kann Defense line variants (including Panov Attack) show mixed results. Consider narrowing your focus to a couple of trustworthy lines within Caro-Kann or substituting with a more comfortable opening if the current lines feel too risky in practice.
  • English Opening variants (including the English Opening: Caro-Kann Defensive System and Agincourt Defense) show variance in results. If you enjoy these, choose one or two go-to ideas and drill them against common responses to build familiarity.
  • QGD: 3.Nc3 Nf6 4.e3 style appears very solid. If you’re comfortable, reinforce this approach and study typical middlegame motifs that arise from this structure.

Tip: you don’t need to memorize every line. aim to stabilize two or three openings you enjoy (for example Colle System and Queen’s Indian) and build a clear plan for the middlegame from each, so you’re not reacting move-by-move.

Placeholder for openings reference: Queen’s Indian Defense

What to work on in practice

  • Stabilize your top-performing openings: Colle System and Queen’s Indian Defense lines. Create a concise study pack that includes common middlegame plans, typical pawn breaks, and a few ready-made responses to the most frequent opponent tries.
  • Endgame readiness: after simplifying into rook endgames or minor-piece endgames, practise clear plan execution—activate the king, convert passed pawns, and avoid unnecessary perpetual checks.
  • Tactics pattern recognition: focus on motifs that arise in these structures, such as back-rank ideas, common minor-piece trades that improve your king safety, and efficient use of the e-file and c-file in the Colle/Queen’s Indian structures.
  • Time management: your games show you sometimes run low on time. Develop a consistent time budget per move and rely on the increment to maintain safety in the critical middlegame. Practice with a timer to simulate tournament conditions.

Practical plan for the next 4 weeks

  • Week 1: Deepen Colle System (Rhamphorhynchus Variation). Create a one-page reference of typical middlegame ideas and 2-3 key pawn-tawn breaks. Play 6 focused games against common responses to test the ideas.
  • Week 2: Strengthen Queen’s Indian Defense line (3.Nc3 Nf6 4.e3). Add 2-3 practice games per day focusing on maintaining a solid center and practicing the planned middlegame motifs.
  • Week 3: Pick one Caro-Kann line (Panov or another comfortable variant) and drill the typical middlegame plans. Pair with 2 short tactical sessions to keep your pattern recognition sharp.
  • Week 4: Review and consolidate. Replay the week’s games, note recurring mistakes, and refine your two main openings. Set a concrete goal such as increasing your win rate in your top two openings by a comfortable margin and reducing avoidable blunders in the middlegame.

Next steps and encouragement

Your momentum is real. By consolidating a small, strong opening repertoire and reinforcing endgame technique, you can sustain and accelerate your improvement. Keep leveraging your strengths in Colle System and Queen’s Indian structures, and keep the practice focused on the patterns that repeatedly arise in those lines.

Profile reference: aleksandr_devaev


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