Quick summary
Nice work — you’re still finding clean tactics and active piece play in blitz, and your opening choices give you practical chances. Recent wins show good tactical awareness (a decisive knight sacrifice and an exchange sac that unlocked the king). Your losses are mostly time-related or endgame slips, so the biggest easy wins come from cleaning up time management and a few recurring technical weaknesses.
Recent game to review (highlight)
Win vs Rafael Ventura dos Santos — instructive tactical conversion. Open the replay and step through the turning points below.
- Replay:
- Key moments to replay slowly: the knight sacrifice on the kingside (Nxf7) and the exchange sac Rxe6 that cleared lines to the opposing king.
What you did well
- Active piece play — rooks and queen quickly went to invading squares (classic blitz plan: activate heavy pieces and punish a loose king).
- Tactical vision — you spotted and executed decisive combinations (forks and sacrifices) rather than trying to grind in a closed way.
- Opening selection gives practical imbalances — your wins often come from complicated middlegames where you out-tactical opponents (see performance in Sicilian Defense: Alapin Variation and Four Knights Game).
- Willingness to simplify when ahead — you convert material/tactical edges instead of letting complications linger.
Where you should focus (high impact)
These are the recurring themes from the recent games and your stats:
- Time management / Zeitnot: multiple games ended with time losses. In blitz, keep an eye on the clock — slow moves that are “only okay” cost you more than a small inaccuracy. Practice quick decision rules (see drills below).
- Endgame technique: when the middlegame simplifies you sometimes miss a safe conversion route or let counterplay develop. Drill basic rook endgames and queen vs rook endings — these return often in blitz.
- Opening consistency: your WinRate in the Caro-Kann Defense is lower relative to other lines. If you play it often, refresh the typical pawn breaks and target plans rather than memorizing only move orders.
- Avoid unnecessary exchanges when you need attacking chances — sometimes you liquidate into passive positions against active opponents.
Concrete, short-term plan (2–4 weeks)
- Daily (15–20 min): tactics trainer — focus on pattern recognition (forks, pins, discovered attacks). Aim for 30 mixed puzzles per day with increasing speed.
- 3× per week (20–30 min): endgame drills — rook vs rook basics, lucena/phalanx ideas, and simple queen vs rook defense. Use very short drills and repeat the same positions until automatic.
- 2× per week (30–40 min): game review — pick your last 6 losses and wins. For each, write down the one moment where the evaluation swung and what alternative you would play next time.
- Weekly (one session): opening tune-up — pick 1 weakness (start with Caro-Kann Defense). Study 5 model games or 10 key positions and the typical pawn breaks and piece placements.
Practical blitz tips (apply in next 10 games)
- When below 30 seconds: simplify decision tree — choose safe developing moves rather than searching for the “perfect” refutation.
- Set small benchmarks on the clock (e.g., by move 10 you should have >1:40). If you fall behind, switch to a faster but safer mode of play.
- Use checks, captures, threats checklist: before each move ask “Does opponent have a forcing tactic?” That one question prevents many hanging pieces or oversights.
- Pre-move sensibly: only pre-move when captures are forced or when you’re sure there’s no tactic. Pre-moves can win time but lose games in complicated positions (avoid in tactical middlegames).
Game-specific notes (from the recent set)
- Win vs Rafael_Ventura — excellent exploitation of a king left in the center; the exchange sac Rxe6 and follow-up showed good calculation. Keep practicing similar attacker patterns (battery, back-rank motifs).
- Loss vs KesOdy — ended on time. The position showed you were fighting for counterplay but ran out of clock. Work on finishing technique under severe time pressure: practice 3|0 and 1|0 with the focus on simple plans.
- Loss vs really65 — also a time loss. Your middlegame was fine but the clock lost you the last phase. Make the clock part of your routine (glance at it with every move).
Short drill list (do these today)
- 10 tactics (3 minutes) — focus on forks and discovered attacks.
- 5 rook endgame positions — win/hold exercises (10 minutes).
- Analyze one lost game: identify the single better move you missed and why.
Checklist before you queue for blitz
- Set a concrete clock goal (e.g., keep >50% of starting time until move 20).
- Decide which opening you’ll use and a one-line anti-surprise plan.
- Plan to spend less than 10s per move in quiet positions; save time for tactics and endgames.
Notes on long-term trends
Your Strength Adjusted Win Rate (~0.494) and recent rating trend (small ups and downs) show you’re at a high level where small improvements (time management + endgames) will give outsized gains. With a focused 4‑week plan you should see a measurable uptick in blitz consistency.
Want me to do a deeper post‑mortem?
Send 2–3 game links (losses you felt confused about or wins you want to understand more). I can produce a short annotated analysis with 3 critical positions and suggested alternatives.
- Example opponents from this batch: Rafael Ventura dos Santos, kesody, really65.