Coach Chesswick
Hi José Martínez (Jospem)!
First, congratulations on maintaining a world-class Blitz rating of 3184 (2024-09-03). Your recent streak of four straight wins in the Arena Kings (see
) shows that your form is still lethal. Below is a concise, practical road-map that should translate into a few extra Elo and—more importantly—cleaner games.1. What’s Working
- Dynamic piece play. In every victory you seized the initiative quickly (e.g. 20.Ba3! versus Alikhan Khazhatuly, or 18.f4! v. Jeromino Real Pareyra). Your pieces land on outposts before opponents can coordinate.
- Resourceful defence. The win against blitzopenings64 shows trademark resilience—Kf8-Kg8-Kh7 hut-hut-hut until the counter-attack landed.
- Killer instinct with limited time. Several mates/resignations occurred while you still had >50 s on the clock. When the win is “in hand” you finish efficiently.
2. Immediate Improvement Priorities
- Time-management in equal/unclear endings.
• Both losses to Stelian-Marian Busuioc and Yoseph Theolifus Taher were flagged positions.
• After move 35 your pace slowed to ≈1.8 s/move while the opponent maintained <1 s.
Action: When material is balanced but the queens are off, switch to “increment mode”: commit to max 2s/move until a clear, forced line appears. - Opening experiment discipline.
• 1…a5 2…a4 (loss to Gianmarco Leiva) and early …Rb8 vs. 2700+ opposition gave away full points before move 15.
Action: Save off-beat weapons for lower-rated opponents or bullet. Against peers, stick to your proven Najdorf, Modern, and Caro structures. - Queen-side pawn breaks vs. f-pawn storms.
• In the Sicilian French set-up vs. yosephtaher, f5-g5-g4 arrived with no counter on c5/d5.
Action: Integrate an automatic …h6/…g6 prevention plan or counter-strike in the centre with …d5 three tempi sooner.
3. Opening Lab Checklist
| Colour | Critical Line | Repair Idea |
|---|---|---|
| White | Four Knights 1.e4 e5 4.h3 Be7 5.d4 exd4 6.Nxd4 | Switch to 4.Bb5 forcing …Bb4 5.O-O |
| Black | London System 7…Qb6 8.Rb1 Bb4 9.Qd1 Ne4?! | Adopt 8…dxc4 9.Bxc4 Nd7 & …e5 plan |
| Black | Modern 4.h4 h5 9…b4 13…Ba6 | Insert …c5 earlier; meet h4 with …Nc6-e5-c4 |
4. Middlegame Themes to Drill
- Conversion vs. passed h-/a-pawns – Both sides of the board show up in your PGNs. A 30-min endgame session on “rook + passer vs. rook” would pay off immediately.
- Exchange sacs for initiative. When behind in development you already like …Rxc3 or Rxf3 ideas—keep refining the calculation speed. Use Puzzle Rush settings with “Piece Sacrifice” filter.
- Quiet zugzwang squeezes. Practice positions where the win is positional, not tactical, to avoid burning time hunting for a knockout that isn’t there. (zugzwang)
5. On-the-Clock Technique
Average remaining time when you won: 56 s
Average remaining time when you lost: 12 s
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Practical tip: The moment you dip under 30 s, simplify if you are better; bail out to a repetition if not.
6. Suggested Weekly Routine (90 min)
- 15 min – Opening memory: one thematic line per side with the board hidden.
- 30 min – Fast-clock sparring 3 + 0 vs. engine set to 2700. Abort after move 30 and analyse the time-usage graph.
- 15 min – Endgame flashcards: rook + passer, opposite-colour bishops.
- 30 min – Puzzle Rush Survival focusing on >35-40 scores; stop the run the first time you drop below 5 s on the clock.
7. Quick Motivation Clip
Replay the decisive sequence 31…Rxb2 32.Bxd8? from the Gianmarco_es game and imagine converting that position with +3. One tactical alert saves a full game.
Final Word
Your ceiling is still climbing, José. Trim the experimental openings in serious blitz, keep the clock discipline, and the next rating jump is inevitable. Good luck in the next Arena Kings—see you on the leaderboard!