Avatar of JustinMatthieu

JustinMatthieu

Since 2011 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟
48.4%- 48.2%- 3.5%
Bullet 1293
3670W 3768L 160D
Blitz 1403
10248W 10369L 902D
Rapid 1029
405W 454L 32D
Daily 1033
2964W 2618L 139D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Executive snapshot

Your recent blitz play shows a healthy willingness to dive into sharp positions and calculate quickly under pressure. You’ve demonstrated the ability to convert complex middlegame chances into wins, and you also faced some sharp challenges in losses and a drawn game that stayed dynamic. Over the longer term, your rating trend is positive, suggesting steady improvement with continued practice and review.

What you do well

  • You actively seek complications when you have the initiative, which can unbalance opponents and create winning chances in blitz.
  • Your calculation in tactical melees is strong enough to spot forcing lines and to follow through with concrete sequences.
  • You show good piece activity and king safety in middlegames when you’re pressed for time, keeping pressure on your opponent.
  • Your openings lean toward sharp, aggressive setups (for example, when you employ aggressive lines you’re comfortable with), which can yield quick wins if your follow‑up stays precise.

Areas to improve

  • Time management under blitz. A few games indicate you expend too much time on a promising tactical idea and then run low on time for the rest of the move sequence. Build a simple time budget: quick checks on threats early, reserve deeper calculation for only the most forcing lines.
  • Endgame conversion. In longer blitz themes, you sometimes enter murky endgames. Practice standard rook endings, king activity in rook endings, and straightforward pawn endings to convert advantages more reliably.
  • Blunder avoidance and pattern recognition. Review games to catch recurring blunders in the opening and middlegame, especially when you’re balancing tactical pressure with material decisions.
  • Opening resilience. While your aggressive choices work, add a few solid, quieter responses to common defenses so you’re not forced into overly sharp lines every game.

Opening focus and plan

Your openings indicate a comfort with tactical, head‑line play. That’s a strength, but pairing it with a compact, reliable secondary repertoire can reduce risk when you’re low on time. Consider the following:

  • Choose 1–2 reliable replies to the most common defenses in your main openings and study their typical middlegame plans.
  • Develop a simple endgame transition plan for your preferred openings so you can convert a middlegame edge into a win more smoothly.
  • In blitz, prefer a straightforward plan over improvising too deeply in the opening unless you’re confident in the resulting middlegame structure.

Progress and trends

Your rating gains over 1 month, 3 months, 6 months, and 12 months reflect positive momentum. Maintain this by keeping a regular review routine and implementing small, measurable improvements after each session.

Recommended practice plan (2 weeks)

  • Daily tactical puzzles (10–15 minutes) focused on common blitz motifs and mating nets you’ve encountered recently.
  • Two opening study sessions per week: drill your main aggressive openings against common defenses, then practice a safer, solid alternative to balance risk.
  • Endgame practice (3–4 sessions per week): rook endings, king and pawn endings, and basic minor‑piece endgames.
  • Post‑game reviews: analyze one win and one loss/draw each session to identify at least one blunder to avoid and one strategic improvement to apply.
  • Time‑management drills: play a 15+2 blitz with a focus on keeping a steady pace, then review how time was spent on critical moves.

Report a Problem