Avatar of Gergely Kantor

Gergely Kantor GM

KantorGergely Budapest Since 2017 (Inactive) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟
52.6%- 34.5%- 12.8%
Bullet 2818
95W 56L 7D
Blitz 2871
85W 45L 26D
Rapid 2511
29W 36L 18D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Overall focus for your rapid improvement

Your recent rapid games show a strong fighting spirit and comfort with tactical, sharp positions. You often press when the position invites it and you coordinate heavy pieces well in attacking setups. At the same time, you sometimes drift into situations where the plan isn’t clear or where time pressure leads to avoidable mistakes. The goal now is to convert your initiative into consistent value and reduce fluctuations in results through structured practice and post-game learning.

What you are doing well

  • You pursue active piece play and look for concrete middle-game plans when your opponent cooperates with the right structure.
  • You show resilience in complex positions, keeping pressure and creating practical chances even when material balance is uncertain.
  • You are comfortable as Black in solid, principled openings and can steer the game toward favorable middlegame themes when the opponent missteps.

Key areas to improve

  • Time management in complex middlegames. Allocate a clear thinking budget for critical phases and avoid spending excessive time on routine moves; practice making safe, principled decisions under time pressure.
  • Plan development after the opening phase. In many games, establishing a concrete plan tied to pawn structure and piece placement helps you avoid drifting into unfocused tactical battles.
  • Endgame conversion and simplification. Improve readiness to simplify when ahead and practice rook and minor-piece endings to convert advantages more reliably.
  • Opening repertoire stability. Build a compact, flexible set of lines that lead to playable middlegames with clear strategic ideas, reducing cognitive load in rapid events.

Concrete training plan

  • Daily 15–20 minute tactical drill focusing on common motifs (forks, pins, skewers, overloaded pieces) to sharpen pattern recognition under time pressure.
  • Endgame practice 2–3 times per week with rook endings and king activity focus. Use set goals (e.g., achieve a rook ending with a pawn to spare) to build technique.
  • Post-game review routine: after each rapid game, write down three critical moments and one change you would make in the same position. Track progress over a two-week cycle.
  • Convert an opening plan into a simple, repeatable sequence. For example, refine a solid Caro-Kann/Queen’s Gambit family for Black and a flexible English/Queen’s Pawn approach for White.

Opening notes and practical suggestions

Your recent games indicate you find you can generate dynamic chances from several solid setups. To reduce risk and time pressure in rapid events, aim for a compact, predictable repertoire and plan-oriented middlegames.

  • Black: consider reliable, solid families such as Caro-Kann or Queen’s Gambit Declined, which tend to yield clear plans and reduce early decision fatigue.
  • White: prefer flexible setups like the English or Queen’s Pawn structures that keep options open and reduce memorization load.
  • Keep a short opening cheat sheet with 2–3 key ideas per line and a few candidate responses to typical middlegame questions (pawn breaks, minor-piece maneuvers, and pressure on the center or back rank).

For quick reference during training, you can explore resources like Caro-Kann Defense and Queen's Gambit Declined to reinforce solid plans without getting bogged down in theory.

Profile reference for easy navigation: KantorGergely.

Encouraging note and next steps

You are already competing at a high level with clear willingness to fight for advantages. By tightening time management, solidifying a compact opening repertoire, and embracing a disciplined post-game analysis routine, you can convert more of your sharp opportunities into wins and reduce avoidable losses in rapid events. Set a weekly schedule that includes a focused opening study, a dedicated endgame session, and a structured game-analysis block.


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