Coach Chesswick
Constructive Feedback for Karina Cyfka
What you are doing very well
- Dynamic Pawn Play. In several recent wins you willingly advance flank pawns (e.g. 16.a5 vs Pirc, 18.b5 vs Old-Indian) to seize space and create open files for your pieces. This courage to change the pawn structure is a clear strength.
- Conversion of the Initiative. Once you get the enemy king a little loose you keep pieces on the board and increase the pressure. The miniature against claudyna16 is a textbook illustration of playing with the initiative. See the critical fragment: .
- Handling of Minor-Piece Imbalances. Games such as your Dutch victory (double knights vs bishop pair) reveal confident decisions about which minor piece to trade and which to keep.
- Opening Variety. You alternate between 1.d4, 1.e4 and 1.Nf3 systems, making it harder for opponents to prepare.
Key areas to focus on next
- Time-Management in Fast Games. Your most recent loss was simply a flag after only three moves. Even in several wins you dipped below 10 seconds with a winning position on the board. A good rule of thumb: aim to keep at least 1 second per move in reserve for the final 15 moves. Try occasional 5 | 2 games to practise playing good moves quickly, not quick moves.
- Early-Middle-Game King Safety (Black). In three of the January losses to Kacparov your king came under heavy fire after ambitious pawn pushes (…h6 g6 or …f5 early). Consider adding one solid line to your repertoire: for example, in the Pirc you could test the 6…Nc6, 7…e6 setup rather than the immediate …c5 pawn break.
- Endgame Technique. The marathon vs Kacparov (A07, 80 moves) shows good defensive resilience but also missed chances to liquidate to a drawn king-and-pawn ending. Work on:
- Basic rook-vs-rook & pawn endings (side checks, checking distance).
- “Cutting-off” the opposing king before pushing your passed pawn.
Opening-specific observations
| Opening | Comment | Actionable Tip |
|---|---|---|
| Pirc (Austrian Attack) | You score well with 4.f4 & 5.Nf3 but sometimes allow …Nc6-d4 counterplay. | After 9.e5 Nd5 10.Nxd5 Qxd5, consider 11.Be4! to cut the queen off the kingside. |
| Dutch (Raphael) | Your Nb6-a8! idea was excellent. Black’s main resource is …d4 break. | Add the prophylactic plan Re1, f3, e4 to be ready for the centre clash. |
| Old-Indian / Ukrainian Defence | You often meet …c5 with d5, grabbing space. Be sure the resulting e4-square is covered. | Try placing a knight on d3 (as in your win vs gliglu) more routinely. |
Practical training plan
- 90-minute weekly session: Analyse two of your own blitz games with an engine, but only after you first write down what you were calculating during the game.
- Tactics warm-up: 20 puzzles at 3-minute limit before entering the playing pool—this will improve both pattern recognition and clock handling.
- Endgame ladder: Work through 10 positions each from “100 Endgames You Must Know” that feature rook & pawn vs rook.
- Opening refresh: Build a micro-file (max 15 moves) for each of your Black defences where the king castle pattern is crystal-clear; revisit before every rapid event.
Progress trackers
Keep an eye on these widgets inside your Chess.com stats page:
- – see if late-night sessions correlate with flag losses.
- – identify “tired days” and schedule lighter training.
- Your current blitz high: 2760 (2020-03-29). Challenge yourself to add +30 points by combining the time-management tweaks above.
Encouragement
You are winning decisive games against 2500-rated opponents with tactical flair. A modest investment in clock discipline and endgame confidence will convert many of your near-misses into victories. Keep the fighting spirit, and good luck in your next tournaments!