Avatar of Maksim Ermakov

Maksim Ermakov NM

komikaoxid Москва Since 2017 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟
47.0%- 44.7%- 8.3%
Daily 800 1W 0L 0D
Rapid 2383 36W 15L 6D
Blitz 2768 1705W 1709L 319D
Bullet 2602 183W 107L 14D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick overview

Nice block of games — you’re creating chances, converting complicated endgames and still showing a healthy win rate against strong opposition. Recent rating trends show small gains over 1–3 months and a positive strength-adjusted win rate (~52%), so your practical play is working. Below are concrete takeaways from your most recent win and most recent loss plus a short training plan.

Win — highlights (vs nataikuai)

Key strengths shown in the win:

  • You play actively: rooks and queen penetrated the enemy position, creating perpetual threats and forcing concessions.
  • Good use of passed pawns and king activity in the long endgame — you turned activity into concrete threats and kept the opponent short on time.
  • When tension rose you chose simplifying trades that increased your practical chances (exchanging into a favorable queen + pawn/rook ending).

Concrete moments to remember:

  • Advance the kingside pawns to open lines (the g- and f-pawn play) and then use rooks on the open files — this paid off.
  • A sequence of checks and queen maneuvers kept the opponent tied down and eventually won on time — good practical play under blitz clock pressure.

Replay the game (key moments):

Loss — what went wrong (vs Bartlomiej Heberla)

The decisive game ended with a mating net. The loss highlights a few recurring issues worth fixing:

  • Tactical oversights near move 41–43: after Rxa2 you allowed White a decisive infiltration (Qxd5+ and Rf8#). Watch for back-rank and mating patterns when your queen/major pieces are off the back rank.
  • Pawn pushes and structure: early pawn advances on the queenside left holes and gave White targets (the a-file invasion and subsequent tactics).
  • Timing of exchanges: several exchanges opened lines to your king — be cautious when simplifying if the opponent gets open files toward your monarch.

Replay the decisive sequence:

Recurring patterns I see

  • Strengths: You create imbalances and are comfortable converting in long queen/rook endgames. Good at translating activity into practical chances (flag wins or time-pressure wins).
  • Weaknesses: Occasional tactical lapses when under time pressure and sometimes lax king safety after pawn advances on the flank.
  • Opening profile: Your best results are in the London Poisoned Pawn and Australian Defense lines — lean into the ideas there rather than memorizing move orders. Your Alapin/Sicilian results suggest mixed handling of dynamic pawn-structure positions.

Concrete training plan (4-week cycle)

Focus on high-impact, time-efficient work for blitz improvement.

  • Daily (20–30 min): Tactics — 200 problems/week, emphasize pattern recognition for pins, skewers, back-rank mates and queen forks. Time each set to simulate blitz pressure.
  • 3×/week (30–45 min): Rapidly review 2–3 opening lines you play most (London Poisoned Pawn, Australian Defense). Learn the typical middlegame plans and pawn breaks — aim for plans, not move memorization.
  • 2×/week (20 min): Short endgame drills — basic rook + pawn vs rook, king + pawn endgames and queen vs rook basics. You convert activity into wins often — make it reliable in low time.
  • Weekly (post-session): Review 3 lost games (including the loss vs Bartlomiej Heberla). Identify the single tactical miss and one strategic error per game; add a one-line note to fix it.
  • Blitz-specific habit: in the last 10 seconds avoid speculative moves — ask yourself: “Is my king safe? Am I hanging material? Any direct mate?”

Practical checklist — apply every game

  • Before each move: check for checks, captures and threats (3-second scan).
  • Avoid speeding when your opponent has active heavy pieces — spend a few extra seconds securing the back rank and escape squares.
  • When simplifying into an endgame, evaluate piece activity and pawn structure first — don’t trade into a passive king position.

Next steps & quick drills

  • Drill 1: 10 back-rank puzzles under a 5–6 second average per puzzle (improves awareness vs mates like the one you suffered).
  • Drill 2: Play 8 rapid games (10+3) focusing only on two openings — don’t change the repertoire during the set.
  • Post-game: save one loss and one win and annotate three moments: best move, mistake, alternative plan.
  • Want me to annotate the loss vs Bartlomiej Heberla move-by-move? I can create a short annotated replay of the critical sequence.

Motivation & closing

Your rating history shows sustained elite-level play and the ability to bounce back. Small targeted work on tactics, back-rank awareness and opening plans will convert many of those close losses into wins. Keep the training focused and measurable — a few minutes a day adds up quickly.

If you want, I can:

  • Annotate the two full games move-by-move with alternative plans.
  • Build a 2-week tactics set tailored to the patterns that cost you (back-rank, forks, discovered checks).
  • Produce a short opening cheat-sheet for your top three lines (London Poisoned Pawn, Australian Defense, Alapin).

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