Avatar of Anas Hazem

Anas Hazem

Username: l_lilil_l

Location: العراق

Playing Since: 2025-01-27 (Active)

Wow Factor: ♟♟♟♟

Chess.com

Daily: 400
0W / 1L / 0D
Rapid: 657
147W / 147L / 13D
Blitz: 427
470W / 478L / 31D
Bullet: 477
35W / 45L / 1D

Anas Hazem: The Chessboard Biologist

Meet Anas Hazem, a player whose chess career is as dynamic and evolving as a living cell under the microscope. With a 2025 rapid rating peaking at a healthy 828 and a blitz max rating soaring to 634, Anas maneuvers through the game’s complex structures with the finesse of a seasoned biologist dissecting molecular mysteries.

His playing style is a fascinating study—a remarkable endgame frequency of 57.6% hints at his endurance, patiently cultivating advantages like a cell growing stronger through mitosis. Anas’s tactical awareness displays impressive adaptability, boasting a 67% comeback rate and a perfect 100% win rate after losing a piece—clearly, he knows how to regenerate his strategy even after a setback, proving that sometimes losing a neuron only makes the brain smarter.

Favorites like the French Defense Knight Variation and the Van't Kruijs Opening showcase his ability to evolve on the board, with win rates often above 60%, a place where his opponents can find themselves caught in cellular traps.

Despite a tilt factor of 8, Anas keeps his calm in most situations, rarely resigning early (just 2.75%). His average game lengths—about 57 moves when winning and nearly 60 in losses—indicate a player who lives life on the edge of the petri dish, carefully orchestrating every move until the cell divides decisively in his favor.

Off the board, Anas's opponent records reveal some rivalries and alliances. He has crushed some foes with 100% win rates and faced challenges others overcame—like a wild ecosystem where only the fittest pieces survive. Around the clock, his performance peaks around late afternoon and evening, with a remarkable 66.7% win rate at 6 AM—talk about an early riser thriving in the morning dew of competition!

In summary, Anas Hazem is a chess player whose game is a living organism—flexible, resilient, and constantly adapting. He may be dissecting your defenses before you even realize they’ve folded, but hey, that’s just part of this grand biological chess experiment.


Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Hi Anas — quick summary of the recent rapid games

Nice run: you converted several clean wins and showed a knack for attacking the enemy king and promoting pawns. Your recent opponents (for example waar444) gave you practical chances and you took them. Your Rating is up (about +27 recently) — that’s progress. Below I highlight what you’re doing well and practical, focused improvements to keep that climb going.

What you’re doing well

  • Strong attacking instinct — you look for forcing moves and checks (examples: the successful knight/queen sacrifices and successful pawn storms).
  • Conversion technique when you get a material edge — you pushed passed pawns, promoted, and used the new queen effectively to finish the game.
  • Good pattern recognition in middlegame tactics (forks, discovered checks) — you create multiple threats and your opponents often crack.
  • Solid opening repertoire choices for fast games — you frequently reach dynamic positions from lines like the Italian Game and aggressive French lines, which fit your attacking style.
  • Resilience: you keep fighting in long endgames instead of quick resigns, which is how you net extra points.

Key areas to improve (concrete, prioritized)

Work on these in order — they’ll give the highest immediate return in rapid games.

  • King safety early and midgame: some losses came after your king became exposed (or you launched a premature attack that left your king vulnerable). Before committing to a sacrifice/checking sequence, confirm your own king is safe or you have enough compensation.
  • Watch pawn promotions and passed pawn defense: in a loss you faced a promoted enemy queen that created decisive mating nets. Practice stopping connected passed pawns and trading when necessary to remove promotion threats.
  • Back-rank and mating-net awareness: avoid leaving your back rank open and watch for tactics that exploit limited king escape squares. Simple luft or moving a rook can often prevent a deadly tactic.
  • Simplify when clearly ahead: when you have a material advantage, trade down to a won endgame instead of hunting extra complications that give chances back to the opponent.
  • Time management in critical moments: you play many winning sequences — don’t rush in complex positions. Use your increment to take one extra second to double-check tactics (especially before sacrifices).
  • Selective opening cleanup: you play many games in the French and Italian/central openings — tidy up a couple of typical move orders so you don’t drift into passive positions or allow tactical shot-lines from opponents. Review common reply sequences to your favorite gambits and defenses (for example, refresh key ideas in the Petrov's Defense).

Specific examples & short notes from the recent games

  • Win: you converted a passed g‑pawn into a queen and finished with precise checks and king activity — excellent endgame technique and awareness to escort the pawn to promotion.
  • Loss: you gave up a lot of kingside shelter earlier and the opponent converted with a promotion and mating threats. That game highlights the promotion-defense point above.
  • Recurring motif: you’re comfortable with tactical sacrifices (Nxf7, Bxh8 etc.). Keep doing them — but add one clear verification step: "If I take this, can my king be checked or mated?"

Practical training plan (next two weeks)

  • Daily: 15–20 tactic puzzles (focus: mates, forks, promotion-defense, back-rank tactics).
  • Every other day: one 15+10 rapid game where you force yourself to pause 2–3 seconds extra on every sacrifice or unclear tactic.
  • Two short endgame drills: king + pawn vs king, queen vs rook with pawn promotion races — 10 positions each, practice until you convert or hold reliably.
  • Weekly review: annotate 3 of your recent games (one win, one loss, one close) — write the turning moment and one alternative move you should have considered.
  • Openings: pick 2 main lines you play (eg. Italian Game and a main reply vs ...e6) and study 5 typical move orders and the tactical traps for each side.

Micro-checklist you can use during a game

  • Before any sacrifice: do I see all checks, captures and promotions next 3 moves?
  • Have I secured an escape square for my king (luft or king step)?
  • If I trade queens now, does the resulting endgame favor me or the opponent?
  • Who has the passed pawn(s)? Can I stop promotion with my king or pieces?
  • Do I have time to calculate this? If not, simplify or make a safe waiting move.

Replay one of the recent wins

Go over this quick win to see how you create and convert threats. Replay the moves and stop at each capture and promotion to ask "Why did that move work?"

Final encouragement & next milestone

Your Strength Adjusted Win Rate (~49.8%) and recent +27 rating change show you're improving. Target for the next month: +50–75 rating points by tightening king safety and endgame defense. Keep the attacking style — couple it with the checklist above and you’ll turn more of your promising positions into wins.

If you want, I can:

  • Annotate one of the loss games move‑by‑move and show safer lines.
  • Create a 2‑week tactics + endgame schedule tailored to your openings.
  • Run a short opening cheat‑sheet for your two main lines.

Which would you like next?



🆚 Opponent Insights

Recent Opponents
rhysyuna 1W / 0L / 0D View
arezooasgharzadeh 0W / 1L / 0D View
carthagodelendachess 1W / 0L / 0D View
ilovechess12567676123 0W / 1L / 0D View
aniem-riri 0W / 1L / 0D View
choppa7272 1W / 0L / 0D View
md-066 0W / 1L / 0D View
huraaaaa22 0W / 1L / 0D View
canucksfan19 0W / 1L / 0D View
ila01010 1W / 0L / 0D View
Most Played Opponents
wealthykyro 3W / 10L / 1D View Games
waar444 6W / 1L / 1D View Games
elyreb 4W / 3L / 0D View Games
el_papi_hm 4W / 1L / 1D View Games
Raaffffffff 2W / 4L / 0D View Games

Rating

Year Bullet Blitz Rapid Daily
2025 477 471 657 400

Stats by Year

Year White Black Moves
2025 338W / 319L / 23D 312W / 343L / 23D 58.4

Openings: Most Played

Blitz Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
French Defense 173 91 80 2 52.6%
Scandinavian Defense 79 32 44 3 40.5%
Barnes Defense 45 20 23 2 44.4%
French Defense: Advance Variation 44 16 25 3 36.4%
Amar Gambit 41 18 22 1 43.9%
Blackburne Shilling Gambit 40 17 22 1 42.5%
Elephant Gambit 40 25 12 3 62.5%
Scotch Game 38 19 19 0 50.0%
Amazon Attack 36 18 15 3 50.0%
Philidor Defense 31 12 18 1 38.7%
Bullet Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
French Defense 12 5 7 0 41.7%
Scandinavian Defense 8 2 6 0 25.0%
Elephant Gambit 6 4 2 0 66.7%
Amar Gambit 5 2 2 1 40.0%
Italian Game: Two Knights Defense, Fegatello Attack, Leonhardt Variation 4 1 3 0 25.0%
French Defense: Exchange Variation 3 2 1 0 66.7%
Amazon Attack 3 0 3 0 0.0%
Scotch Game 3 1 2 0 33.3%
Barnes Defense 3 1 2 0 33.3%
Caro-Kann Defense 3 2 1 0 66.7%
Rapid Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
French Defense 69 33 33 3 47.8%
Blackburne Shilling Gambit 22 12 9 1 54.5%
Amar Gambit 18 9 9 0 50.0%
Elephant Gambit 14 7 6 1 50.0%
Scandinavian Defense 14 5 9 0 35.7%
Philidor Defense 13 6 7 0 46.1%
Petrov's Defense 10 4 5 1 40.0%
French Defense: Advance Variation 10 4 6 0 40.0%
Barnes Defense 10 6 4 0 60.0%
Amazon Attack 9 3 6 0 33.3%
Daily Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Bishop's Opening: 3.d3 1 0 1 0 0.0%

🔥 Streaks

Streak Longest Current
Winning 8 1
Losing 8 0
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