Quick summary for Harshit Ranjan Sahu
Nice work — your recent results show strong tactical play and excellent conversion ability. The big 6‑month jump proves you can improve fast. The 1‑month dip looks like form/time‑management noise rather than a lasting fall — a few focused habits will get you back on the upward track.
What you do well (keep doing these)
- Active piece play and tactical vision — you create threats with knight jumps and forcing sequences and often turn initiative into material or mate.
- Opening strength in certain systems — your win rates in Sicilian lines, Petrov and King’s Indian show you reach rich positions you understand well.
- Good conversion — when you get an edge you tend to simplify or press until the opponent cracks rather than letting the advantage evaporate.
- Versatility — handling both standard and Chess960 positions improves your pattern recognition and practical decision‑making in unfamiliar setups.
Key mistakes to fix
- Time management: several games show dangerous clock usage in complex moments. In blitz, a short scan for checks/captures/threats saves you a lot of blunders.
- Tactical oversights under pressure: you sometimes miss forks or discovered checks when the position simplifies — build a consistent pre‑move checklist.
- Pawn structure decisions: premature pawn grabs or advancing the wrong pawn opened your king in a few games. Prioritize king safety when creating pawn storms.
- Repertoire breadth vs depth: you have many successful lines, but in blitz pick 2–3 core systems to play confidently and save time thinking in the opening.
Concrete examples — one win and one loss
Win (good themes): in a recent Chess960 win you castled to safety, launched a kingside pawnstorm and used knight sacrifices to break open the enemy king — classic active piece + open file conversion.
Loss (what to watch): vs Matthias Bluebaum you allowed a decisive tactical sequence (a knight fork/check combined with rook activity) after several exchanges. The turning point came when the opponent gained tempo and forced a winning fork — run a quick CCT (checks/captures/threats) before every move to catch these.
Short checklist to use during each blitz game
- Before you move: 3 seconds to scan for checks, captures, threats (CCT).
- When ahead materially: trade pieces (not pawns) and keep one active piece to maintain threats.
- If under attack: prioritize king safety and active counterplay over passive waiting moves.
- Opening phase: have a 3–4 move plan (develop + one break). If unsure, play a simple developing move to save time.
4‑week blitz improvement plan (practical)
30–45 minutes daily. Focus on high‑impact drills:
- Week 1 — Tactics: 12 puzzles/day (forks, pins, discovered checks). Build the habit of CCT each move.
- Week 2 — Opening consolidation: pick 2 reliable weapons (one as White, one as Black) and learn typical middlegame plans to move 6.
- Week 3 — Play & review: 15 games of 3+2 or 5+3; review only decisive mistakes (limit 5 minutes/game review).
- Week 4 — Endgames: practice basic rook and king+pawn endgames plus common mating patterns; continue daily tactics (8–10 puzzles).
Weekly goal: cut blunder rate by ~25% and avoid losses on time.
Opening & repertoire advice
- Keep the systems that score well (Sicilian Closed, general Sicilian, Petrov, King’s Indian) but narrow choices for blitz so you play familiar middlegames quickly.
- Create a one‑page cheat sheet for each chosen line: main move orders, common pawn breaks, and 2 typical plans for both sides.
- Study typical tactical motifs that arise from your openings so you recognize them instantly in blitz.
Practical tactical drills
- 10 knight‑fork puzzles (try to solve visually without moving pieces).
- 10 pin/skewer puzzles to internalize when a piece is immobile.
- 5 back‑rank / luft drills so you automatically create escape squares when needed.
Mindset & tournament tips
- After a loss: take 60 seconds to reset — breathe, refocus on opening goals.
- If you go on a losing streak: switch to a slightly longer time control (5+3) to rebuild confidence.
- Use increment: in the last 10 moves deliberately slow down 5–8 seconds to avoid tactical misses.
Next steps this week
- 12 tactics/day for 7 days focused on forks and pins.
- Play 20 blitz games (3+2) and review 1–2 decisive mistakes per game.
- Pick one opening to simplify into a 1‑page cheat sheet; I can make it for you (tell me which opening to lock in).
Useful quick links
- Review the loss to Matthias Bluebaum to study the decisive tactical sequence.
- Openings you score well with: Petrov's Defense and King's Indian Defense — drill the core ideas for both.
- If you want, I can prepare a 7‑day tactics set and a 1‑page opening cheat sheet for your chosen lines — tell me which two openings to focus on.
Final encouragement
Your recent gains show you are capable of rapid improvement. Fix the small tactical/time leaks and your rating will stabilize at a higher level. Tell me which two openings you want to lock in and I’ll build a focused daily plan.