Avatar of lazzyy_boy

lazzyy_boy

Playing Since: 2024-03-20 (Active)

Wow Factor: ♟♟♟♟

Chess.com

Rapid: 832
693W / 650L / 56D
Blitz: 458
171W / 169L / 11D
Bullet: 188
342W / 345L / 9D

lazzyy_boy: The Journey of a Passionate Chess Competitor

Rising through the ranks with determination and keen insight, lazzyy_boy has become known in the chess world for his dynamic performances and consistent improvement. From a strong start in 2024 to a significant leap in 2025, his rapid ratings soared from modest beginnings to an impressive 926, showcasing his commitment to the art of the game.

Competing in rapid, bullet, and blitz formats, lazzyy_boy has displayed remarkable versatility. His rapid battles feature a closely contested record with hard-fought wins and losses — a testament to his resilience on the board. In the faster formats, his aggressive yet thoughtful play shines through, combining sharp tactical awareness with a controlled yet ambitious style.

His opening repertoire is vast and diverse. Whether steering the game with the Scandinavian Defense, exploring the depths of the Queens Pawn openings, or testing less conventional ideas, lazzyy_boy embraces complexity. His performances in specific lines — such as the high win rates in some Scandinavian variations and the clever use of the Accelerated London System — reflect a player who meticulously prepares and adapts his strategies.

Beyond raw skills and preparation, his statistical profile tells a deeper story. A longest winning streak of 10 games and a near-perfect comeback rate after losing material highlight a tactical tenacity and mental resilience. His time performance metrics reveal a player who is most effective during the heart of the week, with Wednesdays and mid-afternoon hours often witnessing his best efforts.

Balancing a careful endgame approach with a strategic early aggression, lazzyy_boy averages around 56 moves in wins and slightly more in losses — a subtle nod to the intensity of his battles. Psychological steadiness is apparent too, as indicated by a low tilt factor and a disciplined early resignation rate, attributes that fortify his reputation as a formidable and focused competitor.

In summary, lazzyy_boy is not just a chess player but a devoted student of the game. His journey from 2024 to 2025 encapsulates the spirit of continuous growth, strategic depth, and resilience. With a blend of strategic preparation, tactical sharpness, and mental fortitude, he stands as an inspiring figure for anyone passionate about improving and excelling in chess.


Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick view — recent games

Nice, you’ve been playing sharp, tactical blitz. Your most recent clean win vs donhector01 shows the kind of aggression that pays off: a knight sac into the king area and ruthless rook invasions on the 7th rank. Your loss vs toasttaliban (Caro‑Kann) and the earlier loss vs kenobivk point to two recurring gaps: time management in longer endgames and some endgame technique when facing passed pawns.

Replay your best tactical sequence (from the win):

  • Embedded game (key tactical swing):

What you do well

  • Active, aggressive play — you don’t wait for the opponent to come to you. Knight sacrifices and cleaning out defenders work frequently for you (example: the Nxe6 → Nxg7 sequence).
  • Rook on the 7th / invasion play — you convert attacks into decisive pressure quickly (Re7 / Rxd7 / Rh7 patterns).
  • Tactical vision — you spot combinations and forks in the middlegame very reliably. Your opening repertoire includes sharp lines (see Modern Defense and gambit lines) that suit your style.

Where to improve (concrete)

  • Time management in endgames — the loss vs toasttaliban ended on time with a dangerous passed pawn on e2. Don’t let the clock decide close endgames. Keep ~25–30 seconds in reserve for critical pawn endgames and promotion races.
  • Basic rook + pawn endgames and passed‑pawn defence — learn the key techniques: Lucena (building a bridge), Philidor (defending a 3rd‑rank barrier) and simple king activity rules. Those three ideas will turn many losses into draws/wins.
  • Premature simplifications — sometimes you trade into endgames where your opponent’s pawn structure or passer is stronger. Before trading pieces ask: “Who benefits from the simplification — me or them?”
  • Avoid rushing tactical decisions under severe time pressure. When down on clock, prioritize solid defensive moves and directly stopping passed pawns over speculative counter‑sacs.

Practical drills (30–45 minute weekly plan)

  • 15 minutes tactics (focus: knight forks, discovered checks, sacrifices into king area). Use mixed‑difficulty puzzles but force yourself to calculate candidate moves, not guess.
  • 15 minutes endgame work: run through 5 Lucena/Philidor or rook vs rook+pawn practice positions and play them out against an engine set to low strength or against a training set.
  • 10–15 minutes practical blitz with a target: every game, keep at least 20 seconds on the clock at move 30. If you fail the target, stop and review the last game’s time decisions.

Opening & middlegame adjustments

  • Modern Defense lines you faced as White worked well because you attacked quickly with f4 and knights to e6/g7. Keep those attacking patterns but study typical Black replies so you don’t get surprised early.
  • Against the Caro‑Kann as Black, watch pawn breaks and the e‑pawn advance. When the opponent gets a protected passer or clear path to e2, trade into positions where your rooks can harass rather than letting their pawn run free.
  • From your openings performance, you have excellent results in Scandinavian and Vienna gambit lines — keep them in your toolkit. For lower win‑rate lines (French, Barnes Defense) either avoid them in blitz or study common traps and plans for 10–15 minutes.

Blitz session checklist (quick)

  • Before move 10: finalize king safety and piece development. If you’re ahead in development, keep the initiative rather than hunting material.
  • Keep 20–30 seconds for move 30 — set a mental alarm every 10 moves to check your clock.
  • If you see a speculative sacrifice, ask: “What’s my concrete follow‑up? Is the king exposed or can they consolidate?” If not, decline the sac in blitz unless you’re sure.
  • When down material but short on time: simplify if it removes opponent’s passers or winning threats; otherwise trade into simpler drawn endgames.

Next two-week plan (small goals)

  • Do 10 tactic puzzles daily — aim for accuracy, not speed. Mark themes (fork, deflection, decoy) when you miss one.
  • Study 3 Lucena/Philidor examples and reproduce them from memory twice each.
  • Play 20 blitz games but stop after any game where you lose on time — review and note what you could have done differently.

Final notes & encouragement

Your style is a big asset — keep the aggression and rook‑on‑the‑7th approach. Patch the two weak spots (time management and basic rook/pawn endgames) and you’ll convert many of those close games into wins. Small, consistent practice (tactics + 10–15 minutes of endgames) will give the biggest return fast.

Want a compact practice plan I can format for a two‑week calendar? Tell me your available minutes per day and I’ll build it.



🆚 Opponent Insights

Recent Opponents
miketankjr 0W / 1L / 0D View
rares1107 0W / 1L / 0D View
dipanshu_11k 1W / 0L / 0D View
Most Played Opponents
sumitsonowal 5W / 6L / 0D View Games
piyushpaul7777 2W / 3L / 0D View Games
fjooy 3W / 1L / 0D View Games
ravimod2 0W / 1L / 2D View Games
tomman152 0W / 3L / 0D View Games

Rating

Year Bullet Blitz Rapid Daily
2025 203 511 863
2024 217 443 695
Rating by Year20242025863203YearRatingBulletBlitzRapid

Stats by Year

Year White Black Moves
2025 342W / 331L / 17D 347W / 327L / 21D 58.8
2024 256W / 239L / 24D 252W / 253L / 14D 57.5

Openings: Most Played

Bullet Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Scandinavian Defense 98 51 47 0 52.0%
Amazon Attack 97 49 45 3 50.5%
Australian Defense 44 22 22 0 50.0%
Blackburne Shilling Gambit 32 17 15 0 53.1%
London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation 29 12 16 1 41.4%
Barnes Opening: Walkerling 28 11 17 0 39.3%
Four Knights Game 28 9 19 0 32.1%
Amar Gambit 26 14 12 0 53.9%
Vienna Gambit, with Max Lange Defense 24 14 9 1 58.3%
Barnes Defense 22 11 10 1 50.0%
Blitz Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Amazon Attack 55 25 30 0 45.5%
Australian Defense 24 11 12 1 45.8%
Barnes Opening: Walkerling 23 9 14 0 39.1%
Scandinavian Defense 22 15 6 1 68.2%
Amar Gambit 15 7 8 0 46.7%
Blackburne Shilling Gambit 14 7 7 0 50.0%
Vienna Gambit, with Max Lange Defense 11 8 3 0 72.7%
French Defense 11 4 6 1 36.4%
Barnes Defense 11 5 5 1 45.5%
London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation 10 5 4 1 50.0%
Rapid Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Amar Gambit 151 79 68 4 52.3%
Amazon Attack 144 64 74 6 44.4%
Scandinavian Defense 91 50 37 4 55.0%
Blackburne Shilling Gambit 72 35 36 1 48.6%
Barnes Opening: Walkerling 60 32 27 1 53.3%
Barnes Defense 59 28 29 2 47.5%
Alekhine Defense 49 27 21 1 55.1%
Australian Defense 48 24 21 3 50.0%
Vienna Gambit, with Max Lange Defense 47 28 19 0 59.6%
French Defense 43 24 18 1 55.8%

🔥 Streaks

Streak Longest Current
Winning 10 0
Losing 9 2
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