Avatar of MasterLeif

MasterLeif FM

Since 2012 (Inactive) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟
45.8%- 45.7%- 8.6%
Bullet 2722
19524W 18590L 3271D
Blitz 2705
4404W 5324L 1210D
Rapid 2051
23W 2L 0D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick summary

Good practical play in these recent blitz games: you create activity, you spot tactical chances and press them, and you convert passed pawns confidently. The main recurring weaknesses are king safety in sharp middlegames, occasional tactical oversights when the opponent opens lines toward your king, and allowing advanced enemy pawns to decide long endgames. Below are concrete examples and a short plan to improve fast for blitz.

What you did well

  • Creating active piece play and open lines — in your recent win you used queen and rooks aggressively to create tactical threats and a decisive passed pawn.
  • Converting a pawn majority — you pushed and supported a passed f‑pawn to force a win on the clock, a practical blitz skill.
  • Practical decision-making under time pressure — you simplified or traded when it helped you convert the initiative in several games.
  • Comfort in complex positions — you often choose fighting continuations instead of passive defence, which returns practical chances in blitz.

Key mistakes & recurring patterns to fix

  • King safety after pawn grabs: in a loss you allowed your opponent's pawns and queen to open lines toward your king (notice how the g‑ and f‑file activity became decisive). Be cautious taking pawns that create open files toward your castled king.
  • Underestimating pawn storms and passed pawns: several losses ended when an enemy pawn advanced into a dangerous passed pawn (or promoted). Work on recognizing when a pawn break will create a protected passer and how to stop it early.
  • Tactical oversights around checks and forks: a few positions had forcing checks (queen/rook checks) that you either missed or mis-timed. When the opponent has active heavy pieces, calculate one or two checks deep before committing to an apparently “safe” move.
  • Time allocation in complex positions: you win on time sometimes, but also lose on time or in unclear endgames — balance spending time on critical moments (tactical sequences, immediate king safety) and playing faster in quiet positions.

Concrete examples (click to view)

Review these short sequences from the recent win and a loss — they show the good ideas and the problems to avoid.

  • Example — strong conversion: your successful conversion as Black (active queen + passed pawn). Open the mini‑game to replay the flow:
  • Example — beware pawn breaks and queen infiltration: a loss where opening files and a pawn push led to decisive checks (review and ask: could you keep an extra pawn safely or trade to reduce attacking chances?):
  • Opponent link: Alan Stein — review their patterns (pawn pushes + queen checks) when preparing your defence.

Short blitz training plan (2–4 weeks)

  • Daily 10–15 minutes: tactics puzzles focused on checks, mates and defending against mating nets (emphasize motifs that involve queen/rook checks).
  • 3× per week: 15–20 minutes of endgame drills — rook + pawn vs rook, king and pawn vs king, and defending/creating a passed pawn. These win/losses show endgame pawn play matters.
  • 2× per week: 3+2 or 3+0 blitz sessions where you practice one habit per session (e.g., "never capture a central pawn if it opens a file to my king" or "trade pieces when under attack").
  • Opening tune-up (weekly): pick the lines you play most (for you that includes Caro-Kann Defense and Alekhine Defense). Review 5–8 model games where the opponent achieves the pawn breaks you struggled with — put the key defensive ideas on flashcards.

Practical blitz tips you can use immediately

  • Before every capture on the queenside or center, ask: "Does this open a file or diagonal to my king?" If yes, calculate enemy checks first.
  • When you have more time than your opponent, steer the game to complexity only if you’re confident tactically — otherwise simplify to increase conversion chances.
  • If the opponent can create a protected passed pawn with one pawn break, stop it early or trade the relevant pieces (rook + king vs passer training helps).
  • Keep a mental checklist in time trouble: king safety, immediate captures, checks, and opponent threats — cycle through it in 10 seconds per move.

Next steps & resources

  • Replay the two mini‑games above and pause at every capture and every check. Ask yourself: "If I were the other side, is there a forcing continuation?"
  • Set a 1‑week goal: reduce blunders from tactical oversights by 25% — measure by reviewing 10 blitz games and counting missed tactics before/after training.
  • If you want, I can prepare a 7‑day practice schedule with specific puzzles, short videos, and 5 positions from your own games to train on — tell me which you prefer (tactics, endgame, opening).

Would you like a short personalized drill?

If yes, tell me which area you prefer: tactics (checks/mates), rook endgames, or Caro‑Kann specific positions — I’ll generate 5 tailored exercises you can do in a single session.


Report a Problem