Avatar of Bojan Maksimović

Bojan Maksimović GM

Username: mbojan

Playing Since: 2012-08-18 (Active)

Wow Factor: ♟♟♟♟♟♟

Chess.com

Daily: 1227
3W / 13L / 3D
Rapid: 2466
64W / 39L / 12D
Blitz: 3003
14448W / 14303L / 3179D
Bullet: 2908
1875W / 1256L / 162D

Overview

Grandmaster Bojan Maksimović — known online as mbojan — is a Blitz specialist with a reputation for fast tactics, deep endgames and an eyebrow-raising ability to turn time trouble into triumph. A titled player by FIDE (Grandmaster), mbojan rose through the online blitz ranks and became a feared opponent on the clock. Keywords: Bojan Maksimović, mbojan, Grandmaster, blitz chess, Amar Gambit, Najdorf, Sicilian.

  • Preferred time control: Blitz (plays like the espresso of chess — short, intense, wakes you up).
  • Title: Grandmaster (FIDE).
  • Online handle: mbojan — widely recognized across fast time controls.
  • Peak blitz recognition: 3075 (2025-11-27).

Early Life & Rise

Bojan's climb felt like a cinematic montage: blitz games in dorm rooms and late-night bullet marathons. From modest starting months to posting triple-digit win streaks, the trajectory shows someone who learned quickly and loved the speed. Early years were full of experimentation — weird openings, brash sacrifices, and an unforgiving love of the clock.

Playing Style & Strengths

mbojan combines tactical alertness with an endgame endurance unusual for blitz lovers. He balances flashy openings with surprisingly patient endgames — the kind that make spectators check the move list twice.

  • Style: Tactical with strong endgame follow-through (high endgame frequency).
  • Strengths: Comebacks and resilience; good recovery after material setbacks.
  • Weaknesses: Occasional tilt after long losing runs (human after all).
  • Psychology: Known to thrive in late-night blitz — the best time? reportedly 03:00 (bring snacks).

Career Highlights

Highlights combine longevity and intensity: thousands of fast games, repeated peaks in blitz performance, and a Grandmaster title earned through consistent competitive play.

  • Long career in online blitz with tens of thousands of blitz games played and relentless activity across years.
  • Frequent peaks in performance and several multi-month surges that moved mbojan into the elite of fast-time controls.
  • Known for stringing together long winning streaks — and for stubborn comebacks after tough losses.

Favorite Openings & Repertoire

mbojan’s opening choices reflect a love of dynamic, sometimes unorthodox play — both to unsettle opponents and generate practical chances on the clock.

  • Amar Gambit — a personal favorite: aggressive and practical in blitz. Amar Gambit
  • Modern — flexible setups that invite opponents to prove themselves.
  • Sicilian Defense (Najdorf and other aggressive lines) — a staple when fighting for a win. Sicilian Defense
  • Caro-Kann and French — solid choices when the mood calls for practicality over fireworks.

Notable Opponents & Records

Across years of play, mbojan has built rivalries and impressive matchups. A few frequent opponents stand out by how often they appeared on the scoreboard.

  • Most-played opponents include jozefkneht, danielnaroditsky and blitzstream.
  • Head-to-head highlights: strong winning record vs jozefkneht; challenging rivalries vs top titled blitzers.
  • Want to peek at a peer profile? Try: JozefKneht (placeholder).

Fun Facts & Extras

Humor-friendly tidbits and interactive placeholders for deeper dives.

  • Nickname in chat: "mbojan" — succinct, memorable, and great for rapid tilt alerts.
  • Likes to open with ambitious gambits in blitz and then pretend the endgame was the plan all along.
  • Chart: career blitz progress over time — good for scrolling on mobile:
    Blitz Rating2012201320142015201620172018201920202021202220232024202530331475YearBlitz Rating
  • Sample mini-game to study (fast, classical-looking ideas in blitz):
  • Trivia placeholder: top blitz peak celebrated here — 3075 (2025-11-27).

Quick Summary

Grandmaster Bojan Maksimović (mbojan) is a blitz-savvy, tactically creative player whose games reward spectators and students alike. If you have 3 minutes and a cup of coffee, his blitz games are the perfect watch: sharp openings, chaotic middlegames, and endgames that make you checkmate the clock.


Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick summary for Bojan Maksimović

Nice work — you're converting advantage cleanly in the win and staying tactically sharp. The loss shows a recurring vulnerability when the center and kingside open against your king after castling long. Short actionable plan below so you keep the positives and stop repeating the same leak.

Games referenced

  • Win vs Jval Saurin Patel — good conversion and clean endgame technique.
  • Loss vs Stelios Halkias — lessons on castling choices, pawn storms and passed pawn technique.
  • Also review a sharp loss vs Dennis Wagner where a mating net finished things quickly; useful reminder to watch back-rank and rook checks in attacking positions.

What you did well (so keep doing it)

  • Turning small advantages into a big one: in the win you forced favorable exchanges and simplified into a winning king-and-pawn ending instead of overcomplicating.
  • Tactical alertness: picks like Nxf5 / Rxd7 showed good calculation and awareness of tactics in the position.
  • Active piece play — rooks and queen were used aggressively to create targets and force concessions.
  • Practical defense under pressure in several positions — you found defensive resources instead of panicking.

Recurring issues to fix (from the loss and other games)

  • Castling long into an open or half-open center can be risky. In the loss you ended up with your king on the queenside while central/ kingside pawns advanced — avoid long castling if the opponent can open the center quickly.
  • Allowing connected passed pawns to advance without timely blockade or king activity. Work on identifying the right moment to exchange/block those pawns early.
  • Pawn structure mis-evaluations: exchanges that leave you with isolated or backward pawns in the face of enemy piece activity cost you time and initiative. Look for pawn breaks that help your side rather than weaken it.
  • Time management spots: you had several intense tactical moments — try to keep a little more time for complex middlegame decisions (practice with the same time control and focus on 2–3 key candidate moves, not more).

Concrete next-week training plan (practical and short)

  • Daily: 6–8 tactics (focused on deflection, overload, and knight forks). Pick puzzles that finish with a material gain or decisive simplification. 20 minutes total.
  • Every other day: 15–20 minutes of pawn endgames — king-and-pawn versus king, outside passed pawn technique and opposition. These convert many blitz wins.
  • 3 sessions this week: 20-minute mini-workshop on castling decision-making — practice three positions where you must choose kingside vs queenside vs keep king in center. Learn a simple checklist: center locked? open file toward your king? opponent has attacking pawns? If yes, favor king safety over activity.
  • One game/day at your usual blitz control but immediately annotate two moments: the turning point and one mistake. Keep it to 5–10 minutes of post-game reflection.

Opening / middlegame fixes

  • Your repertoire shows strong results with gambits and sharp Sicilians — continue those lines because they fit your tactical style and practical chances.
  • Against setups that aim for a pawn storm (King's Indian / Modern), prioritize king safety — prefer short castling or delay castling until the center is clarified.
  • When you trade queens early (as in one loss), evaluate the resulting pawn structure carefully — queen trades often turn into pawn races or minor piece endgames where passers decide the game.

Simple in-game checklist (use before each critical move)

  • Who attacks my king next? (If opponent can open a file or push pawns, reassess castling.)
  • Do I have a passed pawn risk / are they creating one? (Plan to block or exchange it.)
  • Can I force a favorable liquidation to an endgame I know how to win? (If yes, go for simplification.)
  • Do I have time to calculate the tactic? If not, pick a safe, improving move instead of speculative complications.

Short drills you can do at the board

  • 5-minute session: find the best way to stop an enemy passed pawn (block, exchange, or attack the base).
  • 10 puzzles: only solve positions where winning material required a sacrifice or intermediate move — this improves pattern recognition for Nxf5/Rxd7 style combos.
  • Endgame drill: start from the position after your win (capture the h-pawn and advance kingside pawns). Practice converting king+rook+pawn vs king positions.

Longer-term focus (next month)

  • Reduce blunders in critical moments by training 3x/week with slow (10+0) games and analyzing them — get used to the decision checklist above.
  • Solidify one anti-King’s-Indian plan so you don’t get surprised by pawn storms; choose a setup that you can play both as White and Black.
  • Keep the tactical sharpness (it's a strength). Combine it with endgame conversion practice — that combo will raise your win conversion rate fast.

Performance & trends — short takeaway

Your strength-adjusted win rate is almost 50% — you're playing at the expected level for your opposition. The last month shows a small dip (-40) but three- and six-month trends are positive. Treat the recent losses as fixable pattern errors (king safety & pawn races) rather than a form issue.

Fast checklist before you play blitz

  • Pick openings that lead to positions you enjoy and where you know typical pawn breaks.
  • Warm up with 5 tactics and one short endgame position.
  • Decide your castling policy for the opening — commit mentally to either safe king or flexible center play.

Want me to drill a position with you?

Tell me which game/position you want to work on (move number or FEN) and I’ll give a 5–10 minute training routine or a concrete plan for the critical moments.



🆚 Opponent Insights

Recent Opponents
Tugstumur Yesuntumur 2W / 1L / 1D View
Nodar Lortkipanidze 10W / 8L / 5D View
chessfan3143 2W / 0L / 1D View
sahibsinghknight 1W / 0L / 1D View
volvo333 2W / 3L / 1D View
Mirosław Lewicki 3W / 5L / 1D View
fda fadf 1W / 0L / 0D View
🪳🪲Just a glamorous cockroach 1W / 1L / 0D View
I_Am_Whitebeard 3W / 5L / 1D View
Anthony Wirig 17W / 10L / 8D View
Most Played Opponents
JozefKneht 150W / 35L / 16D View Games
Daniel Naroditsky 38W / 103L / 12D View Games
Kevin Bordi 78W / 53L / 8D View Games
Murad İbrahimli 48W / 73L / 14D View Games
Dmitrij Kollars 35W / 89L / 8D View Games

Rating

Year Bullet Blitz Rapid Daily
2025 2884 3001 2466
2024 2897 2980 2413 1227
2023 2927 2844 2396
2022 2805 2681 2390 1235
2021 2480 2749 1385
2020 2342 2678
2019 1975 2700 1259 1208
2018 2331 2494 1315 1330
2017 2264 2317 1330
2016 1967 2184 1387
2015 1832 2037 1330
2014 1755 1938 1232
2013 1378 1747 1357
2012 1366 1475 1245
Rating by Year2012201320142015201620172018201920202021202220232024202530011208YearRatingBulletBlitzRapidDaily

Stats by Year

Year White Black Moves
2025 447W / 324L / 91D 427W / 331L / 96D 93.7
2024 1032W / 772L / 226D 920W / 871L / 232D 95.0
2023 861W / 735L / 195D 792W / 800L / 195D 92.8
2022 890W / 806L / 183D 815W / 873L / 185D 91.5
2021 274W / 225L / 55D 276W / 234L / 63D 95.5
2020 1304W / 1195L / 310D 1134W / 1352L / 332D 93.1
2019 840W / 838L / 183D 831W / 858L / 186D 89.6
2018 751W / 714L / 148D 676W / 805L / 153D 91.1
2017 245W / 192L / 34D 238W / 200L / 31D 88.0
2016 581W / 419L / 87D 546W / 456L / 89D 81.0
2015 495W / 422L / 58D 478W / 426L / 71D 81.8
2014 315W / 331L / 37D 323W / 332L / 28D 75.1
2013 297W / 243L / 32D 300W / 253L / 16D 69.1
2012 308W / 378L / 24D 263W / 399L / 34D 69.9

Openings: Most Played

Blitz Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Modern 2149 938 1008 203 43.6%
Amar Gambit 1388 686 567 135 49.4%
Caro-Kann Defense 1194 563 517 114 47.1%
Sicilian Defense: Najdorf Variation 789 377 348 64 47.8%
Sicilian Defense 682 339 291 52 49.7%
Colle System: Rhamphorhynchus Variation 661 292 306 63 44.2%
Amazon Attack: Siberian Attack 660 308 275 77 46.7%
French Defense 639 280 281 78 43.8%
Sicilian Defense: Closed 575 261 257 57 45.4%
Sicilian Defense: Four Knights Variation, Cobra Variation 549 252 234 63 45.9%
Bullet Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Amar Gambit 385 223 143 19 57.9%
Modern 288 162 109 17 56.2%
Colle System: Rhamphorhynchus Variation 195 116 66 13 59.5%
Australian Defense 154 84 65 5 54.5%
Barnes Defense 119 72 42 5 60.5%
Amazon Attack: Siberian Attack 118 72 41 5 61.0%
Czech Defense 113 69 39 5 61.1%
Scandinavian Defense 102 57 43 2 55.9%
French Defense 101 64 33 4 63.4%
Hungarian Opening: Wiedenhagen-Beta Gambit 82 48 30 4 58.5%
Daily Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Unknown 5 0 5 0 0.0%
Barnes Defense 3 0 3 0 0.0%
Australian Defense 2 0 2 0 0.0%
Amar Gambit 2 1 0 1 50.0%
Caro-Kann Defense 1 1 0 0 100.0%
Four Knights Game: Spanish Variation 1 0 0 1 0.0%
Sicilian Defense: Taimanov Variation, American Attack 1 0 1 0 0.0%
King's Indian Defense: Fianchetto Variation, Yugoslav Variation, Rare Line 1 0 1 0 0.0%
Blackburne Shilling Gambit 1 1 0 0 100.0%
Benoni Defense: Benoni Gambit Accepted 1 1 0 0 100.0%
Rapid Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Amar Gambit 5 4 0 1 80.0%
Petrov's Defense 5 2 3 0 40.0%
Barnes Defense 4 1 3 0 25.0%
Sicilian Defense: Closed, Anti-Sveshnikov Variation, Kharlov-Kramnik Line 4 2 2 0 50.0%
Sicilian Defense: Closed 4 3 0 1 75.0%
Unknown 3 2 1 0 66.7%
Sicilian Defense: Moscow Variation, Haag Gambit 3 1 2 0 33.3%
Benoni Defense: Benoni Gambit Accepted 3 1 2 0 33.3%
Sicilian Defense 3 2 0 1 66.7%
Sicilian Defense: Accelerated Dragon 3 0 3 0 0.0%

🔥 Streaks

Streak Longest Current
Winning 15 0
Losing 17 0
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