Avatar of Artem Gilevych

Artem Gilevych IM

metra93 Bologna Since 2012 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟
50.4%- 38.5%- 11.1%
Bullet 2706
600W 453L 110D
Blitz 2732
1627W 1278L 390D
Rapid 2186
31W 5L 0D
Daily 1843
19W 7L 2D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick summary

Nice run in recent 3‑minute games — you keep creating dangerous kingside pressure and you convert active piece play into wins. At the same time a pattern shows up: when your opponent opens a kingside pawn storm or sacrifices on your king side you sometimes underestimate the long‑term threat of a passed pawn or queen infiltration. Below are focused, practical recommendations to keep the aggression that works and tighten the places that cost you games.

What you’re doing well

  • Creating direct attacking chances: you consistently generate threats against the opponent’s king (pawn storms, active queens/rooks) and punish passive defense.
  • Piece activity over material: you routinely prioritize open files and piece coordination, which produces practical chances in blitz.
  • Opening variety and practical preparation: you use sharp lines (and some offbeat systems) to steer opponents into unfamiliar positions — this is reflected in your strong win rates in several openings like the Amazon Attack and Nimzo-Larsen Attack.
  • Time usage: in most games you keep sufficient time to find tactical shots and finish cleanly — important in 3|0 play.

Key areas to improve

  • Defending against pawn storms and advancing g/h pawns: in the most recent game vs beppe899 you allowed a passed g‑pawn to reach g2 with decisive effect. When the opponent pushes pawns toward your king, evaluate immediate blocking, piece trades that defuse the pawn, and king safety moves first — don’t hope the pawn will stall.
  • Prophylaxis and flight squares for your king: when you commit to an aggressive posture (castling short and pushing pawns), check for escape squares and tactical checks along diagonals and files that could undo your attack.
  • Selective simplification: sometimes you exchange into positions that let your opponent get counterplay (queens or knights landing on strong outposts). Before trading, ask whether the simplified position improves your target squares or their counterplay.
  • Opening weaknesses in certain long theoretical lines: some variations (e.g., the Tarrasch/Botvinnik lines in your dataset) give you trouble. Either avoid sharp theoretical battlegrounds you don’t want to memorize or study the typical plans more deeply.

Concrete drills & study plan (weekly, ~4 sessions)

  • Daily 10–15 min tactical warmup (mixed motifs, focus on mating nets, pawn breakthroughs and sacrifices). Use short sets so your pattern recognition improves under time pressure.
  • 2× per week: 20–30 min game review. Pick one recent loss and one win (preferably the same opening) and do a short engine + human check: identify the critical moment and write 1‑2 concrete alternatives you missed.
  • 1× per week: 20 min opening refresh. For lines you play a lot (like your French systems), review one typical pawn break and one typical end structure — not move‑by‑move theory but the plan and key squares.
  • Blitz practice: play a 10‑game blitz session, but after every loss spend one minute to note the single reason you lost (time, tactic, structural weakness, king safety). This trains quick error diagnosis.

Practical tips to use during blitz

  • When you see an advancing enemy pawn storm aimed at your king, stop and ask three quick questions: can I challenge the base pawn, can I trade to remove the pawn’s protector, do I need to change king shelter? If none of these help, prioritize king safety even at the cost of one tempo.
  • Before sacrificing or opening a file, verify the opponent has no quiet defense that leaves you with a lost endgame. In blitz it’s easy to overlook a defensive resource that neutralizes your attack.
  • Use small prophylactic moves (king step, rook behind, knight redeploy) when you sense a counterbreak is brewing; these moves often buy you one extra tempo that matters in tactical sequences.
  • Keep an eye on the opponent’s passed pawns — if they appear, calculate whether you can stop them by blockade or piece trade. Passed pawn + open file + queen infiltration is the common loss pattern you had recently.

Notable recent win (study this critical position)

Below is one of your recent wins — replay it and stop at each moment where your opponent made a pawn push or piece sacrifice. Ask what the defensive resource was and whether you could have improved your conversion.

Opponent: beppe899

Short-term goals for your next 20 games

  • Reduce losses from pawn‑storm/blocked‑king scenarios by 30%: when you lose, identify whether it was due to a pawn break or a queen infiltration and note it.
  • Convert at least one position per session where you have a clear material or structural advantage — practice the calm finishing technique (trade rooks when king is safe, centralize king in endgames).
  • Strengthen one weak opening line: pick the single opening with the lowest win rate in your frequent repertoire and spend two 20‑minute sessions studying its main ideas (not all moves).

Parting note

You already have the core skills for fast pressure and tactical wins. Tightening defense against pawn storms and doing focused post‑game checks will convert more of your good positions into wins — especially in blitz where one missed prophylactic move can flip the result. If you want, I can analyze one specific loss with move‑by‑move commentary or make a short 4‑week training calendar tailored to the openings you play most.


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