Avatar of Miki Bol

Miki Bol

mikibo Since 2015 (Inactive) Chess.com ♟♟♟
50.1%- 40.0%- 9.9%
Blitz 2463
11682W 9278L 2313D
Rapid 2275
152W 157L 24D
Daily 1200
0W 1L 0D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Blitz Style — what you’re doing well

You show solid tactical awareness and a willingness to press when opponents misstep. In many blitz positions you coordinate pieces actively, look for forcing moves, and keep your opponent under pressure even when material is flung around. This willingness to drive play is a strong asset in fast time formats and helps you create practical chances from dynamic middlegame structures.

Your repertoire in practical play includes several openings that yield dynamic positions where you can generate play against unprepared lines. This can be a good edge in blitz when your opponent hasn’t fully settled into a plan by move 10.

Key areas to improve for faster, cleaner wins

  • Time management: in blitz, try to secure a comfortable minimum thinking time in the first 10 moves. Set yourself a loose tempo and avoid entering ultra-sharp lines when you’re low on time. Quick, safe developing moves early can prevent compounding pressure later.
  • King safety and simplifying decisions: aim to keep your king safe during the middlegame and avoid overextending when you’re ahead in pieces. If your attack stalls, look for a principled simplification to a winning rook or minor-piece endgame rather than chasing another tactic that may backfire under time pressure.
  • Endgame technique in rook endings: blitz often lands in simplified endings. Practice common rook endings and know your basic schemata (how to convert a distant passed pawn, when to activate the king, and standard rook-versus-rook endgames).
  • Opening choice discipline: while your openings produce dynamic positions, consider consolidating with a small, reliable core of 2–3 White setups and 2–3 Black replies. This reduces heavy memorization in blitz and frees mental bandwidth for tactical calculation later.

Opening plan for blitz success

Your openings produce interesting middlegames, which is great for blitz. To turn that into more consistent wins, try the following:

  • Pick a compact White repertoire for rapid development and solid pawn structures, such as a simple, non-gambling setup that leads to safe middle games.
  • Choose 2–3 Black replies you know well against common 1.e4 and 1.d4 starts, focusing on lines with healthy pawn structures and clear development paths. Deep theoretical lines can be risky in blitz if you’re not fully confident under time pressure.
  • Group study by typical middlegame themes you see in your games (for example, pressure along the c-file, or piece pressure on a weak diagonal). Create quick reminder notes so you can recognize these patterns in a few seconds per move.

If you’d like, I can tailor a short opening plan based on your preferred colors and typical opponent choices. miki%20bol

Two practical drills you can try this week

  • Drill A: 15-minute tactical blitz set. Solve 25 puzzles of moderate difficulty with a cap of 40 seconds per puzzle. Focus on recognizing forced moves and checks that create quick material or positional gains.
  • Drill B: Endgame practice. Study 3 rook endings where one side has a distant passed pawn. Practice the exact plan to push the pawn with rooks coordinating on open files, then apply it in a live game when the position simplifies.

Optional notes and placeholders

If you want to review how specific opponents tend to approach you in blitz, you can refer to their profiles here: Gryfffe or Miki Bol.


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