Avatar of Milad_Soliman

Milad_Soliman

Playing Since: 2023-10-20 (Active)

Wow Factor: ♟♟♟♟

Chess.com

Daily: 1200
0W / 0L / 1D
Rapid: 1089
1190W / 1155L / 118D
Blitz: 502
62W / 86L / 9D
Bullet: 464
5W / 6L / 0D

Milad Soliman – Chess Competitor Profile

Milad Soliman is a dynamic and persistent chess player whose competitive journey is marked by consistent progress and adaptable play. With a reputation built primarily on his rapid and tactical prowess, Milad has steadily refined his game, evolving from solid performances in 2023 to notable breakthroughs in subsequent years.

Rising Through the Ranks

Milad’s early competitive years saw him experimenting across various time controls. In blitz, his early games in 2023 showed flashes of brilliance, achieving a high momentary rating before adapting his style. However, it is in rapid chess that he truly shines. Beginning with promising performances in 2023 – where his ratings peaked around 925 – Milad’s rapid game has progressively matured to a level where his rating soared to 1110 by 2025. His progress in bullet games and even a stint in daily chess further reflects his versatility and willingness to master every facet of the game.

A Versatile Opening Repertoire

Known for embracing variety in his openings, Milad’s performances indicate a deep study of classical and modern systems alike. His repertoire spans from the traditional Italian Game and Kings Pawn openings to more assertive choices such as the Scandinavian Defense and dynamic variations in the Ruy Lopez. This extensive understanding of multiple systems not only gives him a tactical edge but also keeps opponents guessing throughout the match.

Tactical and Psychological Resilience

Milad’s tactical awareness is a cornerstone of his playing style. Demonstrating an impressive comeback rate of nearly 66% and a perfect win rate when recovering from material setbacks, his ability to navigate through difficult positions is nothing short of inspiring. Coupled with a low early resignation rate and a balanced approach to both wins and losses, his psychological resilience on the board is evident.

Performance Under Pressure

Time performance studies reveal that Milad is well-calibrated to performing consistently across different days and hours of play. Whether clocking in during late night sessions or during peak competitive hours, his win percentages suggest true adaptability—a trait that has fueled his gradual yet steady rating improvements over time.

Commitment and Competitive Spirit

Milad’s journey in chess is not defined by short bursts of brilliance alone; his longest winning streak of 10 games and a current momentum marked by a recent streak of victories highlight his commitment to progression and continuous improvement. With a strategic balance between calculated endgame planning and aggressive, tactical middlegame maneuvers, he is a formidable opponent and an ever-evolving competitor.

Through tireless practice and a keen analytical mind, Milad Soliman’s profile stands as a testament to what dedication, innovation, and relentless perseverance can achieve in the world of competitive chess.


Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick take — what happened in your recent rapid games

Nice fight — but a clear pattern cost you: tactical oversights (knight forks, loose pieces) and an exposed king repeatedly turned promising positions into quick defeats. Many losses came from a single missed tactic or a failure to tidy up king safety before grabbing material.

Example game: milladkhalil — the opening reached a Maroczy/Pirc-ish structure (Pirc-Defense-Maroczy-Defense). You ended up losing a rook to a knight fork on a8 and later got mated after your king was chased across the board. See the game below to replay the decisive sequence.

Replay the decisive game

Use this quick viewer to step through the final loss move-by-move and spot the turning points.

Tap the board and look for: the knight jump to c7/a8, missed defensive resources, and the final mating net.

What you're doing well

  • You create complications and dynamic imbalances — that leads to many winning chances and shows good fight.
  • Your openings often generate active piece play (you’re not passive).
  • You convert advantages when tactics are present — when you spot the tactic, you often complete it cleanly.

Key weaknesses to fix (practical, repeatable things)

  • Loose pieces / hanging material: before every move run a quick checklist — are any of my pieces unprotected or can my opponent fork/skewer/pin me next move?
  • Kingside and center safety: don’t delay castling when the center is open or opponent’s pieces are active. If you don’t want to castle, make sure you have clear escape squares and piece cover.
  • Tactical awareness around knight forks: when you have a rook on the corner or a piece that can be forked, imagine all enemy knight jumps (c7, e7, f6, etc.).
  • Candidate move habit: stop at least 2–3 seconds and ask “What checks, captures, threats do I have? What does opponent threaten?” — this prevents many single-move losses.
  • Avoid grabbing pawns that open lines to your king unless you have full calculation showing safety.

Concrete 4-week training plan (minimal time, high impact)

  • Daily (10–20 minutes): 8–12 tactics focused on forks, discovered attacks and back-rank mates. Stop when you make repeated mistakes in a motif and drill that motif for another day.
  • 2× per week (30–45 minutes): one slow rapid game (15|10 or 30|0) where you take extra time in critical positions. After the game, do a short post-mortem: find the one decisive mistake and the theme behind it.
  • Weekly (20 minutes): review 3 recent losses — write down the single move that changed the evaluation and why it was missed (tactical blindness, time pressure, opening novelty, etc.).
  • Opening check (15 minutes/week): keep your main lines simple and safe — avoid “gambit grabbing” moves that leave the king exposed. If a pawn looks tasty but opens files, mark it as a potential trap.
  • Monthly (30 minutes): one focused session on basic mating patterns and elementary king safety (back-rank mates, mating nets with queen+rook, smothered mate patterns).

Practical move-by-move checklist (use during games)

  • Before you move: list checks, captures, threats (3-second rule).
  • If opponent has a knight nearby your heavy pieces or corner rook, ask “Is Nc7/Nxa8 or Ne3 possible next move?”
  • When under attack: trade queens if trading reduces the opponent’s mating possibilities and simplifies defense.
  • One-minute rule near endgame: if you’re low on time, simplify and avoid speculative tactics unless you’ve calculated them cleanly.

Next small goals (what to check after each session)

  • Found 1 tactical motif you missed and drilled it (fork/back-rank/pin).
  • Played at least one slow game and completed a short post-mortem.
  • Stopped grabbing an “unsafe” pawn once by consciously declining it in a game.

Hit these 3 each week and you’ll see the frequency of the “one-move” losses drop fast.

If you want, next steps I can help with

  • Go over one loss move-by-move with you and point out candidate moves (we can annotate together).
  • Build a tiny opening cheat-sheet (3–4 lines) that keeps your king safe and leads to positions you like.
  • Provide a tailored set of 50 tactics (forks, pins, back-rank) based on positions from your recent losses.

Tell me which of the three you want first and I’ll prepare it.



🆚 Opponent Insights

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Most Played Opponents
kirosamuel1 3W / 11L / 2D View Games
rafy99 2W / 9L / 1D View Games
ibrahimlima 2W / 0L / 1D View Games
minatkawy 1W / 2L / 0D View Games
tann-16 0W / 3L / 0D View Games

Rating

Year Bullet Blitz Rapid Daily
2025 464 502 1128
2024 414 543 929 1200
2023 637 576
Rating by Year2023202420251128414YearRatingBulletBlitzRapid

Stats by Year

Year White Black Moves
2025 311W / 259L / 33D 267W / 314L / 28D 68.1
2024 316W / 283L / 24D 289W / 301L / 34D 64.2
2023 28W / 36L / 6D 31W / 43L / 3D 63.5

Openings: Most Played

Rapid Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Blackburne Shilling Gambit 499 247 226 26 49.5%
Barnes Opening: Walkerling 187 94 84 9 50.3%
Italian Game: Two Knights Defense 125 66 49 10 52.8%
Scandinavian Defense 121 61 56 4 50.4%
Amazon Attack 108 44 58 6 40.7%
Philidor Defense 101 49 46 6 48.5%
Elephant Gambit 96 50 41 5 52.1%
Amar Gambit 93 49 39 5 52.7%
French Defense 82 37 42 3 45.1%
Scotch Game 80 33 42 5 41.2%
Blitz Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Blackburne Shilling Gambit 22 3 18 1 13.6%
Barnes Opening: Walkerling 21 9 11 1 42.9%
Scandinavian Defense 18 9 6 3 50.0%
Italian Game: Two Knights Defense, Fegatello Attack, Leonhardt Variation 10 4 5 1 40.0%
Amazon Attack 10 5 5 0 50.0%
Amar Gambit 6 3 2 1 50.0%
Ruy Lopez: Exchange Variation 5 2 3 0 40.0%
Elephant Gambit 5 3 2 0 60.0%
Philidor Defense 5 1 4 0 20.0%
Four Knights Game: Spanish Variation 4 1 3 0 25.0%
Daily Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Elephant Gambit 1 0 0 1 0.0%

🔥 Streaks

Streak Longest Current
Winning 10 0
Losing 11 1
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