Avatar of Matyáš Zeman

Matyáš Zeman FM

mistrzemi České Budějovice Since 2016 (Inactive) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟
49.5%- 44.3%- 6.2%
Bullet 2312
193W 178L 15D
Blitz 2558
1989W 1794L 260D
Rapid 1300
24W 4L 2D
Daily 400
1W 1L 0D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick summary

Matyáš — good fight in these recent blitz games. You show solid opening knowledge and create practical counterplay, but a few recurring issues (king safety, pawn-structure weaknesses and time management) are costing you in sharp, tactical positions. Below are concrete observations, examples, and a short training plan you can apply right away.

What you did well

  • Consistent opening setup and piece development — you get bishops and knights out quickly and often seize central space (example: building a classical London-type setup with Bf4, Nbd2, c3).
  • Creating counterplay when under pressure — you push pawns and open lines (b4, g4) to generate chances instead of passively defending.
  • Tactical alertness — you spotted combinations (captures in the center, piece exchanges) that try to simplify or generate activity rather than just fold under pressure.
  • Overall resilience — strength-adjusted win rate ~0.507 means your practical play is solid against varied opposition levels.

Key mistakes and recurring themes

Below are the patterns I saw most often in the recent games and the concrete ways they led to losses.

  • King safety and pawn weaknesses:

    In the most recent loss vs Maxime Vachier-Lagrave you ended up with your king exposed after creating holes around it (capturing on h4, then advancing g-pawns). That allowed the opponent's pawns and pieces to break through and deliver a mating net (final pawn breakthrough on g2). Avoid creating irreversible holes near your king unless you are sure you gain counterplay.

  • Accepting pawn sacrifices that open lines against your king:

    Example: 24 f3 followed by fxg3 and hxg3 left g2 and h‑files vulnerable. Before accepting a pawn sac near your king, ask: can I keep my king safe after the lines open? If not, decline or look for a less weakening recapture.

  • Time management / playing too fast into tactical complications:

    Many decisive moments happened with only a few seconds on the clock. In increment games you should invest a little time on critical turns (when kingside pawns start to storm or rooks invade). Save time in quiet opening moves, and spend it when the position becomes sharp.

  • Handling of the London Poisoned Pawn and similar sharp sidelines:

    Your results show this variation is a weaker area (WinRate ~45% in that line). The line often leads to asymmetric tactical play — plan concrete defensive measures and typical pawn-structure responses so you can avoid getting overwhelmed by early kingside attacks.

Concrete fixes — what to do in games

  • Before capturing near your king, run a quick safety check: which enemy pieces gain open files/diagonals, are back-rank mates possible, can an enemy pawn become a battering ram? If the answer is “yes”, delay the capture or trade off the most dangerous attacker first.
  • When facing a kingside pawn storm (g5/h4/g4 etc.), prioritize king safety (escape squares, rook to the g/h file for defense) instead of returning material immediately.
  • Use a simple time rule: 10+ seconds on quiet opening moves, but spend 20–40 seconds on any move that changes the pawn structure around your king or gives the opponent open lines. Don’t burn all your time in the opening.
  • If your plan requires pushing pawns around your king (g, h or f pawns), only do it when your king has a secure escape or when you can force a simplification that removes attackers.

Study & training plan (practical, blitz-focused)

  • Short-term (daily, 15–30 minutes)
    • 15 min tactics (focus on mating patterns and pawn breaks around the king — puzzles with mating nets, back-rank themes).
    • 10 min review of the last loss: replay critical sequence slowly and ask “what if I decline the sac?” and “where could I improve king safety?” Use the embedded game viewer below to step through the final phase.
  • Weekly (2–4 hours total)
    • 1 hour on London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation — learn 2 main defensive ideas and one safe line you can play automatically in blitz.
    • 1 hour endgame practice — basic rook endings and king + pawn vs king. Many blitz games swing on simple endgame technique.
  • Practical blitz habits
    • Play training blitz where your goal is one specific improvement (e.g., “I will not capture a pawn on the kingside if it opens the g-file”).
    • Do 10-minute reflection after 5 blitz games: mark the turning move in each loss and the underlying reason (tactical miss, time trouble, bad structure).

Examples / reviewable game

Step through the final phase of your most recent loss vs Maxime Vachier-Lagrave and focus on the moves where the g-file opens — that sequence shows the exact patterns to avoid next time.

Interactive replay (tap to open):

Opening preparation suggestions

  • Focus on one safe, low-maintenance London setup you can play quickly in blitz. Learn the key plans (where to put rooks, when to play h3/g4 and when not to) so you spend less clock time in the opening.
  • Against sharp sidelines (Poisoned Pawn), memorize one defensive response that avoids immediate complications — trade off the dangerous piece or route your king to safety early.
  • You do well in some French lines (Exchange/Advance). Keep those in your repertoire as “bullets of stability” when you want reliable results.

Next actions (for your next session)

  • Replay the loss vs Maxime Vachier-Lagrave with the PGN viewer and mark three candidate moves you could have played instead at the moment the g-file opened.
  • Do a 20-minute tactics session emphasizing mating nets and forced sequences; then play a mini‑set of 5 blitz games trying the time rule above.
  • Pick one London variation line to memorize for blitz (one safe line vs the Poisoned Pawn).

Closing — encouraging note

Your overall long-term rating history and strength-adjusted win rate show you are a strong, practical player. These losses are fixable with a few targeted habits (king safety checks, a simple time budget, and focused blitz opening prep). Keep the good habits you already have — development and counterplay — and tighten the holes I pointed out. If you want, I can create a 4‑week training schedule tailored to your preferred openings.


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