Avatar of Murad İbrahimli

Murad İbrahimli IM

Murad_Ibrahimli Since 2018 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟♟
46.3%- 41.4%- 12.3%
Bullet 2947
786W 692L 127D
Blitz 3059
11212W 10049L 3064D
Rapid 2544
23W 6L 6D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

What you’re doing well in blitz

You tend to stay active and look for the initiative in many positions. In several games, you keep pieces coordinated and push ahead with pressure rather than passively defending. You also demonstrate willingness to enter tactical lines, which can create practical chances in fast time controls.

  • Active piece play: you frequently develop pieces toward central and aggressive squares, keeping options open for attacks.
  • Competing for initiative: you often seek to seize the moment when your opponent’s king safety or pawn structure is under stimulus.
  • Decisive attacking ideas in middlegames: you pursue forcing lines and tactical motifs that can win material or deliver threats quickly.

Key areas to improve for stronger blitz results

  • Time management under increment: one notable recent result shows you can be tight on the clock in sharp moments. Build a simple time-management routine to avoid flagging, especially in complex middlegames.
  • Blunder avoidance: in several recent games, the pace of play led to over-ambitious or risky moves. Practice a quick safety check before critical decisions (threats, undefended pieces, and back-rank ideas).
  • Structured calculation: in blitz, focusing on 2–3 forcing ideas ahead is usually enough. Train to identify two candidate moves and verify their main tactical themes within a short window.
  • King safety and simplifications: in the heat of the clock, it’s easy to stray into tangles. Aim to keep the king safe and consider simplifying when you’re ahead or when the position is unclear.
  • Endgame readiness: many blitz games drift into rook and pawn endings. Improve basic endgame technique (opposite rooks, passed pawns, active king in rook endings) to convert advantages reliably.

Opening choices and practical study plan

Based on your openings performance, your results are strongest with solid, flexible setups that lead to clear middlegame plans. Consider prioritizing a compact, repeatable White repertoire and reliable Black systems to reduce guesswork in blitz.

  • White repertoire to consider: London System (solid and easy to memorize) and Colle System with a Colle–Rhamphorhynchus flavor (high win rate and practical ideas).
  • Black repertoire to consider: Slav Defense or Modern/Colle-style setups that lead to solid structures and straightforward plans.
  • Study plan:
    • For White: learn 2-3 main lines for the London and Colle, plus 2 typical middlegame ideas in each setup.
    • For Black: focus on 2 responses, Slav and a reliable 1.e4 or 1.d4 counter system, with 1–2 typical pawn structures and piece maneuvers.
    • Review 2 model games per week in each chosen opening to distill common plans and typical tactical themes.

Time management and practical tips for blitz

  • Use the increment to your advantage: aim to leave 10–15 seconds for critical endgame thinking, not for the whole game.
  • Adopt a two-pass thinking approach in tight positions: first check for threats and material balance, then consider safe, safe-ish moves before deeper calculations.
  • When behind on time, simplify: exchange pieces and seek straightforward plans (purely tactical complications are less likely to pay off).
  • Develop a quick pattern-recognition habit: before each move, glance for a direct threat, a potential fork/skewer, or a tactical trap your opponent might be setting.
  • Endgame practice: dedicate a weekly session to rook endings and king activity with pawns, so you can convert advantages more reliably in blitz.

Progress plan and weekly goals

  • Week 1: Lock in 2 White openings (London and Colle) and 2 Black openings (Slav and Modern). Watch 2 short instructional games for each line and summarize 3 key middlegame ideas per line.
  • Week 2: Start a daily 15-minute tactics routine focusing on blunder-prevention motifs (back rank, overloaded pieces, and hanging pawns). Play 5 blitz games with a post-game quick review.
  • Week 3: Practice endgames twice (rook endings and king-pawn endings). Review 3 recent blitz games to identify recurring time-pressure moments and plan adjustments.
  • Week 4: Combine openings with endgames in longer blitz sessions (3+5 or 5+3 time controls) to build consistency in both early and late phases.

Encouraging note and next steps

You’ve shown long-term potential with positive trend lines and solid openings. By tightening up time management, reducing risky tactical plunges in the moment, and reinforcing a compact opening plan, you can convert more blitz opportunities into wins. If you want, share a specific recent game you’d like me to annotate move-by-move, and I’ll tailor concrete improvement notes for that position.


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