Avatar of Mohammad Mahdi Alizadeh

Mohammad Mahdi Alizadeh CM

Mwhdi3000 Since 2025 (Inactive) Chess.com
47.3%- 46.4%- 6.3%
Bullet 2669
41W 35L 3D
Blitz 2622
71W 75L 12D

Overview

Mohammad Mahdi Alizadeh (username: Mwhdi3000) is a FIDE-titled Candidate Master known for laser-fast intuition and a taste for bullet chaos. A Bullet specialist by preference, Mahdi mixes deep endgame patience with blitz-burst tactics — a combination that has surprised many opponents and entertained even more spectators.

  • Title: Candidate Master (FIDE)
  • Preferred time control: Bullet — the clock is his favorite opponent
  • Playing persona: tactical, stubborn in endgames, and fond of long decisive games

Career highlights

Mahdi reached career peaks in both fast formats during 2025, with standout months that included hot streaks in both Blitz and Bullet. He has played hundreds of serious online games, facing frequent rivals and grinding long, complex endgames.

  • Notable peak performances: strong peaks in 2025 for both Blitz and Bullet — 2722 (2025-07-22) and 2686 (2025-09-20) reflect those runs.
  • Solid overall record in fast games: many decisive battles and a high comeback rate when down material.
  • Tough rivalry: most-played opponent is fight_chess2025 — a match-up of many dramas and tactical fireworks.

Playing style & statistics

Mahdi’s style blends tactical opportunism with endurance. He rarely gives up early and often drags opponents into deep endgames — many of his wins and losses are marathon affairs rather than quick skirmishes.

  • Endgame frequency: ~87% of games reach an endgame phase — he likes the long haul.
  • Average decisive game length: around 90–94 moves (long, thoughtful fights even in fast time controls).
  • Comeback ability: excellent — a comeback rate near 92% shows resilience after setbacks.
  • Play under pressure: converts almost half the games even after losing material (win-after-losing-piece ~47%).
  • Resignation habits: extremely low early resignation rate — rarely quits before the finish.

Openings and repertoire

Mahdi enjoys variety and has reliable weapons for both attacking skirmishes and quiet strategic fights. He experiments frequently but favors certain systems that suit his tactical-endgame mix.

  • Favorites in Blitz: Four Knights Game, Catalan Opening, and the aggressive Diemer-Duhm Gambit (DDG).
  • Bullet go-to lines: solid choices like the Australian Defense and a perfect short sample in the Slav Defense (100% in a small sample).
  • First-move tendencies in 2025: d4 and Nf3 are common—Mahdi builds flexible structures and probes for tactical chances.

Memorable patterns & matchups

Mahdi has a few recurring match patterns: spectacular comebacks, long endgames that flip on a single pawn advance, and opening experiments that pay off unpredictably. His record shows both crushing wins and razor-close losses — a true fighter's logbook.

  • Most-played opponent: fight_chess2025 — many decisive battles and hard-fought lessons.
  • Streaks: can go on a 5-game winning run; also has had tough patches of losses (longest losing streak recorded).
  • Best time to challenge Mahdi: avoid morning sessions around 08:00 — that's when he’s sharpest; for spectators, those are the most exciting hours.

Sample game (quick view)

A short illustrative sequence you can replay — Mahdi’s games often mix classical development with sudden tactical blows:

Practice tips & fun facts

If you want to train like Mahdi (or survive a match against him), focus on long endgame drills, practicing comeback scenarios, and bullet tactics where speed meets calculation.

  • Training focus: endgame technique + rapid tactical pattern recognition.
  • Psychological edge: stays calm after blunders and often turns the tables — bring a towel for the sweat, not the tears.
  • Fun fact: Mahdi’s average decisive games are longer than many classical encounters — he treats fast chess like a chess novella, not a haiku.

Where to watch & follow

Mahdi plays on fast arenas and regularly faces a core group of opponents. For recent opponent pages and match history, check in-platform profiles (example: fight_chess2025). Keep an eye on weekend and evening sessions for his most active play.

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