Avatar of Punin Andrii

Punin Andrii FM

mwpchess Mykolaiv Since 2016 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟
43.7%- 36.3%- 20.0%
Bullet 2609
97W 73L 19D
Blitz 2669
2296W 1950L 1084D
Rapid 2639
14W 5L 1D
Daily 2079
34W 1L 13D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick overview

Hi Punin Andrii — nice run lately. Your play shows good practical understanding: you create activity, press with passed pawns and use rooks energetically. There are a few recurring issues (time management and occasional tactical oversights) that, if fixed, will push your rapid results higher.

What you do well

  • Creating and converting passed pawns — in your most recent win you pushed and converted a queenside passer effectively, forcing decisive exchanges and infiltration with the rooks.
  • Active piece play — you consistently put rooks and knights on strong, aggressive squares (seventh‑rank rooks, knights into outposts).
  • Opening choices that fit your style — you score well with solid systems like Caro-Kann Defense and the French Defense family; these give you clear plans and fewer sharp tactical nightmares.
  • Cleaning up when opponents give you chances — you punish loose pieces and missed tactics by opponents instead of overcomplicating.

Recurring weaknesses to fix

  • Time management: several games show you dropping below a minute on the clock in critical phases. That increases simple mistakes. Build a simple “early routine” to save time for the middlegame.
  • Tactical oversights when the position opens up — you sometimes allow enemy piece infiltration (knight or queen checks) or miss short combinations. This shows up most when you try to hold a passive kingside while the opponent opens lines.
  • Handling opposite‑side castling / sharp pawn storms — when opponents push pawns quickly against your king you occasionally get caught without a clear defensive plan.
  • Exchange decisions: in a couple of losses you either traded into awkward endgames or failed to exchange a dangerous minor piece. Be deliberate about trades (ask “what changes after the trade?”).

Concrete training plan (4 weeks)

  • Daily (15–25 minutes): tactics puzzles focused on forks, discovered attacks and mating nets. Prioritize speed and accuracy — start with 5–10 medium puzzles, then 5 fast ones under a short clock.
  • 3× week (30–45 minutes): one rapid game with full post‑mortem. Immediately review critical moments and write down 2–3 alternate candidate moves you missed.
  • 2× week (20 minutes): endgame fundamentals — practice rook vs pawn, rook endings (Lucena and Philidor ideas) and basic king+pawn vs king technique. These pay off in rapid games where accuracy wins endgames.
  • Weekly (45–60 minutes): opening tune‑up — pick one problematic line (e.g., the Caro‑Kann Exchange you lost) and learn the 3–5 key replies and typical pawn breaks. Use Caro-Kann Defense and one sharp reply to memorize plans, not just moves.
  • One concrete drill: set positions where you have a passed pawn and practice converting (rook behind the pawn, cut the king off). Play 6 training positions and win them against an engine at low depth.

Practical tips to use in your next rapid session

  • Early routine (first 6 moves): aim for quick development and a clear short plan. If the plan is “castle kingside and play for center break,” make those moves fast.
  • When ahead in space or pawns, exchange queens only if it reduces opponent counterplay; otherwise, keep queens to increase winning chances.
  • Before each move: 3‑second checklist — opponent threats, my candidate move, any immediate tactics. This avoids blunders when low on time.
  • If opponent sacrifices on your kingside, pause and count checks and capture sequences before accepting. Many of your losses stem from taking pawns/reacting rather than calculating the consequences.
  • Use the clock: if you have a winning simplified position, trade down earlier to avoid time scramble. If it’s unclear, keep tension and use your time to calculate.

Mini post‑mortem of your most recent win

You played a game where the queens were traded early, then you created a passed pawn on the c‑file and used your rooks actively to penetrate and force decisive exchanges. You converted the passer and used rook activity to restrict the opponent’s king — clean, practical technique. Keep repeating that formula: produce a passer, activate rooks, simplify when ahead.

Replay the game and look for the single moment you stopped your opponent’s counterplay — that’s the recurring pattern to reinforce.

Quick replay:

  • Opponent: sohampalkar1807
  • Opening was close to a French Defense setup (you handled the central tension well).
  • Interactive replay:

Next‑game checklist (keep this on a sticky note)

  • King safety first — is my castling intact or threatened?
  • Opponent threats — any captures or checks next move?
  • My 2 candidate moves — pick one and verify there’s no hidden tactic.
  • Do I have a clear plan (pawn break, piece improvement, or simplify)?
  • Time check — if under 2 minutes, pick safe practical moves and avoid long calculations.
  • If you get a passed pawn: bring rooks behind it, cut the enemy king, and trade when winning.

Closing encouragement

Your results show a strong foundation and a positive trend. Focus on tightening time management and a short tactical routine and you’ll convert more winning positions and reduce avoidable losses. If you want, send 2–3 specific games (losses or close calls) and I’ll annotate key moments move‑by‑move.


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