Avatar of Rahul Srivatshav P

Rahul Srivatshav P GM

Username: Nakachuk

Location: Dallas

Playing Since: 2014-10-02 (Active)

Wow Factor: ♟♟♟♟♟

Chess.com

Daily: 1893
20W / 20L / 0D
Rapid: 2459
43W / 29L / 14D
Blitz: 2946
1551W / 1288L / 262D
Bullet: 2955
863W / 664L / 94D

About Rahul Srivatshav P

Rahul Srivatshav P is an accomplished Grandmaster, well known for his lightning-fast reflexes and sharp tactical play, especially in Blitz chess. With a peak Blitz rating reaching an impressive 2982 as of May 2025, Rahul has proven himself to be one of the most formidable opponents in rapid time controls.

Playing Style

Rahul prefers fast-paced games, shining brightest in Blitz and Bullet formats. His style features a careful balance of strategic understanding and tactical awareness, boasting a comeback rate of over 80%. He is notorious for his resilience, often turning losing positions to wins, which reflects his tenacity and psychological strength against opponents.

Opening Repertoire

Rahul enjoys a diverse and dynamic opening repertoire. Among his favored openings in Bullet and Blitz are:

  • King’s Indian Attack – solid and flexible, with more than 50% win rate
  • Amazon Attack: Siberian Attack – a bold choice with a win rate around 60%
  • Colle System: Rhamphorhynchus Variation – a tactical weapon with over 60% wins
  • Sicilian Defense – balancing aggressive counterplay and positional nuances
  • Barnes Defense – surprisingly effective with a strong winning record

Rahul is not afraid to experiment and adapt, often tailoring his strategy to the opponent or situation.

Career Highlights

  • Achieved Grandmaster title recognized by FIDE
  • Reached a peak Bullet rating close to 2990 and Blitz rating over 2980 by mid-2025
  • Accumulated over 2600 wins in Blitz and Bullet combined, showcasing extraordinary consistency
  • Maintained solid performances in Rapid and Daily formats, demonstrating versatility

Fun Facts

  • Rahul's longest winning streak stands at 30 games – that's a chess marathon!
  • His most common opponent is starworld123, facing off 81 times with exciting battles.
  • His best time to play? Around 9 PM – the hour of chess magic and brilliant tactics.

Summary

Rahul Srivatshav P combines tenacity, deep tactical knowledge, and a love for rapid chess to dazzle the chess community. Whether casting out the King’s Indian Attack or launching into tactical skirmishes, Rahul's games are always a thrilling ride. Watch this Grandmaster; his lightning-fast and thoughtful moves keep fans on the edge of their seats!


Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick summary

Nice work recently — you showed strong endgame technique and good tactical awareness in your wins, and your opening choices give you comfortable familiar structures. Games also reveal a few recurring weaknesses to fix: time management in critical moments, occasional slip-ups against advancing passed pawns, and some missed defensive resources.

Highlights — what you did well

  • Converted a distant passed pawn confidently: you used your king actively to escort pawns to promotion instead of waiting for piece maneuvers. That direct approach won you at least one game.
  • Spotting concrete tactics: the exf7+ idea (sacrificing to damage the enemy king and win material) was calculated and effective — good pattern recognition on forcing lines.
  • Piece activity over material greed: you often prioritized improving king and rook placement, which produced practical winning chances in simplified positions.
  • Opening familiarity: you repeatedly steer the game into Reti / King's / English structures where you know typical plans — that consistency is a strength.

Recurring weaknesses to target

  • Time management under increment — you let the clock drop in several complex positions. With +2 increment, aim to keep 10–20 seconds available on the clock before sharp sequences so you can calculate without pre-moving.
  • Handling fast pawn races: in the loss you allowed an opponent pawn to queen (a-file in that game). When opponents push passed pawns, prioritize cutting off the king or exchanging down to a winning rook vs pawn endgame.
  • Back-rank and aerial checks: a few games featured checks or promotions that could have been prevented by simple luft or rook coordination. Watch for back-rank motifs when you trade pieces.
  • Occasional tunnel vision: after gaining an advantage you sometimes chased a second plan instead of consolidating. When ahead, prefer simplification and prophylaxis over hunting for more fireworks.

Key moments to review (concrete)

  • Winning conversion: after trading into a king-and-pawn ending you used the king actively and created a passed b-pawn that promoted. Review the sequence where you centralize the king and push the pawn — that is repeatable technique.
  • Tactical win: the exf7+ sacrifice created decisive threats. Reconstruct that position and replay the forcing moves — ask yourself what candidate captures or checks your opponent missed.
  • Loss example: examine the game where Black promoted on the a-file. Look for moments you could have traded rooks earlier or placed your king to stop the passer; small changes would have held equality.
  • Time trouble moments: pick one game where the clock became critical and annotate the last 10 moves — find opportunities where simple developing or prophylactic moves would have been fast and safe.

Practical training plan (2-week cycle)

  • Daily tactics: 10–15 mixed puzzles (themes: forks, deflection, promotion tactics). Focus on depth not speed — set a goal to calculate the final position mentally before checking.
  • Endgame drills: 3 x 10-minute sessions per week on king+rook vs rook, and king+pawn races (opposition, cutting off the king, Lucena position ideas). Practice the technique of building a bridge and escorting the pawn.
  • Opening + 1 backup line: pick one main structure (your Reti / King's setups) and work 1–2 key move orders and the typical pawn breaks. Spend 20–30 minutes, twice a week, on the theory and one common opponent reply.
  • Rapid annotated play: 5 blitz games with post-game self-analysis — spend 10 minutes per game annotating critical errors and one improvement you will apply next time.

Concrete habits to adopt during blitz

  • Keep 12–20 seconds on the clock going into complex middlegames — don’t spend more than 30 seconds on a quiet move early on.
  • When your opponent advances a pawn to the 5th/6th rank, immediately ask: “Can I cut off the king?” If yes, do it; if no, trade rooks or create counterplay on the other side.
  • Before any capture that opens files, glance for back-rank mates or pins — five-second habit that prevents cheap losses.
  • If you gain a clear edge, simplify: trades, force good king activity, then march pawns — avoid speculative complications unless you calculated them fully.

Short practice checklist for your next session

  • 10 tactics (mixed) — record 3 you missed and why.
  • 5 rook endgame positions — win or draw technique.
  • Study one key line in your preferred opening and one refutation you fear.
  • Play 5 blitz games applying the “keep 12s” rule — review the worst clock usage after each game.

Replay suggestion

Revisit the tactical/strategic sequence around the exf7+ break in your recent win. Replay that forcing sequence and ask: where did the opponent have defensive resources? Compare the position to standard motifs in your King's structures.

Opponents to review

  • Recent wins vs Aryan Chopra and Nikolozi Kacharava — study how you converted advantages.
  • Loss vs Viktor Gazik — replay the pawn race and queen promotion sequence; find the move where the balance tipped.
  • Earlier loss vs Suresh Harsh — inspect the tactical sequence that led to material loss; defensive resources were available earlier.

Small long-term improvements (monthly)

  • Continue the endgame focus — 30 minutes/week on fundamental endgames will pay off quickly in blitz conversion rate.
  • Track clock usage per game for one month. Aim to reduce losses from time trouble by 50% (small, measurable goal).
  • Keep a short opening notebook with 4–6 typical middlegame plans from your favorite lines — writing helps memory and speeds decision-making in blitz.

Final note — actionable first move

For your next session: do 15 tactics, 2 rook endgames, and play 5 blitz games where your only time rule is “never go below 10 seconds before a capture.” That single constraint will reduce mouse slips and force better time habits. Good luck — you've got the skills to climb back up quickly if you focus on these targeted areas.



🆚 Opponent Insights

Recent Opponents
Tianqi Wang 2W / 0L / 1D View
Nikolozi Kacharava 1W / 0L / 0D View
Viktor Gazik 1W / 4L / 0D View
Aryan Chopra 1W / 0L / 1D View
Suresh Harsh 0W / 2L / 0D View
Srihari L R 0W / 3L / 0D View
Mohamed Anees M 1W / 0L / 0D View
Srihari L 1W / 0L / 1D View
f1_and_chess 0W / 1L / 0D View
Mikhail Markov 2W / 3L / 2D View
Most Played Opponents
Raja Rithvik R 33W / 43L / 5D View Games
ind1anstar-inactive 39W / 8L / 2D View Games
anon102030 18W / 18L / 2D View Games
Nihal Sarin 7W / 29L / 2D View Games
Raja Harshit 21W / 15L / 2D View Games

Rating

Year Bullet Blitz Rapid Daily
2025 2955 2946 2459
2024 2937 2859 2475
2023 2678 2801 2475
2022 2621 2816 2490
2021 2750 2805 2589
2020 2718 2766 2562 1893
2019 2601 2741 1888
2018 2604 2784 1591 1703
2017 2520 2559
2016 2148 2123 1874
2015 2196 1920
2014 1578 1693
Rating by Year20142015201620172018201920202021202220232024202529551578YearRatingBulletBlitzRapidDaily

Stats by Year

Year White Black Moves
2025 33W / 27L / 6D 37W / 28L / 7D 90.2
2024 73W / 68L / 12D 75W / 67L / 10D 87.6
2023 33W / 17L / 8D 31W / 21L / 7D 96.6
2022 32W / 18L / 1D 26W / 20L / 7D 89.0
2021 22W / 17L / 4D 19W / 19L / 3D 67.0
2020 308W / 234L / 45D 287W / 262L / 55D 82.7
2019 184W / 163L / 28D 163W / 192L / 19D 72.0
2018 425W / 313L / 45D 351W / 356L / 59D 80.4
2017 206W / 110L / 22D 192W / 106L / 25D 85.9
2016 37W / 18L / 0D 36W / 8L / 3D 68.6
2015 56W / 18L / 1D 53W / 18L / 1D 72.7
2014 6W / 6L / 0D 8W / 2L / 2D 78.2

Openings: Most Played

Blitz Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Amazon Attack: Siberian Attack 293 145 120 28 49.5%
Unknown 286 151 134 1 52.8%
East Indian Defense 172 86 74 12 50.0%
King's Indian Attack 129 66 50 13 51.2%
London System: Poisoned Pawn Variation 124 67 47 10 54.0%
Hungarian Opening: Wiedenhagen-Beta Gambit 108 50 43 15 46.3%
Sicilian Defense 95 51 41 3 53.7%
Sicilian Defense: Taimanov Variation, Bastrikov Variation 94 36 51 7 38.3%
Sicilian Defense: Taimanov Variation, Bastrikov Variation, English Attack 87 39 40 8 44.8%
Amazon Attack 86 50 29 7 58.1%
Bullet Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
King's Indian Attack 180 96 70 14 53.3%
Hungarian Opening: Wiedenhagen-Beta Gambit 170 91 70 9 53.5%
Colle System: Rhamphorhynchus Variation 161 97 56 8 60.2%
Amar Gambit 85 49 32 4 57.6%
East Indian Defense 60 33 23 4 55.0%
Sicilian Defense 60 33 25 2 55.0%
Amazon Attack: Siberian Attack 58 36 22 0 62.1%
Barnes Defense 56 32 24 0 57.1%
Czech Defense 52 27 22 3 51.9%
Indian Defense: Przepiorka Variation 41 19 16 6 46.3%
Daily Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Unknown 14 4 10 0 28.6%
Barnes Defense 4 0 4 0 0.0%
English Opening: Four Knights System, Nimzowitsch Variation 3 3 0 0 100.0%
King's Indian Attack 1 1 0 0 100.0%
Benko Gambit 1 1 0 0 100.0%
East Indian Defense 1 0 1 0 0.0%
Modern Defense: Pterodactyl Variation 1 0 1 0 0.0%
Colle System: Rhamphorhynchus Variation 1 0 1 0 0.0%
Australian Defense 1 0 1 0 0.0%
Evans Gambit Accepted, 5.c3 1 0 1 0 0.0%

🔥 Streaks

Streak Longest Current
Winning 30 0
Losing 11 0
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