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PracticeMakesOK NM

Since 2021 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟♟
47.3%- 44.1%- 8.6%
Blitz 2901 11936W 11202L 2639D
Bullet 2844 22700W 21038L 3650D
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Coach Chesswick

What went well in your recent blitz games

You showed a willingness to press in dynamic positions and to pursue concrete attacking chances. In the wins, you found sharp, forcing sequences and kept the initiative by coordinating queen and rook activity to create mating threats. You demonstrated confidence when the position opened up, and you trusted your calculation to finish off the opponents in strong attacking nets.

  • You identify targets and use forcing moves to generate real problems for your opponents, which is a key strength in blitz.
  • Your piece activity and willingness to attack into open lines helped you convert several advantages into wins.
  • You can finish decisive games with precise calculation, as shown in the attacking sequences that culminated in mate or decisive material gains.

Areas to improve

  • Time management in blitz: while you win on the clock in some games, work on a steady pace so you’re not relying on your opponent’s time or rushing at critical moments. Develop a simple move-by-move plan for the first 15–20 moves to avoid early time trouble.
  • Endgame technique: when the position simplifies, keep the plan clear and avoid speculative trades that reduce your winning chances. Practice basic king and rook endings and simple pawn endgames to convert small advantages.
  • Defensive resilience in complex middlegames: in crowded tactical positions, pause to verify forcing lines and check for hidden counterplay. It’s easy to overcommit to a single tactic in blitz and miss a stronger defensive move.
  • Opening consistency: you enjoy aggressive, tactical lines, but some openings in your repertoire can lead to imbalanced middlegames that are easy to misjudge under time pressure. Consider strengthening a small, coherent set of lines and learn the typical middlegame plans you should aim for after the main moves.

Openings and middlegame trends to consider

Your openings show a fondness for sharp, active setups (for example, aggressive lines in the Amazon Attack family and related defenses). These can yield great winning chances when your calculation is sharp, but they also demand precise follow-ups. Balancing this with a solid, reliable set of non-tactical lines can help you avoid rough patches when opponents steer the game into quieter positions.

  • Focus on 2–3 main lines for each color and learn the typical middlegame plans that follow. This helps you stay in control even when the position becomes cluttered.
  • For the sharper lines, build a habit of quick, consistent evaluation after each key move to avoid missing tactical counterplay from your opponent.

Momentum snapshot

Short-term momentum is positive, with recent gains in the monthly window. Longer-term trends show some fluctuation, so aim for steady, repeatable improvements through deliberate practice and consistent game-review routines.

Two-week practice plan

  • Daily tactical puzzles (15–20 minutes) focusing on common blitz motifs: forks, pins, skewers, and mating nets.
  • Reinforce 2–3 openings you enjoy with a prepared middlegame plan for each, and review typical responses you’re likely to face under time pressure.
  • Endgame drills: 10–15 minutes every other day on king activity, simple rook endings, and basic pawn endgames.
  • Post-game review: after each blitz session, pick the two main mistakes, write a concrete improvement cue, and test it in the next game.
  • Play one longer blitz session per week to improve calculation depth and time management in less frantic circumstances.

Would you like deeper, annotated feedback?

Tell me which specific game you’d like annotated line-by-line, and I’ll provide targeted improvements and a practical drill plan tailored to those positions.


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