Hi Rustam!
Congratulations on climbing close to the 2900-blitz mark (2940 (2021-09-18)) – your recent results show an energetic, enterprising style. Below is some targeted feedback aimed at converting a few more of those winning positions and smoothing out the rough edges that occasionally creep in.
What’s already working well
- Active openings. Against 1.d4 you mix the Nimzo-Indian, QGD and even the King’s Indian. This keeps opponents guessing and frequently secures an early initiative.
- Tactical alertness. The Szparu game (see PGN below) is a model of creating multiple threats with Black in the Petroff – the …Bxh2+ shot came right on time.
- Momentum management. You often keep pieces on the board and play for initiative, a good recipe for short time controls.
Recurring trouble spots
- Critical decision making around move 15-25. Several recent losses
(e.g. vs
chessdjw&spicycaterpillar) show a trend of drifting in roughly equal positions. You burn time searching for the “best” plan and end up with structural concessions instead. - Pawn-structure awareness. Once you lock the center (Italian, French Advance, King’s Indian)
you sometimes hurry pawn thrusts without a
clear piece re-routing plan, giving the opponent durable outposts – see the knight on e4 in your
loss to
chessdjw. - End-game technique. When the queens come off your conversion rate drops sharply.
The final stage of the
lider34win took 35 moves in an already winning rook-and-pawn ending. Faster technique means extra clock for earlier critical decisions.
Action plan for the next 50 games
- Adopt a “default” plan when unsure.
a) If you have a space advantage, double rooks on an open file
b) If you’re cramped, trade one minor piece then expand.
Having a pre-set plan avoids deep but time-consuming calculation detours. - One end-game per day. 10-minute drill on basic rook endings
(Philidor, Lucena) and
4-vs-3same-side rook endings will directly convert two or three games per week. - Narrow the opening book. • With Black vs 1.e4 commit to either the Petroff or the Classical Italian setup with …Bc5, but not both. • Against 1.d4 keep the Nimzo/Queen’s-Indian pair – skip occasional King’s Indian experiments until you have studied the typical pawn breaks (…e5, …c5).
- Post-mortem checklist. After every session fill in three quick items: “First inaccuracy”, “Time-management hiccup”, “End-game takeaway”. This 2-minute habit compounds quickly.
Mini-glossary for quick reference
- zwischenzug – an intermediate move, often tactical.
- prophylaxis – a move that prevents the opponent’s idea.
- minor-piece-endgame – endings with only knights and bishops.
Model game to emulate
Pay special attention to 8…Qf6! and the thematic exchange sacrifice 11…Bxh2+ – both highlight your tactical strengths while still keeping positional soundness.
Your performance snapshots
Feel free to explore when you win most and plan your training accordingly:
Next opponents to study
- Dennis Wagner – review your recent Italian loss, especially the …Ne4/…f6 plan.
- Ray Robson – strong French practitioner; examine their maneuvering vs your Advance.
- Rafael Leitao – compare your two Nimzo games to spot recurring themes.
Final encouragement
You’re already outplaying 2700-level opposition in the middlegame. Tighten up the transition to end-games and streamline the opening repertoire and 2900+ will follow naturally. Keep the energy on the board – and good luck in your next session!