Coach Chesswick
Hi Ruben, here is your personalized post-match review
Quick snapshot
• Current peak blitz rating: 2935 (2025-02-18)
• Typical performance curve:
What you are already doing very well
- Tactical alertness. Your recent wins feature several in-between moves (Zwischenzug) and mating nets in time trouble (see 60…Qg8+–61…Qg6# in the Sicilian win).
- Central pawn breaks. In victories you often seize the initiative with …d5 (vs 2.Be2 Sicilian) or d5/d4 as White in the Alekhine game, converting space into activity quickly.
- Conversion technique when ahead. The endgame squeeze against
Parthichess1shows patient king walks (Kc6-Kb7-Kc6 …) and zugzwang creation.
Recurring problems spotted in the loss streak
- Early queen excursions in the Pirc/Czech setups – moves such as 4…Qa5 and 14…Qc5+ left the queen exposed and slowed your development. After 18…O-O you were already down a tempo and a pawn.
Critical sequence: – Black’s pieces are tied up and the d6-bishop is trapped. - Neglecting king safety in opposite-side castling races. Against Alan Pichot you allowed pawn storms (…g5/h5 as Black, or …g4/h4 as White) without securing flight squares, leading to decisive attacks.
- Time pressure. In 8 of the last 10 losses you hit <15 s with a tense position still on the board. Good moves stop appearing when the clock is under 10 s.
- Pawn-structure concessions on the queenside. Playing …b5/…b4 vs. White’s a4/a5 in the Dragon and Pirc left weak dark-square holes (c6, d5) that strong opponents exploited.
Targeted recommendations
- Repair the Pirc/Czech branch. Until you have time to patch the move-order details, consider switching to the more solid Classical Pirc with …e5 avoided, or adopt the 1…e5 repertoire you already use successfully against 1.e4.
- Homework drill: Load the position after 14…Qc5+ (diagram above) into an engine and play against Leela-0.5 sec/move from both sides until you can hold it comfortably.
- Add a “safety check” to your thinking routine. Before pushing flank pawns in opposite-side castling positions, ask “Can my king breathe if my pawn lands two squares forward?” – this would have flagged 20…g5?! in the 05-05 loss.
- Clock management micro-goal: Aim to keep ≥45 s by move 25. A simple trick is to hit the clock immediately after making an obvious recapture and think during your opponent’s time.
- Structural study. Work through 10 model games on the theme “hanging pawns vs. minor-piece activity” – this mirrors many of your Slav and English positions.
Practice plan for the next week
| Day | Focus | Time |
|---|---|---|
| Mon | Pirc repair – review 3 games, update repertoire file | 45 min |
| Tue | Tactics – 40 puzzle rush attempts, annotate fails | 30 min |
| Wed | Thematic blitz vs. friend in Slav/English structures | 10 games |
| Thu | Endgame drill – rook + pawn vs. rook under 20 s | 30 min |
| Fri | Play & self-annotate 5 blitz; flag time usage | — |
Keep an eye on these metrics
• Average time left on your clock after move 20.
• Win-rate with Black against 1.e4 before and after the repertoire tweak.
• Accuracy in engine review – strive for <15 % “miss” rate in critical positions.
Final encouragement
You are already competing – and winning – against elite blitz players. A small improvement in opening hygiene and time handling will translate into a significant Elo jump. Good luck, and keep the pieces coordinated!