Quick overview
Nice run in blitz lately — your opening results and conversion rate are strong, but time trouble and endgame technique are costing you a few games. Below I break down your recent win and loss, highlight what you did well, and give a focused training plan you can use in the next 2–4 weeks.
Recent win (selected moves)
Opponent: Timur Kocharin — Opening: Caro-Kann Defense (Tartakower-ish lines)
Key moment: you played a central break with d5 and then expanded with c5, used knight to invade on c6, picked up the kingside pawn with Qxh4 and traded into a favourable queen + minor piece ending. You converted without panicking in a complicated middlegame.
- What you did well:
- Space gains in the centre (d5 then c5) — created a passed/advanced pawn and targets.
- Piece activity — knights and queen found active squares (Nc6, Qf3/Qg4) rather than passive defense.
- Good decision-making under time pressure — you simplified into winning material and then exchanged down confidently.
- Small tweak:
- When playing the pawn storm (b4, c5) keep a clear plan for the rooks — try to bring rooks behind a passed pawn or to open files sooner.
Replay the key sequence (use this to show patterns to yourself):
Recent loss (what went wrong)
Opponent: Dmitry MIschuk — Opening: Caro-Kann Defense
- Main issues:
- Time trouble: the game ended on time loss. Your clock was low repeatedly late in the game — that made accurate defense harder.
- Endgame technique vs passed pawns: the opponent’s passed e‑pawn eventually promoted. You needed a clearer plan to stop the pawn (active rook, cut the king off, or exchange into a drawn minor-piece endgame).
- Passive defense: after the queenside tactics and exchanges you spent a lot of time shuffling — try to look for concrete defensive targets earlier (blockade squares, checks, or trade opportunities).
- Concrete turning point(s):
- The pawn push sequence that produced the advanced e‑pawn became unstoppable because your pieces were tied down and the king was cut off.
Patterns & positional lessons
- When you have a queenside pawn majority (or play c4/c5 ideas) aim to place rooks on open files behind the pawn — rooks behind passed pawns win more reliably than chasing with minor pieces.
- In rook & pawn endgames or positions with a distant passed pawn:
- Prioritize active rook and king activity over passive defense.
- If the opponent’s pawn is far advanced, try cutting the king off (rook on the rank behind the pawn) or preparing a blockading piece on the queening path.
- Tactical theme you executed well in wins: picking off a weakened kingside pawn (Qxh4) when opponent’s pieces are tied to defense — keep scanning for those pawn-grab opportunities.
Training plan (2–4 weeks, blitz-focused)
Small, daily habits produce the biggest change in blitz. Try this schedule:
- Daily (10–20 minutes):
- Blitz tactics: 20–30 puzzles on mixed difficulty — focus on pattern recognition (pins, forks, discovered attacks).
- 10 minutes on one recurring endgame: start with rook vs passed pawn setups, then Lucena/Philidor basics.
- 3× per week (30–45 minutes):
- Openings: pick 1–2 key lines you play (you already score well in Sicilian Defense: Dragon Variation and Caro-Kann Defense). Review one model game per line and write a one-paragraph plan for the middlegame goals.
- Game review: pick 2 blitz losses/wins and spend 15–20 minutes finding the turning moment; try to find YOUR candidate moves first, then check with engine/notes.
- Weekly (1 session, 60 minutes):
- Play a 10+0 or 15+10 rapid game and practice keeping 30–40 seconds in the clock for the endgame — this changes time management habits in blitz.
Practical blitz checklist (use at the board)
- First 10 moves: spend time on opening aims; after move 10–12, switch to 10–15 seconds per move on routine moves to build a time buffer.
- If you get an advantage: simplify (exchange pieces) when safe — trading down reduces tactical risk in low time.
- If the opponent threatens a distant passed pawn: calculate the race (can your king/rook stop it?), or force piece exchanges to neutralize it.
- When low on time (<20s): prioritize checks, captures, threats and use pre-moves carefully only when safe.
- Keep a 20–30 second reserve for the last 10 moves — many lost-on-time games stem from using all time earlier.
Concrete next steps
- This week: 5 tactical sessions + study 2 model games in your Caro-Kann line (write 3 typical plans each).
- Two-week goal: eliminate time losses — play two 15+10 games where you force yourself to keep ≥30s on the clock at move 20.
- One-month goal: review 20 losses and mark recurring motifs (passed pawns, pinned rooks, timing errors) — make a checklist of three habits to apply during blitz games.
Final notes & resources
You're doing a lot right: strong opening win rates (especially in the Dragon and Caro‑Kann), good tactical instincts, and a clear ability to convert advantages. The two highest-impact improvements are consistent time management and focused endgame drills (rook + pawn, stopping passed pawns). If you want, I can build a 14-day training schedule tailored to your available time and the openings you prefer.
Opponents referenced above: Timur Kocharin, Arman Mikaelyan, Dmitry MIschuk.