Avatar of Roman Gavrilin

Roman Gavrilin NM

Romkachess Canada Since 2020 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟♟♟
49.5%- 42.8%- 7.7%
Bullet 2800
3985W 4030L 537D
Blitz 2707
2140W 1935L 433D
Rapid 2386
314W 85L 39D
Daily 1758
752W 178L 111D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Feedback for Roman Gavrilin (“Romkachess”)

1. What you’re already doing well

  • Opening versatility. As Black you handle both the Sicilian (Najdorf & sidelines) and off-beat systems such as the Philidor, while with White you switch smoothly between 1.e4 and 1.d4/London structures. This keeps opponents out of preparation.
  • Initiative-seeking play. Your recent wins against jammmmm256 show a willingness to seize space (…c5/…e5 break vs the London and 9.a4! vs the Caro-Kann) and convert it into durable piece activity.
  • Daily-chess discipline. In correspondence time controls you rarely blunder pieces and your calculation depth is evident (e.g. 15.cxd5! in the Accelerated London game, exploiting the pin on the d-file).

2. Recurrent themes to improve

2.1 Time management in fast chess

Five of your last seven live games were lost on time from playable or even better positions. In bullet/blitz you often enter an excellent technical ending (see diagram after 30……Rb8 vs Bobancio) but run out of seconds.

  • Adopt a “draw-ish bailout” rule when under 5 s: exchange queens or force repetition instead of searching for the absolute best move.
  • Use your opening repertoire to reach familiar pawn structures so you can play the first 15 moves nearly on autopilot.

2.2 Over-pressing in equal positions

The loss vs mukesh_micro (Daily, Canal Attack) is instructive: after 21…Nb7 you pushed unprepared kingside pawns and weakened dark squares, allowing …f5–f4. A quieter plan (doubling rooks on the e-file and only then advancing f4) would have kept the bind.

2.3 Tactical oversight vs engines/strong bots

Against Coach-David-BOT the motif 18…Nxf3+ exploited an absolute pin on the g-file — a textbook example of a deflection-with-check tactic. Drilling 3-to-5-move forcing sequences daily (e.g. via Puzzle Rush ≤20 s per move) will hard-wire these patterns.

3. Opening-specific pointers

  • Najdorf move orders. In several blitz games you reached ∆Nc5, …d5 breaks too late and allowed White’s a4/b4 steamroller. Study 6…e5 (& …Be6) vs 6.Bg5 to learn the thematic …h6 & …g5 counter-strike.
  • Philidor/Lion. The plan ‹…h5/…g5› is powerful, but remember centre first. Insert …c6 or …exd4 before a5/a4 appears, or you’ll be left with loose pawns as happened versus Fox1397.
  • Closed Sicilian as Black. After 2.Nc3 d6 3…e5 you reached a fine Benko-style bind but exchanged queens on d5, removing winning chances. Consider the thematic …f5 pawn lever instead.

4. End-game and technical conversion

When you do reach rook endings with time on the clock you convert confidently (see 17…h6 → 0-1 vs Jammmmm256). Two tweaks will raise your ceiling:

  1. King activity. In several Sicilian endgames your king remained on g8 while the opponent’s marched to d4. Make it a habit to play …Kg7, …Kf6 the moment queens are off.
  2. Opposition drills. Practise “rook & 4 vs rook & 4” endings against an engine at 10 s per move; aim for <90 % engine score loss.

5. Suggested study plan (next 4 weeks)

  • Daily: 15 tactical puzzles + 1 annotated classic game (focus on Carlsen end-game technique).
  • Alternate days: play one 10|5 rapid game, self-annotate, then compare with engine to identify “first tactical miss”.
  • Weekend: 30-minute opening refresher — build mini files for (a) Najdorf vs 6.Bg5, (b) Philidor Lion with early …c6.

6. Stats & tracking

Keep an eye on your progress:

  • Peak ratings: 2711 (2024-03-19), 2737 (2025-02-01)
  • Momentum charts:
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Stay disciplined with the clock, sharpen your tactical eye, and your already impressive playing strength will become even more formidable. Good luck in your upcoming events!


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