Avatar of Stelian-Marian Busuioc

Stelian-Marian Busuioc

sbasil Since 2015 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟
50.9%- 41.6%- 7.5%
Bullet 2654
2537W 1882L 262D
Blitz 2495
5247W 4486L 883D
Rapid 2210
184W 114L 28D
Daily 1533
22W 38L 3D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

What you’re doing well

You handle blitz dynamics with energy and keep the pressure on opponents in open lines. Your choice of active, tactical openings helps create early imbalances that can lead to favorable middlegames. You also show good piece activity and a willingness to complicate positions, which suits fast time controls.

Key areas to sharpen

  • Time management in sharp moments: in blitz, quick, crisp decisions are crucial. Practice a simple rule of spending a maximum of a small, fixed amount of time on non-critical moves, then switch to deeper calculation when the position clearly calls for it.
  • Endgame conversion in blitz: build comfort with common rook and pawn endings, as well as simple knight vs. bishop finales. Being confident in these endings often turns a drawish or unclear game into a clean win or secure draw.
  • Consistency of plan after forcing lines: avoid overloading with tactics if the position starts to simplify. Confirm your long-term plan (coordination of rooks, central pawns, or piece activity) before launching aggressive sequences.
  • Opening depth in blitz: your Scotch Game, Hungarian Opening, and King's Indian lines are strong, but a few standard replies can derail you if you’re not prepared. Deepen 2-3 lines per opening and learn their typical middlegame plans to speed up decisions on move 4–10.

Practical four-week improvement plan

  • Week 1: Tactics sprint. Do 15–20 puzzles daily focusing on common blitz motifs (forks, pins, and discovered attacks) and learn to spot them in 1–2 seconds.
  • Week 2: Opening reinforcement. Pick 2 openings you use most (for example, Hungarian Opening and Scotch). Create a short, clear plan for typical middlegame ideas against the main defenses and drill the key responses.
  • Week 3: Endgame fundamentals. Practice rook endings and king + pawn endings with 3–5 minute drills. Aim to convert small material advantages and to hold drawn endings when behind.
  • Week 4: Time pressure and post-game review. Do several 3–4 minute blitz sessions, then review each game quickly to spot one tactical or strategic miss you can avoid in the next game.

Opening performance notes

Your data shows solid results with several aggressive and tactical lines. To maximize this strength, continue deepening your understanding of 2–3 core lines per opening and prepare concise middlegame plans for each. Build quick reference notes that map initial moves to a basic plan (e.g., development, central control, and king safety) so you can decide confidently under time pressure.

If you’d like, we can craft a pocket guide for your top 2 openings with sample middlegame themes and typical replies you’re most likely to face.

Quick training ideas you can start today

  • Run 10–15 minute blitz warmups focusing on fast, safe development and king safety in your preferred openings.
  • During every blitz session, aim to reach move 20 with at least 1 minute on the clock and a clear plan for the next phase of the game.
  • After each game, jot down one moment where a simpler plan could have worked better and one moment where you found a strong tactical idea.

Bonus: quick reference placeholders

Use these as convenient anchors during study and review. For example: stelian-marian%20busuioc


Report a Problem