Coach Chesswick
Hi Matvei!
Great streak of high-paced games lately. I looked at your most recent results (both wins and losses) and distilled a few strengths, as well as concrete improvement ideas you can apply right away.
What you’re already doing well
- Consistent opening repertoire. 1.e4 as White with the Scotch/Petrov family and the Paulsen-style Sicilian as Black give you positions you understand. You often reach playable middlegames with a small lead on the clock.
- Tactical alertness. Your two March 19th wins show sharp tactics: the Bxc6 / c7 push vs. LaBougieEteinte and the exchange sac Rxf5!! vs. LaBougieEteinte in the first game. When the board explodes, you usually find the right shot.
- Fighting spirit in time scrambles. You frequently keep playing accurate premoves in positions with <5 s. It converts some completely lost endgames into wins on time.
Recurring issues & quick fixes
-
Early …Bc5 in the Paulsen (games vs. MaskOfEmotions2 & Borodianka).
The move wins a tempo on e4, but it makes your kingside dark squares fragile and puts the bishop on a file that White will soon open with b4 or Nxc5.
Quick fix: After…c5 e6 Nf6 Bb4stick to the main line…d6/…Nc6before revealing the bishop. Review 10-min surge of master games in the Paulsen with an engine to internalise better squares. -
Over-extension of the g- and h-pawns when you are Black.
In several losses you pushed …g5/…h5 while undeveloped (moves 14-20). It scared White, but also gave him the g-file for open lines against your king.
Drill: Play three 15-min training games vs. the engine where you forbid yourself to push either flank pawn until move 15. It installs a “seat-belt” habit. -
Time-trouble conversions.
Your average remaining time at move 40 is often below 5 s, even in won positions (see the 78-move endgame vs. xiaotong2008).
Plan: Every day run five 1-min “clock-only” drills (play the opening until move 15 with premoves only, resign, restart). It trains the muscle memory ⟶ spare seconds you’ll need later.
Also read about Zeitnot if you haven’t already. -
End-game conversion.
You frequently reach rook-plus-pawns endings a pawn up, then slip (e.g. Borodianka & MergenKakabaev games).
Immediate task: Solve 20 positions from “100 Endgames You Must Know” chapter 3 (rook vs. rook). Do three/day; annotate key squares in a notebook.
Strategic upgrades for April
- Pick one secondary defence to 1.e4 (Petrov or French Tarrasch) so you’re not forced into the Paulsen when opponents prep.
- Add one positional structure to your White arsenal (e.g. Italian Giuoco Pianissimo) to polish maneuvering skills and limit early exchanges—good antidote to bullet “tactics only” habits.
- Weekly self-review session: import three losses into an engine, annotate “Why did I choose this?” for every move that changes eval > 0.5. This builds disciplined decision-making.
Key performance snapshots
Peak bullet rating: 2759 (2023-08-24)
One puzzle from your own game
Try to spot the winning idea you missed in the loss to MaskOfEmotions2 (position after 15…Bxh2+):
Answer (hover to reveal): 16.Kxh3? was played, but 16.Qe2! gives White no attack and keeps material parity.
Final encouragement
You’re already performing at titled-player level in bullet—excellent! Shoring up the structural mistakes and time-management will push you beyond 2800 in no-increment and stabilise your rapid rating too. Keep the enthusiasm, and see you at the next training session!