Avatar of Sayantan Das

Sayantan Das GM

Shoytan Since 2016 (Inactive) Chess.com ♟♟
54.6%- 37.8%- 7.6%
Bullet 2739
224W 179L 29D
Blitz 2650
533W 371L 76D
Rapid 2599
41W 2L 6D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Hi Sayantan, here’s some focused feedback based on your latest run of games.

What’s working well

  • Tactical alertness: You convert a large number of games on the clock or by winning material in sharp situations. The sequence 25…♖e8–28…♘d4 against ved1703 shows good peripheral vision and awareness of loose pieces.
  • Comfort in dynamic pawn structures: Whether it’s the King’s Indian with …f5 or the French with …f6–…e5, you’re not afraid to unbalance the centre and play for the initiative.
  • Versatility as White: You switch smoothly between 1.e4 and 1.d4, giving you a practical edge in fast time-controls.

Key improvement themes

  1. Time-management in won positions
    Several losses (e.g. vs area_5) came after you reached a clearly superior or equal endgame but ran low on time. In bullet, you only need a “good enough” conversion method – not the absolute best.
    • Adopt a template finish (trade queens, centralise king, push the passer) and premove the obvious recaptures.
    • Practise the “mouse-drill” of queening a pawn with three premoves so it becomes automatic.
  2. Simplifying your French repertoire
    In the Steinitz & Fort Knox lines you often spend 5-7 seconds on early decisions like …♗d7 or …♗c6. Consider a more bullet-friendly scheme:
    • Play the Rubinstein French (3…dxe4) and head for quick piece development.
    • Memorise only the key tabiya up to move 8; after that rely on general French plans (…c5, …♘c6, castle long).
    This will save you precious seconds and cut down on early queen trades that leave you defending slightly worse endgames.
  3. Handling opposite-wing pawn storms in the KID
    Your win vs 1977Ivan showed excellent attacking instincts, but the loss to SaveljevVladislav highlighted a recurring issue: when White avoids castling and pushes h4/h5, you still commit to …f5 without ensuring king safety.
    • Before playing …f5, ask: “Can I meet g4 with …fxg4 followed by …h6, or do I first need the prophylactic …♗d7 / …♖e8?”
    • Train the model exchange sac …♖xf3 in the Mar del Plata to sharpen your intuition for when activity trumps material.
  4. Endgame technique vs strong opposition
    In both recent losses you reached rook-and-pawn endings where a single inaccuracy (e.g. 55…b5? against area_5) turned the tables.
    • Revisit fundamental king-activity rules: in rook endings the king is the extra piece; bring it forward before pushing pawns.
    • Solve 5-minute drills on Lucena and Philidor positions to sharpen pattern recognition. Lucena position

Opening snapshots

Below are two instructive fragments. Replay them a few times and ask “Where could I have made an instant move instead of a thoughtful one?”

1) Critical French moment (loss vs area_5)

2) Successful resource in the Indian Game (win vs ved1703)

Short-term action plan (next 14 days)

  • Day 1-3: Bullet opening clean-up: create a one-page cheat-sheet for your first 10 moves in the Rubinstein French & Taimanov Sicilian.
  • Day 4-7: 20 endgame studies (rook & pawn) – aim to solve each within 60 seconds to mimic time pressure.
  • Day 8-10: Play a training set of 30 games at 3|0 focusing exclusively on time-saving moves. Annotate any position where you dipped below 5 seconds before move 15.
  • Day 11-14: Review your tactics archive; tag five recurring motifs and build a premove “checklist” (forks on e6/e3, back-rank tricks, etc.).

Your stats at a glance

Peak Bullet Rating:
Peak Blitz Rating:

Activity trends

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Keep the momentum!

You’re already performing at a very high level. Shaving a few seconds off your opening phase and tightening the conversion mechanics in rook endgames should net you 30-40 rating points quickly. Feel free to send me any tricky positions you encounter – I’m always happy to help.

Good luck at the board!
– Your Chess Coach


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