Avatar of Sparrow20

Sparrow20

Location: 🌎

Playing Since: 2016-10-31 (Active)

Wow Factor: ♟♟♟♟♟

Chess.com

Daily: 1002
5W / 5L / 0D
Rapid: 865
139W / 149L / 15D
Blitz: 750
1179W / 1205L / 86D
Bullet: 381
1595W / 1725L / 5D

Chess Player Profile: Sparrow20

Meet Sparrow20, a clever avian in the vast ecosystem of online chess! Just like the nimble sparrow that flits through forests with agility and quick reflexes, Sparrow20 takes to the chessboard with a blend of tactical flair and unyielding persistence. With a quirky mix of strategies spanning from the classic King's Pawn to the somewhat exotic Grob Opening (because every bird loves a unique perch), this player keeps opponents guessing and the competition hopping.

Sparrow20's chess journey is a nest well-built over the years. Peaking in rapid play with ratings climbing as high as 1098, this player enjoys the thrill of swift decisions without losing sight of positional finesse. Through blitz and bullet games, Sparrow20 has shown both quick wit and sharp talons, though sometimes fluttering through losses with a tilt factor of 33 – perhaps a reminder that even the best birds can ruffle their feathers occasionally.

With an impressive comeback rate of over 44% and a remarkable 100% win rate after losing a piece, Sparrow20 proves that resilience is truly part of their DNA – because in the wild, it's not just about how strong your wings are, but how fiercely you fight wind and storm.

Tactical awareness is an area where Sparrow20 really takes flight: despite a modest early resignation rate hovering just above 4%, they tend to savor longer battles, with an average of around 42 moves per win, showing patience and endurance to clinch victory from the jaws of defeat.

A fascinating pattern emerges in Sparrow20's preferred openings. The Scandinavian Defense and King's Pawn variations have been favored in blitz games, while the Grob Opening adds a touch of the unexpected in bullet battles. These choices reveal a player who is not afraid to mix birdcalls in their repertoire, surprising foes with both melodious strategy and sharp strikes.

Sparrow20's opponent record reads like a flight log of daring encounters – some highly successful and others where the bird has experienced the occasional singed feather. Nonetheless, with a longest winning streak of 10 games and a current streak ready to take off again, the path ahead looks bright and full of cheeps and checkmates.

Whether it’s the early morning hours (4 AM shows an impressive 58.94% win rate!) or the post-dusk playtimes where instincts take over, Sparrow20 adapts with the environment like a true chess sparrow thriving in its domain.

In summary, Sparrow20 is a blend of charm and challenge on the chessboard — unpredictable yet methodical, cheeky yet strategic. This player reminds us that in the vast birdwatching world of chess, even the smallest bird can make the biggest splash. So watch your backs and keep your rooks ready – Sparrow20 might just swoop in and claim the game!


Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick summary

You’re doing a lot of the right things in bullet: you find tactics, punish loose pieces, and you win many games on time by keeping pressure on the clock. Recent wins show good pattern recognition (capturing the enemy queen when it wandered) and practical conversion via opponent mistakes. Biggest recurring leak is time management — several wins and losses are decided on the clock rather than the board. Below I highlight what to keep and what to fix, with a compact, week-long practice plan.

Recent game highlights (example)

Nice clean tactic in the Scandinavian line — you punished a queen sortie and won material quickly. Replay the critical sequence here:

  • Quick replay:

  • Opponent: jbjaguar — you exploited a Loose Piece (the queen on g4) and converted immediately.

What you’re doing well

  • Quick tactical recognition — you regularly spot and execute simple tactics (captures, forks, loose-piece wins).
  • Aggressive, practical play — you pressure opponents into time trouble and force mistakes.
  • Opening familiarity — you stick to a set of lines (e.g. Scandinavian Defense) so you reach familiar middlegames quickly.
  • Resilience in messy positions — you thrive in-chaotic short time controls where concrete play matters more than long strategic plans.

Main areas to improve

  • Time management: many wins and losses are decided on the clock. Don’t burn time in equal positions — use quick, safe moves and save time for crunch moments.
  • Queen safety & loose pieces: the Scandinavian example shows both strength and a recurring theme — your opponents sometimes drop a piece, and sometimes you leave pieces hanging. Always ask: “Is any piece en prise?” before moving.
  • Conversion technique: when you win material, simplify and exchange to reduce opponent counterplay instead of hunting more complications that cost time.
  • Premove discipline: in bullet, premoves are powerful but double-edged. Avoid premoving in unclear positions or when captures are possible on the destination square.
  • Endgame basics under time pressure: practice simple rook-and-pawn, king-and-pawn conversion drills so you convert when the clock is low.

Concrete bullet tips you can apply immediately

  • When ahead materially: simplify (trade queens/rooks) and move fast. Aim to get to an easily winning endgame before the clock bites.
  • When equal: play natural developing moves (knight, bishop, castle). Save time by having 3–4 “go-to” moves memorized in your common openings.
  • Critical moments: spend 3–6 seconds to decide — longer only if the tactic is decisive. Use a baseline of “move in < 2s unless a tactic exists.”
  • Premoves: enable premoves only for forced recaptures or when opponent has a single safe response — otherwise they cost you games by mouse slips or unpredicted captures.
  • Blunder-check routine: before every move, check (1) is my moved piece hanging? (2) does opponent have a check? (3) any incoming forks/pins?

Opening & repertoire suggestions

  • Keep using what works: you have a decent win rate in lines like the Barnes Opening: Walkerling and Amar Gambit. Stick to 2–3 main replies so your moves in the first 6–10 plies are automatic.
  • Study common traps and refutations in your main defenses — e.g. Scandinavian sidelines where an early queen sortie can be met with a quiet queen retreat and quick development.
  • Practice one reliable endgame line from each opening you play so conversion patterns are automatic.

Short practice plan (7 days)

  • Daily (10–15 minutes): Tactics trainer — focus on mates, forks, and loose-piece tactics (20 puzzles/day).
  • 3× this week (15–20 minutes): Bullet time drills — play a 1+0 or 2+1 session with the specific goal of keeping average move time under 3s while maintaining accuracy.
  • 2× this week (20 minutes): Analyze a recent loss and a recent win — find the turning point and write down the one pattern to avoid or repeat.
  • Endgame micro-session (10 minutes): basic rook endgames, king+pawn vs king, and queen vs rook patterns — these save or win flagged conversions.

Practical micro-checklist to use at the board

  • “Loose pieces?” — quick scan before I move.
  • “If I move fast, is the position still safe?” — yes → move; no → think 5–10s.
  • “Am I winning on the board or on the clock?” — if on clock, simplify and avoid risky premoves.
  • “Can I force trades to end the game faster?” — trade down when up material under time pressure.

Where you’ll see the biggest gains

Addressing time management and premove discipline will give you the fastest rating improvement in bullet. Improving routine blunder checks and learning one or two conversion templates will turn many time-wins into clean, playable victories.

Next steps & encouragement

Pick one small habit to change this week (for example: “no premoves unless recapture”) and stick with it during every session. Re-run the short practice plan for 2–3 weeks and you’ll notice less flag-based chaos and more stable wins. You’re already doing the key parts — sharpen the clock skills and remove the small slips.

Want a focused drill set or a 30-move annotated replay of a specific game (e.g., vs divyanshd21 or gorgoman)? Tell me which game and I’ll break it down into 3 improvement points you can train on.



🆚 Opponent Insights

Recent Opponents
carbownara 0W / 1L / 0D View
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isjcjekskfkejwjskfkw 1W / 0L / 0D View
cheeseman12222 0W / 1L / 0D View
fammmy23 1W / 0L / 0D View
hawk2001 0W / 1L / 0D View
chilliverde07 1W / 0L / 0D View
tangaaar 1W / 0L / 0D View
thesenthilkumar 1W / 0L / 0D View
Most Played Opponents
dj7860 2W / 14L / 1D View Games
jiaudeen 5W / 11L / 0D View Games
peachette84 6W / 5L / 0D View Games
karma9111 8W / 0L / 0D View Games
serpastyj 2W / 5L / 0D View Games

Rating

Year Bullet Blitz Rapid Daily
2025 381 773 865 1002
2024 378 753
2023 498 694
2022 410 575 805 1036
2021 269 634 853 1193
2020 732 1038 1327
2016 566
Rating by Year20162020202120222023202420251327269YearRatingBulletBlitzRapidDaily

Stats by Year

Year White Black Moves
2025 638W / 604L / 41D 657W / 620L / 27D 56.6
2024 24W / 20L / 1D 16W / 28L / 1D 60.1
2023 55W / 61L / 1D 50W / 62L / 2D 48.4
2022 237W / 229L / 1D 208W / 252L / 7D 41.2
2021 518W / 553L / 11D 468W / 615L / 11D 40.4
2020 22W / 15L / 1D 20W / 16L / 2D 54.9
2016 1W / 3L / 0D 1W / 3L / 0D 20.9

Openings: Most Played

Blitz Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Amar Gambit 446 216 221 9 48.4%
Scandinavian Defense 387 191 183 13 49.4%
Barnes Defense 256 123 120 13 48.0%
Czech Defense 220 98 116 6 44.5%
Barnes Opening: Walkerling 193 85 98 10 44.0%
Philidor Defense 104 50 50 4 48.1%
Amazon Attack 91 38 52 1 41.8%
Center Game: Berger Variation 90 34 48 8 37.8%
Australian Defense 85 37 46 2 43.5%
Center Game 81 45 34 2 55.6%
Bullet Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Amar Gambit 801 399 402 0 49.8%
Barnes Defense 385 172 211 2 44.7%
Scandinavian Defense 299 134 164 1 44.8%
Barnes Opening: Walkerling 248 138 110 0 55.6%
Czech Defense 244 112 132 0 45.9%
Australian Defense 179 90 89 0 50.3%
Philidor Defense 139 63 75 1 45.3%
Amazon Attack 126 55 71 0 43.6%
Alekhine Defense 108 54 54 0 50.0%
Colle System: Rhamphorhynchus Variation 97 43 54 0 44.3%
Daily Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Amar Gambit 5 2 3 0 40.0%
Nimzo-Larsen Attack: Classical Variation 1 0 1 0 0.0%
Barnes Opening: Walkerling 1 0 1 0 0.0%
Döry Defense 1 1 0 0 100.0%
Philidor Defense 1 1 0 0 100.0%
Modern Defense 1 1 0 0 100.0%
Rapid Opening Games Wins Losses Draws Win Rate
Amar Gambit 80 32 45 3 40.0%
Barnes Defense 39 18 18 3 46.1%
Czech Defense 20 10 8 2 50.0%
Barnes Opening: Walkerling 20 11 8 1 55.0%
Philidor Defense 17 5 10 2 29.4%
Scandinavian Defense 13 5 7 1 38.5%
Australian Defense 11 5 6 0 45.5%
Nimzo-Larsen Attack: Classical Variation 11 6 5 0 54.5%
Amazon Attack 8 5 3 0 62.5%
Modern Defense 8 4 4 0 50.0%

🔥 Streaks

Streak Longest Current
Winning 13 0
Losing 33 1
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