Avatar of Štefan Mazúr

Štefan Mazúr IM

stefansachy Since 2025 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟
49.6%- 43.2%- 7.2%
Bullet 2498
19W 8L 3D
Blitz 2589
555W 498L 81D
Rapid 2025
6W 0L 0D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Profile snapshot

Great work staying active in blitz, stefansachy. Your willingness to experiment with different setups gives you practical chances to surprise opponents and gain early initiative. Let’s turn that energy into consistent, clean play from move one to move sixty.

What you did well

  • You press for activity when your pieces are developed, often creating concrete chances early in the middlegame.
  • You handle unfamiliar positions with composure, trying practical plans rather than falling into passive defense.
  • You're comfortable generating threats and keeping the opponent on the back foot, which helps in blitz where time and space are tight.
  • Your willingness to use offbeat openings can lead to opponents spending extra time deciding how to respond, giving you practical practical chances.

Key areas to improve

  • Time management under pressure: in some games you spend too long on the most forcing lines. Practice quick prioritization—develop, King safety, and a simple plan first, then calculate only the critical consequences.
  • Consistency in converting advantages: aim to translate even small edge into a clear plan or material gain. If a line looks risky, switch to a safer continuation that preserves the edge.
  • Endgame technique in blitz: when material is even or you’re slightly ahead, practice simple endings (rook endings, basic minor piece endgames) to lock in wins rather than letting games slip into unclear positions.
  • Opening discipline: your openings show creativity, but have a reliable core repertoire. Pair your flexible setups with a few solid, time-tested lines to reach comfortable middlegame positions quickly.
  • Post-game reflection: incorporate a short, structured review after each blitz session (what went well, what went wrong, and what you’ll change next time).

Openings performance insights

Your results suggest strength with flexible, non-mainstream setups such as the Nimzo-Larsen Attack and Bishop's Opening variations. These can be powerful in blitz when surprise and development lead to quick initiative. Consider the following:

  • Keep developing lines crisp: for Nimzo-Larsen, practice the core ideas (earlier bishop development, control of central squares, and safe king placement) so you reach middlegame plans quickly.
  • Use solid transitions: in Bishop's Opening variants, have a clear plan to consolidate the central control and coordinate rooks and queen sidelined activity rather than chasing too many tactical ideas in a single move.
  • Build a compact repertoire: select 2–3 reliable responses against common Black setups (like 1...c5 or 1...e5) and stick to them in blitz to reduce decision fatigue.

If you want to explore a reference, you can check standard materials on the Nimzo-Larsen Attack and Bishop's Opening variants, or view them in your opening notes: Nimzo-Larsen Attack and Bishop's Opening (Horwitz Gambit).

Strategic training plan

  • Daily tactics focus (15–20 minutes): sharpen pattern recognition, especially motifs common in blitz (pins, skewers, double attacks, and back-rank ideas).
  • Opening practice (3 sessions per week): reinforce a compact Nimzo-Larsen/Silent Bishop approach, plus a solid 1...e5 or 1...c5 answer for blitz safety. Build a 2–3 move safety net for each reply.
  • Post-game reviews (after every blitz session): identify one missed winning idea and one missed defensive resource you should have found.
  • Endgame drills (weekly): practice rook endings, minor piece endings, and basic opposite-colored bishop endings to convert advantages reliably.
  • Time management drills (weekly): play 3+0 or 2+1 blitz with a strict clock discipline; after each game, note where a quicker simplifying line would have preserved time and position.

Practical drills and next steps

  • Drill a two-opening plan for blitz: one flexible Nimzo-Larsen setup and one solid Bishop's Opening line. Practice until the first 15 moves feel routine.
  • Run a 10-game blitz set focusing on converting small advantages; analyze each game quickly to extract one win-or-margin decision per game.
  • Endgame emphasis: each week pick one endgame pattern (e.g., rook ending with pawns on both sides) and solve 5 quick exercises, then apply in practice games.
  • Review with a coach or a strong training partner once every two weeks to get targeted feedback on decision-making under time pressure.

Notes and aims

Keep your creative energy in blitz, but couple it with disciplined planning and efficient calculation. Your current openings strength is a solid foundation—build on it with a compact repertoire and sharper endgame technique to turn more positions into wins. If you want, we can tailor a two-week micro-plan around your upcoming blitz schedule and practice slots.


Report a Problem