Avatar of TatjanaVasilevich

TatjanaVasilevich IM

Since 2019 (Inactive) Chess.com ♟♟
57.0%- 35.4%- 7.6%
Bullet 2710
156W 155L 25D
Blitz 2719
257W 146L 22D
Rapid 2126
111W 24L 23D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Hi Tatjana, here is your personalized coaching report!

Quick Snapshot

• Current form: You just beat Matvey Galchenko (2978) with an energetic Four-Pawns Attack and you held your own against several 2800+ blitz specialists.
• Personal best: 2721 (2024-12-10)
• Activity trends:

Win Rate by Hour100%75%25%0%50%0:00 - 84.6%1:00 - 100.0%2:00 - 66.7%3:00 - 63.6%4:00 - 42.9%5:00 - 100.0%6:00 - 100.0%7:00 - 100.0%8:00 - 58.3%9:00 - 77.8%10:00 - 46.1%11:00 - 52.9%12:00 - 80.0%13:00 - 57.1%14:00 - 84.6%15:00 - 61.2%16:00 - 48.1%17:00 - 46.1%18:00 - 47.6%19:00 - 52.8%20:00 - 69.2%21:00 - 64.7%22:00 - 68.7%23:00 - 54.5%01234567891011121314151617181920212223Hour of Day (UTC)
 
Win Rate by Day100%75%25%0%50%Monday - 67.1%Tuesday - 59.5%Wednesday - 58.5%Thursday - 68.0%Friday - 42.5%Saturday - 50.3%Sunday - 63.3%MonTueWedThuFriSatSunDay of Week

Your Competitive Strengths

  • Fearless opening choices. You confidently enter sharp main lines (e.g. Four-Pawns vs KID, Alapin Sicilian) and often seize the initiative by move 10.
  • Dynamic pawn play. Advance breaks such as 22.e5/23.e6 (!!) vs MatthewG-p4p and b-pawn storms (b5/b4) regularly crack open files for your rooks.
  • Tactical alertness. In several wins you spotted deflections (25.Nd5!, 31.Bxc5!) and mating nets (44.Rxg7+ vs alanchamp) faster than 30-second 2700s—a sign your pattern base is elite.

Key Growth Areas

  1. Time management & conversion.
    Three of your last five defeats (e.g. vs Nguyen Ngoc Truong Son, G10De_Arrascaeta) were lost on the clock from roughly equal or better positions.
    Training task: Play two 5-minute games each day where you must hit 30 seconds in reserve before executing any forcing sequence. This builds an “internal clock” so you keep >10 s for the unavoidable blitz scramble.
  2. King safety in the Sicilian Alapin (Black).
    Against Jose Martinez you followed a typical setup (…Nc6, …d5) but 12…Ba6?! 16…c4 allowed White’s pawn roller (g-h file) to explode. Modern theory prefers 12…Be6 or 12…Qc7 keeping dark-square control.
    Action plan: Review three recent GM games in the …e6 & …g6 Alapin tabiya and note how Black meets g-pawn advances with timely …h5, …Bg4, or …f5.
  3. Handling counter-play when a pawn up.
    In the loss to rasmussvane (QGD Janowski) you were a clear pawn ahead but 28…Rc4!! swung the game. Your pieces were split between attack and defense.
    Technique drill: Set the engine to +1 pawn endgames and practice converting with the “no tactics” rule—every move must improve king, rooks, or passers, ignoring flashy shots. This nurtures prophylaxis prophylaxis and reduces swindles.
  4. End-game finesse.
    Versus Mikhail_Bryakin you won on time in a rook-and-pawn ending that was drawn with best play. Small improvements (e.g. cutting the king with Rc2 before pushing pawns) would secure the table-base win and save clock.

Opening Notebook

White vs KID: Your Four-Pawns move order is excellent. Add 12.e5! plans if Black delays …e6, and study the rare 10…Qc8 pivot.
Black vs 1.e4: Decide between a pure …e6-Alapin or drifting into Scheveningen structures; mixing plans can leave dark squares soft (see loss to Jospem).
White vs QGD/Slav: After 18.Nc5 in the rasmussvane game, consider 19.e4! instead of Qd3/Qd2 to keep tension and stop …d4 ideas.

Suggested Weekly Routine (2-hour block)

  • 30 min: End-game conversion drill (rook & minor vs pawns).
  • 30 min: Flash-card tactics focusing on quiet defences: (e.g. avoiding automatic captures).
  • 20 min: Annotate one blitz loss—identify the first moment your evaluation slipped.
  • 20 min: Replay a model game in your pet opening, pausing before each candidate move.
  • 20 min: One rated 3 + 1 blitz game applying the day’s theme.

Motivation Corner

Your attacking flair already beats super-GMs on a good day—refining end-game and clock skills could push you over the 2800 blitz barrier. Stay curious, trust the process, and keep enjoying the fight!

– Coach AI


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