Avatar of Oleg Kozlov

Oleg Kozlov IM

VAT55 Since 2021 (Inactive) Chess.com ♟♟
45.7%- 48.9%- 5.3%
Bullet 2716
91W 61L 6D
Blitz 2747
1583W 1735L 191D
Rapid 2250
12W 8L 0D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Oleg, great fighting spirit!

You have been hovering around 2737 (2025-04-29) with a very respectable tactical awareness. Your recent victories show both creativity (the g3–Bg2 double-fianchetto setups) and excellent conversion technique in technical endings. Below are a few focused remarks to help you climb to the next tier.

What you already do well

  • Opening variety & understanding. You comfortably switch between the King’s Indian Fianchetto and Closed/Grand Prix Sicilians, often steering play into middlegames you understand better than your opponents.
  • Counter-punching under pressure. In your win over NMBraveheart0820 you calmly absorbed Black’s queenside play and then seized the initiative with 24.Nxb5! and 28.b5!, taking over the c-file.
  • End-game persistence. The game against Mikhal867 shows solid technique: you activated the king early and kept the passed pawn rolling until the flag fell.

Key areas for growth

1. Time management

Five of your last seven losses featured <10 seconds on your clock by move 35. Even when you are slightly better you slip into “panic-pre-move” mode and accuracy drops.

  • Use the first 10–15 moves to bank time, not to spend it. If you know the position, move instantly.
  • Adopt a “minimum 15 seconds” rule: when the clock first dips under 15 s, liquidate tension or simplify.
  • Train in 5 | 5 or 10 | 0 sessions to practise calculating without perpetual time trouble.

2. Pawn-storm discipline when behind in development

Your loss to Hans_L4145 began with the enthusiastic 5.h4 6.g4 7.g5—but the queen-side pieces were still asleep. Once Black broke with …c5 you had no king safety.

Guideline: “Three minor pieces developed before launching a flank pawn storm.”

3. Dutch/Leningrad structures as Black

The defeat against DvaHrasta revealed hesitation in typical Leningrad plans. You played the correct thematic …f5 and …d6, but missed:

  • …e5 break after …Re8 instead of the slow …Qe8–c8 maneuver;
  • timely queenside counterplay with …c6–d5, freeing the dark-square bishop.

Suggested drill: annotate 3–5 games by established Leningrad specialists (e.g. Malaniuk, Kramnik) and identify recurring move orders.

4. Tactical clean-up

A handful of tactical oversights still creep in, often connected to loose pieces on opposite wings. Adding 20–30 puzzles/day filtered for “very hard” motifs (double attack, deflection) will reinforce pattern recognition.

Quick homework plan

  1. Re-play move 20 onward of the Hans_L4145 game and note every move that gave your opponent an uncontested tempo (tempo).
  2. Solve 50 end-game studies this week; focus on king activity.
  3. Build a mini-repertoire file of 10 critical Dutch/Leningrad tabiyas with best plans on both sides.
  4. Play a 10-game set of 10 | 0 to practise staying above 60 seconds by move 25.

Your performance snapshot

Below charts summarise recent trends—use them to schedule training when win-rate dips.

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Keep the momentum!

You are already on the cusp of master strength. Polishing time usage and tightening early-pawn adventures will add 50–70 rating points quickly. Stay confident and keep analysing your own games—especially the losses.

Good luck in your next Titled Tuesday run, and remember: “Solid first, creative later.” I’m here whenever you need another review.


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