Avatar of Viktor Skliarov

Viktor Skliarov IM

viktorskliarov Kyiv Since 2015 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟♟
59.1%- 27.9%- 13.0%
Bullet 2818
491W 214L 63D
Blitz 2752
3278W 1609L 717D
Rapid 2370
267W 112L 96D
Daily 2395
99W 13L 32D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick summary

Solid cluster of rapid games — recent wins show good tactical flair and piece activity, recent losses highlight recurring issues with time management and defending against passed pawns / promotion races. Rating has dipped ~28 points over the last month, and your strength-adjusted win rate (~0.49) suggests you’re roughly performing at expectation versus similarly-rated opposition, but there’s room to convert advantage more consistently.

Highlights — what you did well

  • Active piece play and initiative: in your win against Caleb Levi you grabbed central space and kept the pieces on aggressive squares rather than hiding them.
  • Opening variety and preparation: your repertoire (Bishop’s Opening, Alapin, French Advance, etc.) gives you good practical chances and several high win-rate lines — keep using that edge. See example: Bishop's Opening: Vienna Hybrid, Hromádka Variation.
  • Conversion under pressure: many wins come from pressing small advantages and forcing mistakes — your finishing instincts are strong when the opponent gives you targets.
  • Tactical vision: you win a lot of games by spotting combinations and exploiting loose pieces — continue drilling tactics to keep that sharp.

Main weaknesses to address

  • Time management / time trouble: several games (including the loss to Sergey Sklokin) finish with extremely low clock values. When the position becomes complex you’re losing practical chances to the clock.
  • Endgame technique in pawn races / promotions: you allowed opposing passed pawns to queen or created messy promotion races where the opponent’s coordination won (see the promotion sequences in recent loss).
  • Opening-specific losses: your record in some Sicilian Closed / anti-Sveshnikov type structures is weaker. Targeted theory and model games will help close that gap.
  • Prophylaxis and counterplay: in a few losses you let the opponent build a single obvious plan (advance a pawn, lift a rook, create a passed pawn) with insufficient preventative measures — tighten your prophylactic thinking.

Concrete next steps (training plan)

  • Daily (15–30 min): tactics — focus on calculation depth and pattern recognition. Mix medium puzzles (4–6 plies) with one hard puzzle a day.
  • 3× week (30–60 min): endgames — practice rook + pawn vs rook, queen vs rook races, and basic pawn race positions. Work with tablebase examples until the winning technique is automatic.
  • 2× week (30–45 min): opening review — for the Sicilian/Closed lines where your win rate is lower, review 8–12 model games and one typical middlegame plan. Drill the key break moves and a few typical tactics your opponents often use.
  • Weekly: one slow rapid game (15|10 or 10|5) to practice thinking under increment and to eliminate pre-move/time-scramble habits.
  • Post-game routine: after every session pick 3 losses/dubious games and annotate them quickly — what was the turning point, one improvement per game, and one recurring pattern you see across games.

Practical tips to use at the board (rapid)

  • Quick checklist before you move: opponent’s checks, hanging pieces, immediate pawn pushes, your king safety. If anything urgent exists, resolve it first.
  • When ahead: simplify if the simplification reduces opponent counterplay (trades that reduce passed pawn chances). But before trades, ask: does this exchange make my king or pawn structure weaker?
  • Pawn races: when queens, rooks or connected passed pawns appear, switch to counting mode — count moves to promotion for both sides and prioritize blocking opposition promotion paths and king activity.
  • Time rule: at ~3 minutes left, switch to a “practical mode” — stop long-forcing lines unless necessary; aim for safe, improving moves and keep an eye on increment (if any).

Opening-focused advice

  • Leverage your strengths — keep playing lines with high win rates (French Advance, Alapin, Bishop’s Opening Horwitz Gambit) to score more wins where you know the plans.
  • Target improvement: allocate focused study time to the Sicilian Closed / Anti-Sveshnikov lines (your Openings Performance shows lower win rate there). Learn one reliable setup against typical pawn breaks and one defensive idea to neutralize counterplay.
  • Build a short “anti-prep” packet: 3–5 moves you play against common sidelines your opponents try — this saves time and avoids drifting into unfamiliar territory during rapid games.

Mindset & tournament tips

  • When you notice a small slide in rating (-28 last month), don’t chase quick fixes. Follow the training plan and focus on consistency (fewer lost wins and fewer lost on time).
  • Use a short breathing ritual between games — 30 seconds to reset focus reduces tilt and bad mouse errors.
  • If you repeatedly flag or get into time trouble, switch to formats with increment for a week (10|5 or 15|10) to retrain your clock sense.

Example: review your latest win

Here’s a compact replay of your recent win — use it to mark the critical moments (where you improved activity and where your opponent’s pieces got cramped):

Links & targeted resources (placeholders)

Final note — what to focus on this month

  • Cut down losses to time trouble: play 10|5 or 15|10 for a week; track whether flagging drops.
  • 15–30 minutes/day of tactics + 2 focused endgame sessions on rook/pawn races each week.
  • One opening deep-dive (Sicilian Closed lines) so you stop being surprised and can play confidently from move 10–20.

Send me one annotated game (loss or unclear win) and I’ll give a move-by-move check focusing on decision points and simpler alternatives.


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