Avatar of Aditya Mittal

Aditya Mittal GM

vinniethepooh Mumbai Since 2012 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟♟
48.1%- 42.3%- 9.6%
Daily 1714 132W 112L 28D
Rapid 2498 185W 159L 75D
Blitz 3054 5381W 4651L 1356D
Bullet 3000 6720W 5978L 1014D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Hi Aditya!

Congratulations on maintaining a world-class bullet rating (3060 (2025-02-04)). Your recent results show a healthy +60 % score and a fearless, creative style. Below are a few observations that can help you squeeze out those last Elo points.

1. Time Management (your biggest “opponent”)

  • Four of the last six decisive games were settled on the clock, including the lone loss against GarayevKanan that reached move 80. Even when you are clearly better – or already winningZeitnot turns the board into a lottery.
  • Practical tip: Adopt a “30-20-10 rule.” After move 10 you should still have ≈ 30 s, after move 20 ≈ 20 s, and never let yourself dip under 10 s until a forced win/endgame tablebase position is reached.
  • Work in 1-move premove batches instead of chains of premoves; this lowers the risk of blundering yet keeps the hand speed high.

2. Opening Selection & Risk Profile

  • You often begin with …a6/…b5 (St George / Owen’s style) and as White mirror it with a4/b4. It creates imbalanced, fun positions, but against top-3000 opposition the loose queenside pawns are targeted instantly (see the ClydeHillKid losses).
  • Suggestion: Keep the surprise weapons, but add one solid “meta” line each with White and Black (e.g. 1.e4 e5 → Berlin, 1.d4 Nf6 2.c4 e6 → Nimzo) so you can fall back on structures you know deeply when the match score is tied.
  • Your early-queen forays (…Qg5-h5 in the Polish, or Qe5/Qa5 in sidelines) scored some miniatures but also cost tempi when the opponent played precisely. A one-tempo delay in bullet is huge; consider developing the queen no earlier than move 6 unless it wins material outright.

3. King Safety & Pawn Storms

  • Several defeats feature an exposed monarch after pawn storms on both flanks (example: h-pawn rush vs ClydeHillKid). While double-edged play suits bullet, remember that open kings also require extra calculation time – the exact commodity you’re short of.
  • Study model games with the “hook” structure g3/h3 (or …g6/…h6 as Black) to learn the right moment to break with …h5/h4 or g4. The Kramnik-Topalov, Wijk aan Zee 2004 King’s Indian Attack is an evergreen reference.

4. Conversion Technique

  • The win against Pencil-in-a-bar (first PGN) drifted from +10 to a spinning rook ending before you finally flagged him. In bullet you will not convert every +10, but you can learn schematic finishes: trade queens when up a rook; push connected passers instead of hunting pawns.
  • Drill: Set up winning-but-not-trivial endgames vs engines and play them out with 10 s + 0 delay until you can convert 9/10.

5. Tactical Alertness

Your tactic vision is elite (see 21.Nd6+!! vs Wizard_97 and 10.Nxg7+!? vs Pencil-in-a-bar). Continue sharpening with 3-minute Puzzle Rush sessions right before playing; it primes the pattern-recognition part of the brain without tiring you out.

6. Study Capsule (one week)

  1. Daily 15-minute opening clean-up: build a “safe mode” repertoire file.
  2. Daily 10-minute endgame drill: rook + pawn vs rook, or two connected passers vs piece.
  3. Three times a week: 25-run Puzzle Rush Survival.
  4. Every weekend: Review the auto-analysis of your worst time-trouble losses, tag the moment where speed dropped.

Progress Tracking

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Highlight Game to Revisit

The following miniature shows excellent central control and pawn levers; try to reproduce the key ideas over a board:


Final Word

Small tweaks in clock handling and a slightly more restrained move-one pawn push will convert many “almost wins” into points. Keep the creativity – just anchor it with a safety net. Good luck, and see you above 3100 soon!


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