Avatar of Vlad Vlad

Vlad Vlad

vladimir112233 Since 2018 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟♟
47.0%- 46.0%- 7.1%
Bullet 1421
1W 1L 0D
Blitz 2377
16184W 15829L 2432D
Rapid 962
4W 5L 0D
Daily 1705
3W 0L 0D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

What to celebrate from your recent blitz games

You showed strong initiative in the winning game, finishing with a clear attacking idea that pressed Black’s king and led to a decisive finish. Your willingness to activate pieces and maintain pressure helped convert an advantage into a clean win.

In the games that didn’t go your way, you kept fighting and stayed relatively solid under pressure. That resilience is a good sign for blitz, where staying calm and finding practical moves often decides the result in tight moments.

Key areas to improve

  • Time management in blitz: you sometimes rush critical decisions when the clock gets tight. Practice allocating your thinking time, e.g., spend a planned amount of time on the first 15 moves, then reassess. Consider a simple rule like “singular focus for 1 critical moment per move” when you are near the time control.
  • Endgame readiness: several blitz games reach endings where accurate technique matters more than raw calculation. Work on common rook endings and king activity with short, practical drills (e.g., rook and pawn versus rook endings, promoting passed pawns under pressure).
  • Blunder prevention in tricky positions: when there is tactical tension, slower, safer lines often beat overly ambitious calculations. Build a habit of verifying at least one quiet, solid alternative before committing to a tactical line.
  • Opening consistency: your openings show willingness to play dynamic lines, but maintaining a clear plan after the initial piece development will help you convert openings into steady middlegames. Consider narrowing to a small, dependable repertoire that leads to familiar middlegame themes.

Practical training plan for the next week

  • Daily tactics: 10-minute puzzle session focusing on common blitz motifs like back-rank ideas, overloads, and fast tactical blows.
  • Endgame bite-sized drills: 15-minute rook-and-pawn endings several times this week to improve technique under time pressure.
  • Game review routine: analyze one win, one loss, and one draw from the last week. Write down 3 concrete improvement points for each and try to apply them in the next games.
  • Blitz-specific opening practice: pick two White setups and two Black responses to 1.e4 and 1.d4, with a one-page quick reference of 4-5 typical middlegame ideas for each variation.

Recommended focus for openings

Your openings show you like active ideas. To improve consistency, designate a compact two-line White repertoire and a compact two-line Black repertoire. For each line, note the typical middlegame plan and common tactical motifs you should watch for. Use short, practical notes or a one-page cheat sheet to review before blitz sessions.

Interpreting the data you shared

  • Your strength-adjusted win rate sits near neutral territory. Small, focused improvements in endgames and time management can push you to convert more of your favorable positions into wins.
  • Rating trend data suggests volatility. Aim to reduce avoidable mistakes and maintain solid decision-making when the clock is tight. Build routines that slow down critical decisions without dramatically increasing overall time usage.

Optional quick next step

If you’d like, I can generate a short personalized practice plan based on your next 5 blitz games. I can highlight specific moments to study (for example, a recurring tactic you fall for or a type of endgame that commonly arises in your games) and provide focused drills you can complete in under 20 minutes.


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