Avatar of Yekaterina Kusluvan

Yekaterina Kusluvan WFM

YEK94 Стамбул Since 2020 (Inactive) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟
69.7%- 26.2%- 4.1%
Bullet 1933
370W 181L 21D
Blitz 1999
655W 205L 40D
Rapid 1889
2W 0L 0D
Daily 927
2W 0L 0D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Overview of your blitz play

You demonstrate a willingness to fight for sharp, tactical positions and to keep the pressure on opponents even when the position becomes unclear. Your pieces often become active quickly, and you show resilience in complicated middlegame scenarios.

  • Strengths: you create practical chances, keep your options open, and are willing to complicate when needed, which often punishes overconfident opponents.
  • Areas to grow: manage time more consistently, avoid unnecessary exchanges that reduce your attacking chances, and sharpen your plan in the early middlegame so you can steer games toward favorable endgames.

Opening and plan patterns to lean on

Your opening choices show you thrive when you keep the game dynamic and tactical. Building a compact, repeatable opening repertoire can help you avoid clock pressure and make quicker, healthier decisions in blitz.

  • High-confidence lines appear in dynamic setups where you fight for initiative. Consider strengthening a small set of 2–3 openings you know well, so you can reach your preferred middlegame plans faster.
  • If you want to push your results further, emphasize lines that lead to clear middlegame goals (active piece play, open files, and straightforward endgame plans) rather than overcomplicated branches.

Suggested focus areas (without going deep into theory): consider reinforcing a couple of tactical Black responses and a reliable White system you’re comfortable with. If you’d like, I can outline quick, mobile-friendly drills for these lines. Placeholder: East Indian Defense, Four Knights Game

Practical training plan to improve quickly

  • Time management: adopt a simple rule for the opening and early middlegame—spend a maximum set amount of time on critical moves, and default to safe, developing moves otherwise to avoid time trouble.
  • Post-game review: after each blitz game, note one good decision, one mistake, and one alternative plan you could have chosen. Use this to build a small library of patterns you can reuse.
  • Endgame readiness: practice rook endgames and basic king activity concepts so you can convert advantages more reliably when the fight goes long.
  • Pattern training: complete short daily tactic drills focused on common blitz themes (checks, forcing moves, and opponent threats) to reduce blunders when the clock is tight.
  • Opening consolidation: pick 2–3 openings you enjoy and study their typical middlegame landmarks (pawn structures, piece placement ideas, and common pawn breaks) to speed up decision making in blitz.

Optional next steps

If you’d like, I can tailor a two-week, mobile-friendly practice plan and provide short annotated training games focused on your preferred openings to reinforce these ideas on the go. Let me know your preferred pace and target areas, and I’ll customize the plan.


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