Avatar of Polina Gutkovich

Polina Gutkovich WFM

Zmeeed63 Since 2017 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟♟♟
52.6%- 43.4%- 4.0%
Bullet 2246
720W 519L 50D
Blitz 2378
1671W 1460L 134D
Rapid 1711
7W 0L 0D
Daily 781
2W 1L 0D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Hi Polina!

Your recent bullet games show an exciting, initiative–seeking style. Below you’ll find a balance of praise and practical suggestions, backed up by concrete examples from the last games in your database.

What you’re already doing very well

  • Opening ambition. In your 1-minute games you’re happy to steer play into sharp, off-beat lines (e.g. the Portisch Gambit with 5.g4!? against the Queen’s Gambit Declined). This consistently knocks opponents out of book.
  • Piece activity & initiative. Win-or-lose, your pieces rarely sit passive. Even in losses, you usually have at least one active piece creating practical chances.
  • Clock handling. A large share of your wins come from maintaining ~5 – 10 seconds when the opponent is below 1 sec. Flagging skill is a bullet super-power—keep it!

Growth opportunities

1. Soundness of speculative pawn storms

The win against quickpawns10 is a perfect illustration:

  • 5.g4 gains space and surprises Black, but after 8…cxd5 10…Kh8 12…Ne4 you were down a pawn and Black was almost consolidating.
  • Practical fix: launch after you finish development. In this line 5.Nf3 or 5.Bd3 first, then g4, keeps you a tempo up and your king safer.

2. Central counterplay with Black in the Closed Sicilian

Your latest loss to sledermanhuy turned when White broke with e5xd6 and Be5, tying your pieces to the d-file.

  • Lesson: In Closed Sicilian set-ups, challenge the center earlier with …d5 breaks before White is ready for e5.
  • After 13…Qb6 the immediate 14…d5! would have opened lines on your terms and reduced the power of White’s dark-square bishop.

3. Converting technical edges

You flagged several opponents from positions that were already winning on the board (e.g. the long endgame vs James Bond). In longer time controls this habit can backfire.

  • Train simple winning techniques (lucena/philidor, converting extra pawns) so you finish games with moves, not just the clock.
  • Use zugzwang studies and engine-off endgame drills for 10 minutes a day.

4. King safety in time trouble

Several resignations stemmed from exposed kings (e.g. …g5 in the Queen’s-Pawn Symmetrical and …b4 in the Rossolimo). A quick double-check before pushing wing pawns—“Will this weaken the squares around my king?”—will save half a dozen rating points per session.

Suggested training menu (per week)

  • 3×15 min: Review your own bullet games focusing solely on the first 12 moves—ask “Could I reach the same type of position with one extra tempo of development?”
  • 2×10 min: Endgame technique drills on rook + pawns vs rook.
  • Daily: 5 tactics puzzles at ~+400 elo of your current to keep calculation crisp.
  • Optional: Track your performance trend here →
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Quick-reference improvement checklist

  1. Open lines after you castle, not before.
  2. If your opponent’s center is flexible (e.g. e4-d3), hit it with …d5/…e5—don’t wait.
  3. When ahead on the clock and the board, choose the cleanest conversion, not the fastest premove sequence.
  4. Before pushing a wing pawn, glance at the squares it leaves—weakened dark squares cost you at least two bullet games this week.

Keep playing boldly, but sprinkle in those small positional fixes and you’ll break your next rating ceiling soon. Good luck, and enjoy the grind!


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