Avatar of Zugzwang_IM

Zugzwang_IM IM

Since 2024 (Active) Chess.com ♟♟♟♟
51.3%- 40.3%- 8.4%
Blitz 2870
183W 144L 30D
Coach Chesswick's Profile Photo
Coach Chesswick

Quick recap (recent games)

You finished the session with a few clean wins and a couple of instructive losses. Your victories show typical strengths of a high-level blitz player: fast, accurate tactical strikes and good exploitation of opponent inaccuracies. Your losses point to a mix of middlegame over-commitment and occasional time-pressure slips.

  • Most decisive win (short tactical finish):
  • Recent tough loss: a game where an early king-side break and a penetrating knight/queen combo turned the tide (opponent Nikolozi Kacharava).
  • Another loss against a sharp kingside attack (opponent Vjacheslav Weetik) highlighted sensitivity to tactical leaps into e6 / g5 squares.

What you’re doing well

  • Active piece play and tactical awareness — you spot forks and jumps (Nb6-style motifs) and convert them quickly into wins.
  • Opening choices: your Closed Sicilian handling is a strength — you get playable imbalances and consistent results (Closed Sicilian Defense).
  • Conversion and endgame technique — when the position simplifies you generally keep the initiative and convert cleanly (several games end after precise finishing moves).
  • Good practical handling in blitz: you keep pressure on opponents and force mistakes, which is exactly what wins blitz games.

Recurring weaknesses to fix

  • King safety vs. active enemy queen/knight: in the loss to Nikolozi Kacharava you allowed a strong queen+knight invasion and didn’t neutralize it quickly (watch moves around Qxd6 → follow-ups).
  • Timing of exchanges: you sometimes accept or allow exchanges that open files toward your king. When the opponent’s pieces are aiming at your king, prefer simplification only if it relieves the pressure.
  • Time management in critical moments: a few games show large clock drops mid‑game. Time trouble led to less precise defensive choices.
  • Specific opening line gaps: your Philidor results are weaker than your Closed Sicilian (see overall opening performance). Study typical pawn breaks and defensive setups so you don’t get squeezed by plans that target e5/d4/e6 squares (Philidor Defense).

Concrete next steps (practice plan)

  • Daily 10–15 min tactics session focused on forks, skewers and knight jumps. Emphasize patterns where the knight lands on b6/e6/f5 — those motifs recur in your games.
  • Two targeted opening drills per week:
    • Closed Sicilian: review the typical queenside plans and the ideas when Black plays ...Nd4 / ...Nc5. Keep a short folder with 3–4 model games so you can recall plans quickly in blitz.
    • Philidor: learn 2–3 defensive setups and the standard d6/d5 breaks, plus a simple plan to trade queens or create counterplay when attacked.
  • Blitz time-control work: play short sessions where you force yourself to keep at least 10–15 seconds on the clock every move in the critical phase (moves 10–25). That prevents panic blunders in the middlegame.
  • One post-game routine: within 30 minutes after each session, review only the decisive moments (2–4 positions). Ask: “Was my king safe? Could I trade? Did I miss a tactic?”

Simple technical drills (10–30 minutes each)

  • Tactical pattern drill: 30 puzzles of knight forks and discovered attacks. Stop the clock after each and write down the motif name.
  • Mini-endgame drill: rook + king vs. bishop + king patterns and basic opposition patterns — helps convert endings under time pressure.
  • Opening flashcards: build 10 flashcards (position + plan) for your Philidor and 10 for Closed Sicilian typical pawn breaks and piece placements.

Blitz-specific tips (quick wins)

  • When attacked: trade queens if it reduces direct mating/entry threats — in blitz simplifying is often practical defense.
  • Pre-move policy: avoid pre-moves in sharp positions; keep pre-moves for trivial recaptures only.
  • When you see a tactical shot, pause 3–4 seconds to check for a reply — short checks avoid oversights that cost the game.
  • Keep a “mental fallback” — a simple safe move (h6, Kh8, Re8, or queen trade) you can play when under time pressure instead of searching for the miraculous win.

Follow-up

If you’d like, I can:

  • Annotate one of the recent losses move-by-move and show 3 alternative plans (you can paste which game to focus on).
  • Build a 2-week training micro-plan (tactics + openings + blitz drills) tailored to your schedule.
  • Make 10 opening flashcards for your Philidor and Closed Sicilian lines.

Pick one option and I’ll prepare it.


Report a Problem