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      Home  >  Chess Improvement • Chess Puzzles  >  Another classic

      Another classic

      Chess tactic, Puzzle Solving


      D. Joseph 1922, presented by Andreas

      I presented this once before and it is a good one. Let’s see if you can remember it 🙂 No computer please. White to move. How should White proceed?

      3K4/kp6/p7/1P6/8/8/7P/8 w – – 0 1

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      13 Comments

      1. Anonymous Reply
        June 25, 2008 at 1:18 pm

        b6+ Kb8 (Kxb6 loses right away)
        h4 a5
        h5 a4
        h6 a3
        h7 a2
        h8(B) a1(Q)
        BxQ and white wins.

      2. Anonymous Reply
        June 25, 2008 at 1:20 pm

        If 6.h8B a1Q
        7.BxQ this is a draw position.

      3. Anonymous Reply
        June 25, 2008 at 1:27 pm

        I guess that is a draw.

        So Must be
        h8(Q) a1(Q)
        Qh2+ ka8

        I guess the trick is to avoid perp but black k is about to be mated, I have to look a little further.

      4. Anonymous Reply
        June 25, 2008 at 1:28 pm

        Not Qh2 but Qg8 now black is in serious trouble. Discover check is going to kill him.

      5. Anonymous Reply
        June 25, 2008 at 1:42 pm

        b6+ Kb8
        h4 a5
        h5 a4
        h6 a3
        h7 a2
        h8(Q) a1(Q)
        Qg8 Qa2
        Qf8 Qa3
        Qe8 Qa3
        Qe5+ Ka8
        Qh8 followed by checkmate

      6. Anonymous Reply
        June 25, 2008 at 2:28 pm

        Since you picked Djokovic, Susan, I’ll let you have another pick for the Gentlemen’s Singles title at Wimbledon.

      7. Anonymous Reply
        June 25, 2008 at 2:54 pm

        b6+ Kb8
        h4 a5
        h5 a4
        h6 a3
        h7 a2
        h8(Q) a1(Q)
        Qg8 Qa2
        Qf8 Qa3
        Qe8 Qa3
        Qe5+ Ka8
        Qh8 followed by checkmate

        Must be a typo in there — you have “…Qa3” for two consecutive Black moves.

        You have the right idea, but 8.Qf8? isn’t good enough — 8…Qa3 9.Qe8?? (many other moves draw) Qd6+! 10.Qd7 Qxb6+ and Black is the one who wins.

      8. Anonymous Reply
        June 25, 2008 at 2:56 pm

        Anon 8:42 — nice solution, but with a small flaw:

        “b6+ Kb8
        h4 a5
        h5 a4
        h6 a3
        h7 a2
        h8(Q) a1(Q)
        Qg8 Qa2
        Qf8 Qa3
        Qe8″

        Can’t Black now play

        … Qd6+
        Qd7 Qxb6+

        So probably easiest to just play

        b6+ Kb8
        h4 a5
        h5 a4
        h6 a3
        h7 a2
        h8(Q) a1(Q)
        Qe8 Qa4
        Qe5+ Ka8
        Qh8

        Or am I missing something?

      9. Anonymous Reply
        June 25, 2008 at 3:16 pm

        So probably easiest to just play

        b6+ Kb8
        h4 a5
        h5 a4
        h6 a3
        h7 a2
        h8(Q) a1(Q)
        Qe8 Qa4
        Qe5+ Ka8
        Qh8

        7.Qe8? Qg7 and Black escapes.

      10. Anonymous Reply
        June 25, 2008 at 4:28 pm

        after the last posts the solution must be:

        b6+ Kb8
        h4 a5
        h5 a4
        h6 a3
        h7 a2
        h8(Q) a1(Q)
        Qg8 Qa2 (to avoid the Qg7-idea)
        Qe8 Qa4 (to avoid the Qa3-Qd6+ -idea)
        Qe5+ Ka8
        Qh8

      11. ebutaljib Reply
        June 25, 2008 at 6:19 pm

        It is a puzzle Kasparov “couldn’t solve”.

        Actually he solved this particular puzzle, but couldn’t solve the easier one when the king is on c8 instead of d8.

        http://www.chessbase.com/puzzle/puzzle9/puzz9-1a.htm

      12. Bill Brock Reply
        June 25, 2008 at 10:57 pm

        9:54 a.m. anon shows a nice blunder that I’d never seen before.

        After 9:54 a.m anon

        Black to play and win

        1k2K2Q/1p6/1P1q4/8/8/8/8/8 b – – 0 1

      13. Anonymous Reply
        June 26, 2008 at 8:32 am

        Black to play and win

        1k2K2Q/1p6/1P1q4/8/8/8/8/8 b – – 0 1

        1…Qe6+ seems clear: 2.Kf8 (2.Kd8 Qc8+) Qc8+ 3.Kg7 Qxh8+ 4.Kxh8 Kc8 wins the pawn, and White’s king is too far away.

      Leave a Reply to Anonymous Cancel reply

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