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      Home  >  Chess Improvement  >  Chess improvement

      Chess improvement

      Chess improvement, Endgame Improvement, Puzzle Solving


      White to move. Is this a win or draw?

      7k/1R4R1/7p/p2p3P/P2P4/8/KP4P1/r7 w – – 0 2

      This is based on the game between L’Ami (2626) – Van Wely (2666).

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      38 Comments

      1. Anonymous Reply
        December 1, 2010 at 6:14 am

        If white can escape the checks by going up the board, then he can win.

      2. Anonymous Reply
        December 1, 2010 at 6:15 am

        …but he may have to go all the way over by h2 to get there.

      3. Amir Reply
        December 1, 2010 at 6:16 am

        white must win. Kxa1 and checkmate with two rooks.

      4. Anonymous Reply
        December 1, 2010 at 6:21 am

        kxa1 is stalemate

      5. Eric R Reply
        December 1, 2010 at 6:22 am

        looks like a win. King goes to b5 by way of h2, g3, f4 etc. Once K hits b5 check on b6 can retake with R or c5 takes with pawn and black then has a pawn move.

      6. Brad Reply
        December 1, 2010 at 6:27 am

        I don’t see anyway to avoid the black rook checks without stalemate so it looks like a draw. The only try would be to bring the white king to the 8th rank but black can still give checks without putting his rook on the seventh or being blocked

      7. me Reply
        December 1, 2010 at 6:29 am

        White win

      8. Sudhi Reply
        December 1, 2010 at 6:52 am

        its a draw

      9. jMac Reply
        December 1, 2010 at 6:52 am

        Looks like Black has a desparado (sp?) draw: 1. Kb3 Ra3+ 2. Kc2 Rc3+, etc, because if White ever captures the rook it is a stalemate.

      10. jdalberg Reply
        December 1, 2010 at 6:53 am

        Its a win.

        There are some squares where the black rook can not go. b5, c5, e5 and g6.

        The white king has to do a walk around the g pawn and up the board until it ends up on the b5 square from where the black rook can not check without loosing, since both the b6 square and the c5 squares are covered.

      11. Anonymous Reply
        December 1, 2010 at 7:11 am

        I think white can win.
        The winning plan is to bring the WK to b5. Once there, the BR has no more desperado checks.
        The path to follow is amazing and amusing!
        Thank you Susan for this.

      12. A Reply
        December 1, 2010 at 7:20 am

        Its a win but very long way for the king from a2 – h1 – a6

      13. Anonymous Reply
        December 1, 2010 at 7:37 am

        k to b5 wins
        han

      14. jayson Reply
        December 1, 2010 at 8:13 am

        white should win this one..dont capture the stubborn rook by your king..you should move ur king to the 7th rank so that the white rook can capture the black rook and in 1 move mate..got it..

      15. jayson Reply
        December 1, 2010 at 8:14 am

        white should win this one..dont capture the stubborn rook by your king..you should move ur king to the 7th rank so that the white rook can capture the black rook and in 1 move mate..got it..

      16. jayson Reply
        December 1, 2010 at 8:15 am

        white should win this one..dont capture the stubborn rook by your king..you should move ur king to the 7th rank so that the white rook can capture the black rook and in 1 move mate..got it..

      17. Alex Dimitriadis Reply
        December 1, 2010 at 8:22 am

        White wins as follows:

        1)Kb3 Ra3+ 2)Kc2 Rc3+ 3)Kd2 Rd3+ 4)Ke2 Re3+ 5)Kf2 Rf3+ 6)Kg1 Rf1+ 7)Kh2 Rh1+ 8)Kg3 Rh3+ 9)Kf4! Rf3+ (if 9)…Rh4+ 10)Rg4+-) 10)Ke5 Rf5+ 11)Kd6 Rf6+ 12)Kc5 Rc6+ 13)Kb5 and black cannot check anymore (if 13)…Rc5+ 14)dxc5 and no stalemate, if 13)…Rb6+ 14)Rxb6 Kxg7+-).

        If between moves 3 and 5 the black rook doesn’t check from the third row, the white king will escape earlier to f4 square.

      18. All-round Freak Reply
        December 1, 2010 at 8:46 am

        1.Kb3 Ra3+ 2.Kc2 Rc3+ 3.Kd2 Rd3+ 4.Ke2 Re3+ 5.Kf2 Rf3+ 6.Kg1 Rf1+ 7.Kh2 Rh1+ 8.Kg3 Rh3+ 9.Kf4 Rf3+ 10.Ke5 Rf5+ 11.Kd6 Re6+ 12.Kc7 Rc6+ 13.Kb8 Rc8+ 14.Ka7 Ra8+ 15.Kb6 Ra6+ 16.Kb5 +-

        – SS

      19. Asdracles Reply
        December 1, 2010 at 9:53 am

        I think the desperado rook is not enough.

        White has a safe square on b5. If rook checks on b6, then I can capture with b7 rook. If you check me on c5, I capture with the pawn and no stalemate as Black can play d4

        So I think White king has to do a route like

        Kb3-c2-d2-e2-f2-g1-h2-g3-f4-e5-d6-c5-b5 when Black is checking with the furious rook, and then is over.

      20. Anonymous Reply
        December 1, 2010 at 10:07 am

        White wins, as after running his king to b8!
        1. Kb3 Ra3+ 2. Kc2 Rc3+ 3. Kd2 Rd3+
        4. Ke2 Re3+ 5.Kf2 Rf3+ 6. Kg1 Rf1+
        7.Kh2 Rh1+ 8.Kg3 Rh3+ 9. Kf4 etc…

      21. Anonymous Reply
        December 1, 2010 at 10:24 am

        get the king to a6 without taking the a pawn, wins

      22. me Reply
        December 1, 2010 at 10:33 am

        White king must go to b5 and no more stalemate checks

      23. rantallian Reply
        December 1, 2010 at 10:36 am

        White wins eventually by running his king along the 7th rank, with black following giving rook checks on the 6th rank. Then..

        After Kc7 Rc6+, Kb8 Rc8, Ka7 Ra8, Kb6 Ra6, Kb5 Black runs out of good checks. Rb6+, Rxb6 Kxg7 and its all over.

        There is nowhere else on the board with a black pawn getting in the way of useful rook checks.

      24. Anonymous Reply
        December 1, 2010 at 10:37 am

        This must be a draw, because white king doesn’t come out of rook checks without taking the rook.
        Going for the h pawn doesn’t help either, because white’s Rg6 doesn’t prevent the stalemate.
        If the pawns in the d-line were at d5 and d6, then the white king should have a beautiful field on d7, I think (enforcing Re7 or Rf7).

      25. Chessminator Reply
        December 1, 2010 at 10:45 am

        It’s a win:
        1. Kb3 Ra3+ 2. Kc2 Rc3+ 3. Kd2 Rd3+ 4. Ke2 Re3+ 5. Kf2 Rf3+ 6. Kg1 Rf1+ 7. Kh2
        Rh1+ 8. Kg3 Rh3+ 9. Kg4 Rh4+ 10. Kf5
        If the rook takes the pawn, it doesn’t exist a stalemate.
        10 …Rf4+ 11. Ke5 Rf5+ 12. Kd6 Rf6+ 13. Kc5
        Rc6+ 14. Kb5
        1 – 0

      26. Anonymous Reply
        December 1, 2010 at 11:03 am

        White wins! it’s not completely true that “whenever white takes the rook it’s stalemate”!
        maybe there are other squares too, but for sure b5 is a square for the white king where there is no useful check
        (bl. Rb6/c5/b4 Rb6:/dc5:/Ka6!)
        And white manages to get to b5, e.g.:
        1.Kb3 Ra3 2.Kc2 Rc3 3.Kd2 Rd3 4.Ke2 Re3 5.Kf2 Rf3 6.Kg1 Rf1 7.Kh2 Rh1 8.Kg3 Rh3 9.Kf4 Rf3 10.Ke5 Rf5 11.Kd6 Re6 12.Kc5 Rc6 13.Kb5 1-0
        (of course there are other possibilities for black, but none of them hinder white from finally reaching b5 – or finishing the game earlier…)

      27. Roland Reply
        December 1, 2010 at 11:05 am

        White wins! Sample line:
        1.Kb3 Ra3
        2.Kc2 Rc3
        3.Kd2 Rd3
        4.Ke2 Re3
        5.Kf2 Rf3
        6.Kg1 Rf1
        7.Kh2 Rh1
        8.Kg3 Rh3
        9.Kf4 Rf3
        10.Ke5 Rf5
        11.Kd6 Rf6
        12.Kc5 Rc6
        13.Kb5 Rc5
        14.Kb6 Rc6 (14…Rb5 15.Ka6 wins)
        15.Kxa5 Ra6 (15…Rc5 16.Rb5 wins)
        16.Kb5 Ra5
        17.Kc6 Rc5 (17…Ra6 18.Rb6 wins)
        18.Kd7 and White wins.

      28. Anonymous Reply
        December 1, 2010 at 11:17 am

        White wins!!

        1. Kb3 Ra3+ 2. Kc2 Rc3+ 3. Kd2 Rd3+ 4. Ke2 Re3+ 5. Kf2 Rf3+ 6. Kg1 Rf1+ 7. Kh2 Rh1+ 8. Kg3 Rh3+ 9. Kf4 Rf3+ 10. Ke5 Rf5+ 11. Kd6 Rf6+ 12. Kc5 Rc6+ 13. Kb5!! Rc5+ 14. dxc5 1-0

        not 13…Rxb6+ because of Rxb6 white wins

      29. Anonymous Reply
        December 1, 2010 at 11:24 am

        It’s a win but it will take like 20 moves or more, because the black rook can keep suicidally checking the white king. The white must use one of his rooks to interpose a check, then the black will have little choice to but to lose his rook. Black king takes the other rook and then it’s a normal pawn endgame with white advantage.

      30. Jaideep Reply
        December 1, 2010 at 11:44 am

        White wins, King path Kb3 -c2,d2,e2,f2,g1,h2,g3,f4,e5,d6,c7,b8,a7,b6,b5 and hurray .. Rb6+ is met by Rxb6.

      31. Anonymous Reply
        December 1, 2010 at 12:21 pm

        King takes rook. Some may call this a stalemate, but my rule if the game ends in a stalemate but you have more material, you get 3/4 of a point which is better than a draw and almost as good as a win.

      32. Mark Leonard Reply
        December 1, 2010 at 12:24 pm

        White runs his king to b5 and the checks stop as …Rc5+ is met by dxc5.

      33. Anonymous Reply
        December 1, 2010 at 12:33 pm

        to avoid the stalemate trap, the white king has to escape all the way via b3, h1, g3, d6-c5-b5, and then the black rook can’t check no more, because on c5 the white pawn will capture setting loose the black pawn on d5, on b6 the white rook will capture, allowing the black king to capture the other rook. greets, jan

      34. Anonymous Reply
        December 1, 2010 at 12:46 pm

        White K has to go to d6 – c7 – b8 – a7 – b6 – b5 for no more checks to the wing the game

      35. Marcin Reply
        December 1, 2010 at 1:15 pm

        White wins – the king will eventually go to b5, via b3, e2, g1, g3, e5 etc. When it arrives on b5, black will no longer have any checks resulting in a stalemate, and it’s an easy win afterwards.

      36. Anonymous Reply
        December 1, 2010 at 1:19 pm

        I can’t seem to figure out how to avoid the desperado checks….I thought going for h6 might work…but nope…can’t see it…if there IS a winning pattern…I’d love to see it.

      37. Tom Barrister Reply
        December 1, 2010 at 3:29 pm

        Black will usually have two ways to give check, and optimally, the Rook will give check next to White’s King, so that a rook can’t interpose.

        White needs to find a square in which a Black Rook check will be answered by a rook capture or a pawn capture that frees Black’s pawn to move. Looking at the position, White needs to maneuver her King to b6 and Black’s Rook to c6, with Black to move.

        To do this, White must go on an interesting tour.

        1 b3 Ra3+
        2 Kc2 Rc3+

        Black tries to keep White confined to the first and second ranks.

        3 Kd2 Rd3+
        4 Ke2 Re3+
        5 Kf2 Rf3+
        6 Kg1

        This is how White escapes the second rank. If the pawn on g2 weren’t there, the game would be drawn, as Black would still be stalemated after the Rook on g7 captured his Rook on the g-file.

        6 … Rf1+
        7 Kh2 Rh1+
        8 Kg3 Rh3+
        9 Kf4 Rf3+

        Forced, as 9… Rh4+, 10 Rg4 eliminates the stalemate.

        10 Ke5 Rf5+

        Or 10… Re3+, which leads to the same position after 11 Kd6 Re6+

        11 Kd6 Rf6+
        12 Kc5 ….

        White could also take a tour around the Rook on b7 and end up at b5 with Black’s Rook at a6, but this way is faster.

        12 … Rc6+
        13 Kb5

        The game of Ring-Around-The-Pawns is over. Both 13… Rb6+ 14 Rxb6 and 13… Rc5+, 14 dxc5 remove the stalemate.

      38. Jorge Reply
        December 1, 2010 at 9:46 pm

        Greetings from Spain.

        1)Kb3,Ra3+
        2)Kc2,Rc3+
        3)Kd2,Rd3+
        4)Ke2,Re3+
        5)Kf2,Rf3+
        6)Kg1,Rf1+
        7)Kh2,Rh1+
        8)Kg3,Rh3+
        9)Kf4,Rf3+
        10)Ke5,Rf5+
        11)Kd6,Rf6+
        12)Kc5,Rc6+
        13)Kb5 and whithe win the game

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