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      Home  >  Chess Improvement • Chess Puzzles  >  Fischer chess tactic

      Fischer chess tactic

      Chess tactic, Puzzle Solving


      White to move. How should white proceed? (This is an actual game by Bobby Fischer against Robert Byrne. I just flipped the colors to make it easier for all the bloggers to see.)

      r2r1k2/p4q1p/bpn3p1/3n4/8/1P4P1/PB1Q1PBP/R3R1K1 w – – 0 1

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      23 Comments

      1. Anonymous Reply
        June 22, 2011 at 8:41 pm

        I don’t know if this is the right line, but …

        Qh6+ Kg8 (forced)
        Re8+ Rxe8
        Bxd5 pinning the Q
        Q cannot take because of the mate on
        g7

      2. Mike Magnan Reply
        June 22, 2011 at 9:01 pm

        Talk about a mental reboot!!!! Qh3 (6) with the rook sack mate…thats making my brain strange…haha..

      3. Sebastian Reply
        June 22, 2011 at 9:26 pm

        Hello, I see 1.Qh6+ Kg8 2.Re8+ Rxe8 (..Qxe8 3.Qg7#) 3.Bxd5 pins the queen ..Qxd5 4.Qg7#

      4. Anonymous Reply
        June 22, 2011 at 9:38 pm

        1.Qh6 Kg8 2.Re8:

        if 2… Re8 then 3.Bd5 adn mate on g7

        if 2… Qe8 3.Qg7 mate.

      5. Andy Reply
        June 22, 2011 at 10:03 pm

        D2-H6+ F8-G8
        E1-E8+ D8-E8
        G2-D6

      6. Yancey Ward Reply
        June 22, 2011 at 10:09 pm

        Ah, the famous 1963 game from the US Championship. An actual game, but a position that never arose, if I remember correctly. Byrne had resigned a couple of moves before this exact position arose, and Fischer had lamented the resignation and the missed line:

        1. Qh6 Kg8 (Qg7 2.Qg7#)
        2. Re8

        Probably the move Fischer regretted not being able to play over the board. Continuing:

        2. …..Re8(Qe8 3.Qg7#;Qf8 3.Qf8#)
        3. Bd5 and black loses the queen and the remaining king side pawns most likely, and there might even be a quick mate in here that I am overlooking.

      7. Anonymous Reply
        June 22, 2011 at 10:17 pm

        1. Qh6 Kg8
        2. Re8 Rxe8
        3. Bxd5, winning the queen.
        I don’t think I would’ve found it hadn’t I seen it before.

      8. Anonymous Reply
        June 22, 2011 at 11:29 pm

        1. Qh6+ Kg8
        2. Re8+ Rxe8
        3. Bxd5 That’s all.

        “This is an actual game by Bobby Fischer against Robert Byrne.”

        In which year the game was played?

        Best regards
        Stef

      9. Vivian Reply
        June 23, 2011 at 12:39 am

        1. Qh6+ Kg8
        2. Re8+, with the idea Bd5:

        This was the easy part of that game!

      10. Morsa Reply
        June 23, 2011 at 12:51 am

        1.Qh6+ Kg8 2.Re8! Re8 (2. … Qe8 3.Qg7#) 3.Bd5+ wins

      11. Anonymous Reply
        June 23, 2011 at 3:46 am

        1.Qh6+ Kg8(forced move)
        2.Re8!+ RxR (not QxR, mate in one)
        3.BxN!! QxB (no choice, anyway)
        4.Qg7++

      12. Anonymous Reply
        June 23, 2011 at 3:50 am

        1.Qh6+ Kg8
        2.Re8+ RxR
        3.BxN! Q have no choice but to take the Bishop
        4.Qg7mate

      13. Lucymarie Reply
        June 23, 2011 at 6:22 am

        In the interests of completeness, I am sending this. It’s not immediately clear that after
        1. Qh6+ Kg8 2. Re8+ Rxe8 3. Bxd5 Ne5 4. Bxf7+ Kxf7 5. Qf4+ Kg8 the winning move is 6. Qf6. A lot of the other continuations are also non-trivial. So, how much of this did Fischer and R.Byrne see during the game?

        1. Qh6+ (1. Bxd5? Rxd5!) 1. .. Kg8 2. Re8+ Rxe8 3. Bxd5 Ne5 (3. .. Re7 4. Qg7#) 4. Bxf7+ Kxf7 (4. .. Kh8 5. Qf8+ Rxf8 6. Bxe5#) (4. .. Nxf7 5. Qg7#) 5. Qf4+ Kg8 (5. .. Ke7
        6. Qxe5+ Kd7 (6. .. Kd8 7. Qd6+ Kc8 8. Rc1+ Bc4 9. Rxc4+ Kb7 10. Qc6+ Kb8 (10. .. Ka6 11. Ra4#) 11. Qc7#) (6. .. Kf8 7. Qg7#) (6. .. Kf7
        7. Qf6+ Kg8 8. Qg7#) 7. Qd4+ Kc7 (7. .. Ke6 8. Re1+ Kf5 9. Qf4#)
        (7. .. Ke7 8. Re1+ Kf7 9. Qg7#) (7. .. Kc6 8. Rc1+ Bc4 9. Rxc4+ Kb5 10.
        Qd5+ Ka6 11. Ra4#) (7. .. Kc8 8. Rc1+ Bc4 9. Rxc4+ Kb8 10. Qd6+ Kb7 11.
        Qc6+) 8. Rc1+ Bc4 9. Rxc4+ Kb8 10. Qd6+ Kb7 11. Qc6+) (5. .. Ke6 6. Qxe5+)
        (5. .. Kg7 6. Bxe5+ Kg8 (6. .. Rxe5 7. Qxe5+) 7. Qf6 Rxe5 8. Qxe5) 6. Qf6
        {and there is no good defense to Bxe5} *

      14. knockout2011 Reply
        June 23, 2011 at 10:59 am

        1.Qh6+ Kg8
        2.Re8+ Rxe8
        3.Bxd5 Qxd5
        4.Qg7#

        #p/s: Bobby Fischer is my idol and I know what he will do when in a situation like this

        – MR KO ( Malaysian)

      15. prof.S.G.Bhat Reply
        June 23, 2011 at 12:22 pm

        1Qh6+ Kg8
        2Re8+ Rxe8
        3Bxd5 Now whether Q takes B or not Qg7# is threatened.
        (a)3…. Ne5 to block B diagonal
        4 Bxf7+ Kxf7
        5Qf4+ and N is also gone.
        (b) 3…. Re5 with same intention
        4Bxf7+ Kxf7
        5Qxh7+ Ke6
        6Qxg6+ Kd7
        7Rd1+ Kc7
        8Qd6+ Kb7
        9Qd7+ Kb8
        10Qxc6 and now if 10… Re8
        there are two options
        Rd8+ or Be5+ both leading to mate.
        The position is so rich white may have many options.

      16. prof.S.G.Bhat Reply
        June 23, 2011 at 12:58 pm

        Dear Not so Lucidmarie,
        I felt like an insect caught in a web of 16 { I counted} pairs of parenthesis.Will I get bail from this, not “ale” of Yancey. I stopped analysis when white got Q for a R.

      17. Lucymarie Reply
        June 23, 2011 at 3:06 pm

        Dear prof S.G.Bhat,

        Regarding your humorous reference to insects caught in webs:

        Not being a grandmaster, I always feel like I’m an insect caught in a web when studying chess. How does one decide which lines of forced (or semi-forced, or likely) play it is worth the time to think about? Having read “Think Like a Grandmaster” (by Kotov) many years ago, I still have trouble deciding which lines it is worthwhile to pursue. OK, part of it is just my insatiable curiosity, and part of it is just my obsession for completeness. I still have the hope that if I’m very thorough, I may eventually develop the judgement to decide which lines are worth pursuing, and which are not.

        Perhaps if I keep analyzing these positions, eventually, one day I will be able to “see” this all relatively quickly over-the-board. It hasn’t happened yet, but one day, just maybe……….

        Your ever hopeful,

        Lucidmarie

      18. Yancey Ward Reply
        June 23, 2011 at 3:19 pm

        I was right, but Byrne had only resigned one move before this position arose.

        http://www.chessgames.com/perl/chessgame?gid=1008419

        There was a note in the annotations from Fischer that claims a short mate in the line starting with Qh6 (Qh3 in the real game), but on looking at it again this morning, I am not seeing it. Lucymarie’s Ne5 seems resistant to a quick mate, even if white’s material advantage is decisive nonetheless.

      19. prof.S.G.Bhat Reply
        June 23, 2011 at 3:48 pm

        Dear Lucymarie,
        I did not mean what all I wrote but it would have helped if different types of parenthesis () [] {}were used at different levels.e.g. continuation of 5Qf4+ Kg8 at 1st line of analysis came in last line 6Qf6.So it was bit difficult for me to comprehend. Otherwise a well conducted analysis.

      20. prof.S.G.Bhat Reply
        June 23, 2011 at 3:52 pm

        dear Lucymarie,
        In the meanwhile you had forgotten about analysing 3 Re5 instead of 3Ne5.Otherwise the number of parenthesis would have increased further.

      21. prof.S.G.Bhat Reply
        June 23, 2011 at 6:12 pm

        Dear Lucymarie,
        One more doubt. After 5Qf4+ Kg8 you play 6Qf6 ,why not 6Bxe5 straight away?

      22. Lucymarie Reply
        June 23, 2011 at 8:37 pm

        Dear prof.S.G.Bhat,

        If 6. Bxe5 straightaway, then Black plays 6. … Rf8.

        But after 6. Qf6 Rf8 7. Qxe5

        Lucymarie

      23. prof.S.G.Bhat Reply
        June 24, 2011 at 1:59 pm

        Yes.Lucymarie is right.I was satisfied with Q for R but she wanted to get more from the position. 6Qf6 is good since N will not run away and to avoid mate after 7Bxe5 black has to give up exchange.

      Leave a Reply to prof.S.G.Bhat Cancel reply

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