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      Home  >  Chess Improvement • Chess Puzzles  >  Special chess tactic

      Special chess tactic

      Chess tactic, Puzzle Solving


      White to move. How should White proceed?

      3r3k/p1r2P2/1p1p4/3B4/1bP2Pp1/1P5P/P6K/4q1Q1 w – – 0 1

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      11 Comments

      1. Yancey Ward Reply
        July 14, 2010 at 1:53 am

        Well, I see nothing but

        1. Qd4 Kh7
        2. Be4 Qe4 (Kh6 3.Qf6 Kh5 4.Qg5#)
        3. Qe4 Kg7
        4. Qe8 Rf7 (Rcc8 5.f8(Q)+)
        5. Qd8 and white should win since the rook cannot take at f4. It is so nice to have a relief puzzle that I don’t have to work hard at.

      2. Lucymarie Reply
        July 14, 2010 at 3:14 am

        White is down a whole bunch of material, but does have the passed f-pawn on the 7th, and some checks
        on the Black king. Even a mate if Black cooperates. (Black never does cooperate win I’m playing her.)

        In fact, the more I look at this, I believe this is a win for White.

        1. Qd4+

        Making sure that we cover everything, 1…. Qe5,
        one of two legal moves, loses to 2. fxe5. I’m being serious: one cannot assume that this loses, no
        matter how likely that is. The only other legal move:

        1…. Kh7
        2. Be4+

        Again, Black has two legal moves, 2…. Qxe4
        and 2…. Kh6. We will have to come back to 2…. Qxe4,
        since on 2…. Kh6, there is a forced mate:

        2…. Kh6
        3. Qf6+ Kh5
        4. Qg5#

        So, we had better take a look at 2…. Qxe4.

        1. Qd4+ Kh7
        2. Be4+ Qxe4
        3. Qxe4+

        and Black has 3…. Kh8, Kh6, or Kg7.

        After any of these moves by Black, 4. Qe8 appears to
        be the only plausible try by White. All other moves
        lose, and this one wins. And
        either 4…. Rxe8 or 4…. Rxf7 must be played by Black.
        Otherwise, White will queen with check, 5. f8=Q+,
        and have 2 queens on the board. Let’s say that Black
        moved the king to g7 on the 3rd move. Then what we have
        so far is:

        1. Qd4+ Kh7
        2. Be4+ Qxe4
        3. Qxe4+ Kg7
        4. Qe8

        Here Black can play:

        4…. Rxe8
        5. fxe8=Q gxh3
        6. Kxh3

        Black can also try:

        4…. Rxf7
        5. Qxd8 gxh3 (not 5…. Rxf4?? 6. Qg5+)
        6. Kxh3 or 6. Qg5+ right away

        White should win in either case, but it will be a long
        night if Black wants to play on (and she will want to, I’m afraid).

        Lucymarie

      3. Anonymous Reply
        July 14, 2010 at 4:33 am

        1.Qd4+, Kh7 2. Be4+, Kh6 3. Qf6+, Kh5 4. Qg5#…black would have to sacrifice the queen to stop this.

      4. anand Reply
        July 14, 2010 at 5:42 am

        Qd4+ Kh7
        Be4+ Kh6
        Qf6+ Kh5
        Qg5+ #

      5. Umesh::ഉമേഷ് Reply
        July 14, 2010 at 7:13 am

        Won’t 1. Qd4+ Kh7 2. Be4+ force checkmate? Am I missing something?

      6. Umesh::ഉമേഷ് Reply
        July 14, 2010 at 7:15 am

        Regarding my last comment:

        After 1. Qd4+ Kh7 2. Be4, Black can play 2… Qxe4 and still (s)he is ahead in material. Need to analyze more.

      7. Timothée Reply
        July 14, 2010 at 7:17 am

        1.Dd4+ Rh7 2.Fe4+ Dxe4 3.Dxe4+ Rg7 4.De8! +-

      8. Umesh::ഉമേഷ് Reply
        July 14, 2010 at 7:21 am

        1. Qd4+ Kh7 2. Be4+ Qxe4 3. Qxe4 Kg7/h6 4. Qe8! with the threat 5. f8Q+ wins another R.

        That should win the game.

      9. John Rebus Reply
        July 14, 2010 at 8:54 am

        White is far behind in material, but had the black queen not been there, he had a mating attack:

        1. Qd4+ Kh7
        2. Be4+ Kh6
        3. Qf6+ Kh5
        4. Qg5#

        Black can give up his queen to avoid this, but is it good enough for white?

        2… Qxe4
        3. Qxe4+ Kg7

        Now? Can white win with Q vs 2R+B? Took me some staring at the board to figure out the answer:

        4. Qe8!!

        Now, a black rook also goes off the board whatever black does. White should win the resulting position.

      10. Anand Gautam Reply
        July 14, 2010 at 9:17 am

        1. Qd4+ Kh7 (1. … Qe5 loses easily)
        2. Be4+ Qxe4 (2. … Kh6 gets mated)
        3. Qxe4+ Kg7 (or any other move)
        4. Qe8 wins 1-0

      11. Anonymous Reply
        July 14, 2010 at 11:23 am

        Checkmate in 4…

      Leave a Reply to John Rebus Cancel reply

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