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      Home  >  Chess Improvement • Chess Puzzles  >  SPGI Puzzle Solving Championship

      SPGI Puzzle Solving Championship

      Chess tactic, Puzzle Solving

      Here are 8 of the puzzles from the 2012 SPGI Puzzle Solving Championship. How long does it take you to solve them correctly?

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      7 Comments

      1. Lucymarie Reply
        July 25, 2012 at 5:36 am

        Too long. Solved all eight, but the brain cells don’t work so quickly anymore.

      2. MrB Reply
        July 25, 2012 at 8:21 am

        The first four are fairly easy:

        #13:

        1. Qc5+ Kd7
        2. Qd6+ Ke8
        3. Qe7#

        #14:

        1. Qxf8+ Kxf8
        2. Nf6+ Kg8
        3. Rf8#

        #15:

        1. Rh8+ Kxh8
        2. Qxh6+ Kg8
        3. Qxg7#

        #16:

        1. d6+ Ke6
        2. Re8+ Kd5
        3. Bb7+ Kc4
        4. Rb4#

        Now let me look at the remaining four. 🙂

      3. pht Reply
        July 25, 2012 at 9:42 am

        13)
        1. Qc5+ Kd7
        2. Qd6+ Ke8
        3. Qe7#

        14)
        1. Qf8+ Kxf8
        2. Ng6++ Kg8
        3. Rf8#

        Took only the time to write the solution. But the rest is harder:

        15)
        1. Rh8+ Kxh8
        2. Qxh6+! Kg8 (g7 was pinned)
        3. Qxg7#
        Took me a minute to find the right move order here (tried all other sequences first).

        16)
        1. d6+ Ke6
        2. Re8+ Kd5
        3. Rd1+ Kc6
        4. Rc8#
        Easy, since there were so few squares black king could walk on.
        But took a minute though.

        17)
        1. Qc6+ Ka5
        2. b4+ (magnetism) Kxb4
        3. Qc5+ Ka4
        4. Bd1#
        Again, a minute.

        18)
        1. Kg4+ Kg6
        2. Kf4+ Kf6
        3. e5+ Ke6
        4. Nc5#
        Here I first tried 3. Bc3+? that didn’t work…

        19)
        Here is something tricky about the d7/d6 escape fields.
        1. Re8+ Bxe8
        2. Rxe8+ Kd7
        3. Nf6+! Kxd6
        4. Re6#
        Not really difficult, but still took me 2 minutes.

        20)
        The last one seems surprisingly easy:
        1. Nf6+ gxf6
        2. Qg3+ Kf8
        3. Bh6#
        Well, black can prolong this with the interposing sack:
        2. … Qg5
        3. Qxg5+(?) Kf8
        Oops, where is my mate in 4 now? My own queen suddenly stands in the way for my bishop!
        Improvement:
        1. Nf6+ gxf6
        2. Qg3+ Qg5
        3. Re8+! Kg7
        4. Qxg5#
        There had to be some fun in one of those puzzles:-)

      4. MrB Reply
        July 25, 2012 at 11:29 am

        Solutions for second set of four problems.

        #17:

        1. Qc6+ Ka5
        2. b4+ Kxb4
        3. Qc5+ Ka4
        4. Bd1#

        #18:

        1. Kg4+!! Kg6
        2. Kf4+ Kf6
        3. e5+ Ke6
        4. Nc5#

        #19:

        1. Re8+ Bxe8
        2. Rxe8+ Kd7
        3. Nf6+ Kxd6
        4. Bf4#

        #20:

        1. Nf6+ gxf6
        2. Qf8+ Kxf8
        3. Bh6+ Kg8
        4. Re8#

      5. Anonymous Reply
        July 25, 2012 at 12:56 pm

        These are too hard.

      6. MrB Reply
        July 26, 2012 at 3:33 am

        @pht:

        Your and my solutions differ in 3 cases (apart from a typo I made in #14):

        1. #16

        Your solution is wrong, since you missed the interposing move, 3… Rd3 after which there is no mate in 4.

        2. #19

        Both our solutions appear to work (the difference is only in the mating move)

        3. #20

        Your fourth move is not really a mating move, since you missed the pawn on f6. So, black escapes your purported mate with 4… fxg5. My solution is correct, though.

      7. pht Reply
        July 26, 2012 at 7:17 am

        Comparing MrB’s solutions to my own, I can see my mistake on #16:
        My solution is mate in 5, I overlooked blacks sack 3. … Rd3

        I can also see my mistake on #20:
        My solution is mate in 5, I overlooked blacks extra sack 2. … Bg4

        About #19, are here three mates?
        4. Re6#, 4. Bf4# or 4. Bf8#

      Leave a Reply to Lucymarie Cancel reply

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