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      Home  >  Chess Improvement • Chess Puzzles  >  Women’s Chess Tactic

      Women’s Chess Tactic

      Chess tactic, Puzzle Solving

      J. Polgar vs Yilmaz (EICC 2014)

      White to move. How should white proceed?

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      11 Comments

      1. Md Arifuzzaman Arif Reply
        March 15, 2014 at 5:04 am

        Rf4

      2. Md Arifuzzaman Arif Reply
        March 15, 2014 at 5:04 am

        Rf4

      3. Pawn Down Reply
        March 15, 2014 at 5:44 am

        Rf5 looks interesting

      4. Prof.S.G.Bhat Reply
        March 15, 2014 at 7:19 am

        1.RB5 followed by 2.f3 wins Q for R and N.Black can not hope for two rooks as there is N fork also.
        However I did not know that women chess tactic could be different from that of men although in real life it is definitely different.

      5. mesilah Reply
        March 15, 2014 at 12:03 pm

        1. Rf5 blocking the Black Queen’s escape route, and threatening
        2. f3, winning the Queen.
        Best move for Black:
        1. … Qxd1
        2. Qxd1 g6xf5
        Then
        3. Ne6+ (!) wins the Black rook on d8, and White comes out on top.

      6. Oleg Mezjuev Reply
        March 15, 2014 at 1:14 pm

        1. Rf5 gxf5 2. f3 1-0 White wins black’s queen.

      7. Anand Gautam Reply
        March 15, 2014 at 1:33 pm

        1. Rf5!!
        And Black must give up his queen as 2. f3 is coming 🙂

      8. Yancey Ward Reply
        March 15, 2014 at 3:54 pm

        Cut off the black queen’s retreat by first playing Rf5, then matricide with f3.

      9. Anonymous Reply
        March 15, 2014 at 4:55 pm

        This is a position where the tactics would be very hard to foresee. The Black Queen looks a little out of place and doesn’t have many squares available to her although she has the diagonal leading back to e6-d7-c8. However 1) Rf5!? cuts off that diagonal and clears the square for the pawn advance f2-f3 attacking the Q. So the idea is 1)Rf5 gxf5, 2) f3 winning the Q

        But I thought, why doesn’t Black simply take the Rook on d1 and get at least 2 rooks for the Q? It turns out that there is more. For instance 1)…Qxd1, 2) Qxd1 gxf5, 3) Qxh5 with the idea if Black takes the Knight …fxg5, 4)Qxg5+ and the loose R on d8 is simultaneously attacked. Black doesn’t have to take the Knight but the Knight and Q are threatening mate so this looks very promising along with the gain of material if White keeps his Knight. Many variations still to work out though!
        – Craigaroo

      10. CraigB Reply
        March 15, 2014 at 5:27 pm

        1. Rf5 and 2. f3 winning the Q is inevitable. Perhaps 1…Q:e1 2. Q:e1 fg (gf 3. Ne6+) is preferable

      11. Yancey Ward Reply
        March 16, 2014 at 5:05 pm

        Craigaroo,

        Unfortunately, black does even worse with 1. …Qxd1:

        1. Rf5 Qd1?
        2. Ne6!

        And now what for black? The fork has undermined the idea of winning two rooks for the queen, or even winning two rooks for a knight and queen) Some possible continuations:

        2. …..Kf7
        3. Nd8 Ke8 (what else now?)
        4. Qd1 and white will have won a queen for a knight overall.

        Or:

        2. …..Kg8
        3. Qd1 gf5
        4. Nd8 and now the white queen can win at d6 completely destroying the black position.

        Or:

        2. …..Kh8
        3. Qd1 Rd7 (or gf5 4.Nd8+-)
        4. Rf6 with a decisive edge.

      Leave a Reply to Md Arifuzzaman Arif Cancel reply

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