A Checkmate Pattern

Submitted by Nytik on Wed, 08/19/2009 at 1:15pm.

When sifting through the archives of forgotten webpages, I found an interesting column on a certain checkmate pattern, which should be familiar to most of you. Today I present the positions that appear in that column, as puzzles for you to solve, so that you can hone your tactical skills.

But first, we shall take a quick glance at the fundemental position. The pattern involves the queen on h6, removing the enemy king's escape squares, a bishop controlling the b1-h7 diagonal, and a pawn on f7. Note that in this 'skeletal' position, there is a faster mate by Bh1, winning by zugzwang, but we must ignore this to see our pattern.

 


Be sure to get that position firmly planted in your brain! Now we move on to our first puzzle. How can white win material by threatening to employ the mating pattern shown above?


Hopefully you got that puzzle correct! If so, you are seeing ways to create the skeletal position by using clever moves, in this case a sacrifice. This ability is key- you can't expect forced checkmates to just drop into your lap.


If you solved that puzzle, it means that not only do you have a nice ability to spot sacrifices that lead to attacks, but also that you can spot variations on a theme. In that case, the bishop is delivering mate rather than the queen, but we can see that it is a similar position.

I now leave you with a final puzzle, which is taken from Vukovic's The Art Of Attack, which is a book I recommend purchasing. By creating the potential to bring our skeletal position to life, you can force black to allow you victory.


Nytik

 

Comments:

by Lord-Chaos - 3 months ago
Devon England
Member Since: Feb 2009
Member Points: 1953

Rg5+ and Rg4+ are both threats? kk got it thanks. So if the Queen stays on the bishop diagonal, then Rg5+ is the threat. if it ever leaves, then Rh4 threatening Rg5+ is the threat.

thnx i understand now

by Nytik - 3 months ago
Southampton United Kingdom
Member Since: May 2008
Member Points: 4491

Lord-Chaos: White threatens Rg5+! where after fxg5 f6 black is lost.

by Lord-Chaos - 3 months ago
Devon England
Member Since: Feb 2009
Member Points: 1953

with the last puzzle (as it is in a book, there is no fault, but im wondering) why Rh5? because after b6 the Queen can just go back to Qb8 and then there is the threat on Bxg3 again, defending Rh4.

by Nytik - 3 months ago
Southampton United Kingdom
Member Since: May 2008
Member Points: 4491

I had copied the position wrong from the book. The white pawn is on e3, not e2. The puzzle has been fixed. Thanks for pointing that out.

by chessmaster102 - 3 months ago
Detroit MI United States
Member Since: May 2009
Member Points: 491

Also what if black played 3...Qxb6+ for the last puzzle.

by Nytik - 3 months ago
Southampton United Kingdom
Member Since: May 2008
Member Points: 4491

chessmaster102- 2... Qe7 3. Qh7+ Kf8 4. Qh8#

by chessmaster102 - 3 months ago
Detroit MI United States
Member Since: May 2009
Member Points: 491

For the first puzzle what would have happened if black played 2...Qe7  instead.

by Elroch - 3 months ago
Watford England
Member Since: Oct 2008
Member Points: 2216

<applause>

by razorblade12 - 3 months ago
Herefordshire United Kingdom
Member Since: Dec 2008
Member Points: 804

very nice, very nice... i like it!

 

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