Chess Problem -2

Submitted by sanjayd1998 on Thu, 06/25/2009 at 5:10am.

White's pieces are clustered menacingly around Black's King, but it is far from easy to force mate in two. White to play and mate in two.

Hint:The first point to note is that Black's King has a possible escape route to e4, so white's first move must prevent ...Ke4 or prepare to reply to it. The second point to note that if white loses control of c4 or e6, then black can give a discovered check by moving his king. However composers love an element of paradox in their problems, so...

The arrangement of the bishop on a8 and the king on h1 appears to make life hard for white, because it creates the possibility of a discovered check by Black if, for example, the queen moves and allows either ...Kc4+ or ...Ke6+. But this is precisely the sort of deception composers like to incorporate into their problems; the idea is that the solver will see the discovered checks and therefore reject a queen move...But it turns out that the key is with the queen after all. Black is allowed his bit of fun, but the queen is ambushed behind the rook, and White can trump Black by meeting his discovered checks with discovered mates! The threat is Re3 mate if the bishop moves or the f pawn moves, and the queen move prepares to meet 1...Ke4 by 2 Qg2 mate. Black can stop the threat by 1...d3 but then 2 Rb4 is mate, while 1...e4 is answered by 2 Rb5 mate. The two star variations arise from the other moves of Black's king, 1...Kc4+ allows 2 Rf3 mate (the rook must guard d3), and 1...Ke6+ allows 2 Rb7 mate (the rook must guard d7 and e7). Altogether, White's rook delivers a total of five different mates. 


» posted in sanjayd1998's Blog
 

Comments:

by Evasan - 5 months ago
Johannesburg South Africa
Member Since: Jun 2009
Member Points: 127

tx anyway. helps those without chessmaster

by sanjayd1998 - 5 months ago
Bangalore India
Member Since: Nov 2008
Member Points: 168

Yeah I know, but I wanted everyone else to know about it.

by Evasan - 5 months ago
Johannesburg South Africa
Member Since: Jun 2009
Member Points: 127

thanks, have seen these puzzles on ChessMaster GME but nice to practise

 

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