White to move and win (difficult) - Alexey Troitsky, 1897
White to move and win (difficult) - Alexey Troitsky, 1897
Queen H1 to F1?
Edit: I’m still an idiot.
9ReplyPg2
Edit: Apparently I'm being downvoted by somebody who doesn't understand white starts on row 1
4ReplyQd3 Pg3 Qf5
2Reply
That's what I would have thought, leaves the King nowhere to go and there's nothing to block/capture the Queen.
3ReplyBlack is moving down, Pg2
4ReplyPawn to G2?
3Reply
Bc6 Rb2 Trying to mate on g2 and defending.
I'm not sure where to go from there, either bg2+ or nf4+
Either case I can't find a forced mate in my head atleast
5ReplyGood start. You don't have to calculate all the way to mate in that line, White gets an overwhelming advantage.
But more interestingly: What do you do after Bc6 Rb1+?
5Reply-
Bc6 Rb1+
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Ke2 Rxh1
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Bg2+ Kxg2
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Nf4+ Kg1
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Ke1 g2
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Ne2
3Reply-
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Bc6 Rb1+
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Ke2 Rxh1
3.Bg2+ Kxg2
4.Nf4+ Kg1
5.Ke1 G2
6.Ne2#
Edit K for knight to N
4ReplyIt appears I'm an idiot too
I'm very new to chess annotation and i keep using k for knight and king.
4ReplyI think it's meant to be
Ke1 G2
as Ne1 is an illegal move but that's just a notation issue 3ReplyYeah it was very late i was meant to be asleep not playing chess puzzles knight starts with a k haha
2Reply
Nicely done! You solved the main (study) line. There's other lines where Black actually holds out longer, but they're much simpler to calculate.
2ReplyWhat happens if black declines the queen? Too lazy to calculate it out at this point
2Reply
It seems to be open ended if black doesn't take queen, though
2ReplyWhat's interesting is if black moves to Rf4 and ignores the queen i see how it gets very open ended
2ReplyBishop moves to g2 checkmate of it doesn't check the king.
If it does then the king walks back towards the rook. Until it takes it or the rook doesn't check the king ending the game
2Reply
Nf4 to Ne1 isn't a valid move?
1ReplyMeant to be Ke1
I fucked up the Knight and King it was 11 at night when i was doing it
1Reply
After 4. Nf4+, wouldn't it be better for the king to go to f3? Or am I overlooking something obvious
Edit: answered my own question, white king covers f3 after moving to e2, forgot about that
1Reply
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I need the reddit bot to try it online.
3ReplyMy bad, next time I'll provide a link right away. Here you go: https://lichess.org/analysis/4B3/8/6N1/5p2/1r4p1/6pk/7b/4K2Q_w_-_-_0_1?color=white
6ReplyThanks
1Reply
King E1 to F1
2ReplyNo that's no good either, then castle comes to check
2ReplyHang on im still onto it.
New plan
Bc6
Rb1 checking king
Kd2
Rb2 checking King
Kc1
Rook must leave or be taken. Anywhere doesnt matter.
Qg2 checkmate
2ReplyPermanently Deleted
1Reply
What about queen?
1ReplyWhat about the Queen?
1Reply
Does it involve Ke2, Pg2, Qe1? Ending with Qc1, Qh6
Edit nvm I'm dumb
2ReplyUnfortunately no. After 1. Ke2 g2 2. Qe1 Black has a simple way to win the queen, and after 2. Qc1 Black can at at the very least promote the pawn and there will never be a checkmate for White.
4Reply
Qf1
1ReplyRead other comments
1Reply
Doh I'm an idiot, missed Re4 somehow
1ReplyI'd guess king e1 to f1, then it's probably either rook to b6 or pawn to g2, in both cases queen to g2
1ReplyChest
1Reply