PRACTICAL
CHESS ENDGAME
*www.chessending.com*
31/10/2004
Editor: Brian Gosling
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
Welcome to this active site. Each week I am
going to present to you an endgame position for you to solve or to
workout the best continuation. Computer analysis will also be
considered. Some of these positions will come from actual historical
games. Others will be composed endgame studies, but all the solutions
will be relevant to the practical game. The new position will occur
each SUNDAY and
I will always be pleased to receive
POSITIVE feedback about the positions and
the analysis and I will try to acknowledge these where
relevant.
Thanks to Antonio
Senatore, Henryk Kalafut, Gerard O'Reilly, Rainer Staudte and Valdir
Uchoa Jr.
THIS WEEK
POSITION 351
WHITE to play and WIN
FORSYTH
NOTATION:3b4/7p/2KB4/p7/Pp6/1P5k/7P/8 w - - 0 1:
It is good training to try initially to
solve the endings without the assistance of a chess playing
programme.
> >
Cumulative
competition
LAST WEEK, POSITION 350
K. A. Leonid Kubbel,
(1891-1942).
Soviet Endgame Composer, Problemist and Strong
Player. Kubbel saw himself firstly as a problemist. His early
studies were compiled when he was only 13 years old and they showed
his great talent. Leonid Kubbel along with
Troitzky, Rink and the Platov brothers were leading the emerging art
of endgame study composing. With the early composers he
explored and added the strategic themes of the problemists to the
genre of the endgame study. Kubbel composed over 500 endgame studies.
He believed that practical play was also important to a composer
because it gave confidence in composing.
K. A. L. Kubbel
Shakhmaty v SSSR,
1936
WHITE to play and WIN
FORSYTH
NOTATION:rk1b4/p2p2p1/1P6/2R2P2/8/2K5/8/5B2 w - - 0 1:
In an early study published in 1895, Troitzky (1866-1942) had
shown in a simple setting how a lone Bishop could mate the King.
Kubbel had become fascinated with this theme and tried to add rich
content to the original idea. It was fitting that this study was
published with a dedication to the founder of the modern endgame
study on the occasion of his 70th birthday.
White plays for the Troitzky mate !!
1.Rc8+! ...
1.b7? Kxb7 2.Bg2+ Kb6
3.Kc4 Rb8 =+;
1.Bg2? axb6 2.Bxa8
bxc5 3.Bd5 Kc7 4.Kd3 Kd6 5.Ke4 Bf6 6.Bc4 =+;
1... Kxc8
1...Kb7? 2.Bg2+ Kxc8 3.b7+ +-;
2.Ba6+ Kb8
3.b7 Bb6
No better is
1... Bf6+ 4.Kc4 Be7 5.Kd5 Ba3 6.Ke5 Bf8 7.f6 g6
8.f7 Be7 9.f8Q+ Bxf8 10.Kf6 etc;
4.Kc4 Bc7
4...Be3 5.Kd5 Bf4
6.Ke4 Bh2 7.f6! gxf6 8.Kf5 Be5 9.Kg6 d5 10.Kf7 d4 11.Ke7 d3 12.Kd7 d2
13.bxa8Q+ Kxa8 14.Kc8 d1Q 15.Bb7 mate;
5.Kd5 Bg3
In order to set up the
Troitzky mate White has to get his King to "d7". The Black Bishop
guards the "d6 "gateway so White sacrifices the f-pawn to find
another way.
6.f6! gxf6
7.Ke4 Bh2
7...Be5 8.Kf5 Bc3 9.Kg6
f5 10.Kf7 f4 11.Ke7 f3 12.Kxd7 f2 13.bxa8Q+ Kxa8 14.Kc8 f1Q
15.Bb7mate;
8.Kf5 Be5
9.Kg6 d5
Black advances his pawn but to no avail.
10.Kf5 ...
10.Kf7 d4 11.Ke7 d3
12.Kd7 d2 13.bxa8Q+ Kxa8 14.Kc8 d1Q 15.Bb7mate;
10... d4
11.Ke6 d3
11...Kc7 12.bxa8Q d3
13.Qb7+ Kd8 14.Qd7#;
12.Kd7 ...
The King reaches his destination just in time.
Everything is ready for the grand finale.
12... d2
13.bxa8Q+ Kxa8
14.Kc8 d1Q
15.Bb7 MATE.
The Troitzky mate in its original form.
Gens Una
Sumus
> > Cumulative
competition
Steven B. Dowd
and Valdir Uchoa Jr win in
September.
There will be a special prize
for the highest placed newcomer in 2004.
The winners of the 2003 cumulative
competition:
|
|
Antonio
Senatore - Argentina,
Henryk
Kalafut - USA,
Alexander
Voyna- Ukraine
|
|
4th
|
Gerard
O'Reilly - England
|
COMPETITIONS for 2004
1. Cumulative 2004 This event will
run from 4/1/2004 to
19/12/2004 with a recess in the Summer. Present rules apply
but note the book prizes will go to those participants who climb the
ladder the greatest number of times during the year. The relative
position of the solver's name on the ladder will decide the
allocation of prizes.
Pre 18/04/04
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