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phonybenoni 25-Nov-17, 00:13 |
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jlhuddleston2002 25-Nov-17, 08:52 » Report abuse |
![]() It looked like RxKn would mate in 3. If Black takes the R with K or Q the Q mates (h6 mate or g5 then h6 mate). Even more interesting, if Black takes the queen, you get the very fascinating discovered mate through 1.RxKn PxQ 2. Rf7+ Kg8 3. Rd7 mate). But Black escapes the 3-move mate by moving its own Q or light-squared B--allowing it to block the mate on White's light-squared B diagonal (e.g. 1. RxKn Be6. or 1. RxKn Qd5). |
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bobandyo 25-Nov-17, 09:07 » Report abuse |
![]() 1.RxKn PxQ 2. Rf7+ Kg6? |
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jlhuddleston2002 25-Nov-17, 17:28 » Report abuse |
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jmchess01 11-Oct-25, 06:22 » Report abuse |
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