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sirissac 13-Jul-14, 00:08 » Report abuse |
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mrfery 13-Jul-14, 00:52 » Report abuse |
![]() 3.5 stars for 15 minutes struggle.... |
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asiong1934 13-Jul-14, 02:34 » Report abuse |
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the_17_pawn 13-Jul-14, 05:04 » Report abuse |
![]() mrfery, I don't know your wife to say she's cute or not, but this puzzle surely is, just like this another puzzle composed by Johann Berger(White to move and draw): |
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maxwellunsmart 13-Jul-14, 06:35 » Report abuse |
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iberville 13-Jul-14, 08:55 » Report abuse |
![]() (if 1... gf4 2. h4 wins for white). |
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maxwellunsmart 13-Jul-14, 08:59 » Report abuse |
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asiong1934 13-Jul-14, 09:18 » Report abuse |
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sirissac 13-Jul-14, 09:38 » Report abuse |
![]() Oh well, the first idea is certainly fun but 1.gxf4 seems to be much work. |
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the_17_pawn 13-Jul-14, 09:40 » Report abuse |
![]() On either 1.h4? or 2.h4?(In the mainline), Black simply responds ...gxh4 and wins with the a-pawn, as White's king can be no longer stalemated, White's king also can't catch the a-pawn, and Black's king can easily catch the f-pawn if it tries to promote itself. |
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asiong1934 13-Jul-14, 09:43 » Report abuse |
![]() White has the move and wins! Do you believe it? Though it is not proper for me to post this sort of puzzle, I just can't help myself sharing it when we talk about "cute". |
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maxwellunsmart 13-Jul-14, 09:50 » Report abuse |
![]() the_17_pawn, 1. f4 a5 2. f5 gxf5 3. h4 wins for white. Black must move the King on move 1 to stay within the rule-of-square. If.. 1. f4 a5 2. f5 a4 3. fxg6 and white wins (rule-of-square). |
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maxwellunsmart 13-Jul-14, 09:55 |
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the_17_pawn 13-Jul-14, 09:56 » Report abuse |
![]() That's a case where much material for one side does damage instead of actually help. If instead, the f7-pawn were gone, White's 1.h5! only draws(And all other moves loses on the spot), after 1...Ke6 2.h6 Kf6 3.f5! Kf7!(That's the point. Black can draw here by shuffling his king around f7-f6, which is not possible in the actual puzzle due to the f7-pawn existance) 4.Ka1 Kf6 5.Kb2 1/2-1/2. |
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sirissac 13-Jul-14, 09:56 » Report abuse |
![]() 1. h5 Ke6 2. h6 Kf6 Black must follow to stay in reach of the h-pawn 3. f5 zugzwang, Black must move the king or forfeit the a-pawn. If he forfeits the a-pawn zugzwang again, move the king or forfeit the b-pawn. If he forfeits the b-pawn zugzwang again, move the king and White promotes. |
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asiong1934 13-Jul-14, 10:12 » Report abuse |
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maxwellunsmart 13-Jul-14, 16:05 » Report abuse |
![]() That 1... a5 is a losing move by black. I found the puzzle on the internet and they all say 1... a5 is the correct move. I'm saying that by playing 1. Kc8 or Kc7, black keeps the white pawns within the rule-of-square and the only option for white is to play for the stalemate. A better layout for the puzzle is to have the black king at c8 to start. That would take away white's alternate path and force white to play for the stalemate, and 1... a5 is no longer a losing move. Here's the various scenarios I played out following 1. f4 a5: 2. h4 a4 3. f5 gxf5 4. hxg5 (black cannot stop white promotion) a3 5. g6 a2 6. g7 a1=Q 7. g8=Q+ Kb7 8. Qd5+ Kc7 9. gxf5 2. f5 gxf5 3. h4 a4 4. hxg5 (black cannot stop white promotion) a3 5. g6 a2 6. g7 a1=Q 7. g8=Q+ Kc7 8. gxf5 Someone would have to beat me playing black from the position following 1. f4 a5 to convince me otherwise, or show me the errors of my way. I challenged the_17_pawn puzzle to play the position with me as white. My move is 2. f5, the more aggressive line. |
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mrfery 13-Jul-14, 20:27 » Report abuse |
![]() As to that puzzle sent by mister 17-pawn, well I think the following leads to a stalemate f4. Kc7 (or Kc8) fxg. a5. ( or Kd7) if gxf white will win by promoting one their pawn Kg3 a4 ( or Kd6) Kh4. a3 g3. And the door is closed. Stalemate. Brilliant puzzle...congrats to the publisher and composer |
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snailmate 11-Jan-25, 09:55 » Report abuse |
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