A beautiful study by Canada's Steve Laughlin

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • A beautiful study by Canada's Steve Laughlin

    Here is a sample of the quality of composition produced by Steve Laughlin of Toronto. Steve has finished another book that I will convert to a PDF file complete with full colour coded solutions. Contact me for more info.



    White to play and win.

    Hint: Fritz has a lot of problem with this one (it's too deep)

  • #2
    Re: A beautiful study by Canada's Steve Laughlin

    For me, my solution is too long.
    1 Kd2 Kb2
    2 Qa1 Ka1 (still need to find something good for Kb3!? Qc3 Kc2...)
    3 Kc1 and trying to mate with Ke1-c2X, but some variations go upto moving the h4 pawn to h8 Qx :)

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: A beautiful study by Canada's Steve Laughlin

      Without thoroughly analyzing the postion, the theme seems to be to stalemate the Black K, and mate it with the N - e.g.
      start with 1. Kd2+ Kb2 2. Qxa1+ Kxa1 3. Kc1 Bh7 (to stop Ne1-c2 mate) 4. Ne1 Bxd3 5. Nxd3 Ra anywhere (if Rb5, take it). Ne1, followed by Nc2 mate. Am I missing anything?

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: A beautiful study by Canada's Steve Laughlin

        Originally posted by Hugh Brodie View Post
        Without thoroughly analyzing the postion, the theme seems to be to stalemate the Black K, and mate it with the N - e.g.
        start with 1. Kd2+ Kb2 2. Qxa1+ Kxa1 3. Kc1 Bh7 (to stop Ne1-c2 mate) 4. Ne1 Bxd3 5. Nxd3 Ra anywhere (if Rb5, take it). Ne1, followed by Nc2 mate. Am I missing anything?
        Nc2 mate can be avoided :D
        Ra not anywhere but Ra4 Ne1 and Rc4+ Nc2+ (not mate!!!) and then goes my idea with h8Q (again not mate!!!) as Black pushes a pawn to c3 (where it is blocked but blocks check as well). Thus final move with mate Qc3x :) Here could be B as well spoiling the solution (?)

        Solution confirmed with Rybka 2.2n2. Fritz 11 have not found...
        Last edited by Egidijus Zeromskis; Sunday, 10th August, 2008, 11:12 PM.

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: A beautiful study by Canada's Steve Laughlin

          Hi Hugh,

          Yes, but I think you should mention the continuation after 1. Kd2+ Kb2 2. Qxa1+ Kxa1 3. Kc1 Bh7 (to stop Ne1-c2 mate) 4. Ne1 Bxd3 5. Nxd3.........5....Rxa4 with the idea to give up the Rook for the Knight. 6.Ne1 Rxc4+ 7.Nc2+ Rxc2+
          The remainder is the funny part.
          Still I give you 9.5/10 ....deduction for form.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: A beautiful study by Canada's Steve Laughlin

            Your comment about the under promotion is alert. I don't think studies are flawed by such things. If I posted the diagram as a Mate in 15! everything would be spoiled.

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: A beautiful study by Canada's Steve Laughlin

              Originally posted by Bill Evans View Post
              Your comment about the under promotion is alert. I don't think studies are flawed by such things. If I posted the diagram as a Mate in 15! everything would be spoiled.
              That why I putted a question mark (?) The move is not a final one.

              P.S.
              Fritz 11 still searching (~20min) vs 1 min with Rybka :)

              Comment

              Working...
              X