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Doesn't Black have 3) .... Qe1+ to win? I'm not home now and don't have a board so I'm wondering if I'm missing something obvious. It wouldn't be the first time. :)
Doesn't that allow 4. Kg2 solidifying white's position and threatening to promote the pawn? or maybe not since after QxR black's King goes to g8 stopping the pawn
Last edited by Zeljko Kitich; Thursday, 3rd February, 2011, 04:55 PM.
Note the quoted last sentence after the given variation (by editor C.J.S. Purdy): "Of course it's easy, now, to see what Black ought to have done. But never resign just to show you can see your opponent's threats."
Note the quoted last sentence after the given variation (by editor C.J.S. Purdy): "Of course it's easy, now, to see what Black ought to have done. But never resign just to show you can see your opponent's threats."
I did see it, but the article states that white resigned the position and then an onlooker demonstrated a win for white. It seems a little muddled. Perhaps Kevin is presenting it tongue-in-cheek?
The problem lies in the punctuation. 3.Rf2 may warrent an exclam, but 3...Qxf2 should get ??. It's really just a last desperate fling by White in a lost position. 3...Qe1+ is a simple win as pointed out. Just another example of my motto: "There is no position so good that there isn't some way to screw it up!"
Interesting challenge... can we construct a position in which every move leads to a winning checkmate? :)
Or a position where the only legal move(s) result in checkmate...
That is all fine and good, except that the player could hallucinate and offer a draw or resign! (no way to prevent that!)
I once saw a problem (in Scientific Americain no less) about 35 years ago in which the problem was to find a legal move that wasn't checkmate. As I recall, I had to look up the solution!
Item #334 http://www.xs4all.nl/~timkr/chess2/diary_17.htm talks about a recent record for "worst possible move" - all moves, except one, mate immediately - with an exceptional move that self-mates. Also on the most recent entry (Dec 2010) is a consecutive check record.
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