chessgames.com
Members · Prefs · Laboratory · Collections · Openings · Endgames · Sacrifices · History · Search Kibitzing · Kibitzer's Café · Chessforums · Tournament Index · Players · Kibitzing
 
 
Premium Chessgames Member
ChessCoachClark
Chess Game Collections
[what is this?] --*-- [what is this?]

<< previous | page 5 of 5 | next >>
  1. The Dynamic English-- KOSTEN
    Games from the old, but useful, book by Tony Kosten: THE DYNAMIC ENGLISH (c)1999.

    Use a chess analysis engine to confirm the lines that impress you and you'll do fine. Most of this book is still solid and recommended for an introduction to the English Opening-- it's only 144 pages of half-size sheets.

    If you want to be like Alpha Zero (which preferred the English Opening and Queen's Gambit back in 2017), then jump into the heavier or multi-volume books on the English Opening after digesting this foundational material.

    It has a few typos and other errata, but nothing to worry about.

    Games are listed in chronological order, not as they were presented in this text. Seems more convenient that way, really. Adding the page numbers gives you the 'belt and braces' features, though.

    Hoping to convince ChessGames to include other games from this text (12 more have not been included, yet) in their database here. This game collection is a work in progress, then.

    ChessCoachClark (CCC) originated this game collection and he updates it on occasion. This project is a work in progress, culling games from various sources, including several chess training books and personal research. The games are ordered by date (oldest first), not by importance.

    Be well.
    Be safe.

    27 games, 1851-1999

  2. Trapped Piece Tactic-- OTB Examples
    Here is a compilation of games available in this website's database that show the Trapped Piece tactic, which is limited to games where a chess piece cannot move or has no safe squares available to itself. Setting a trap for material advantage or checkmate is a different topic, not covered in this compilation.

    You should also read the article "Trapping Pieces," at Chess.com by WGM Natalia Pogonina (dated June 7, 2011) and work through the three games she has cited there. Her own game with Ikonomopoulou is not available at ChessGames.com, but an interactive version of that game is within the article.

    The article is interesting, but the Gelfand-Kamsky game she cites first does have a conclusion with a trap, rather than a trapped piece. (The White Queen is taken after a Discovered Attack-- the Bishop captures a Knight and at the same time the Bishop unmasks an attack from a Rook on that Queen.)

    This game collection only includes trapped pieces, that is, those which have no safe place to move.

    However, the Pogonina - Ikonomopoulou 2011 game does feature a trapped Knight being attacked by a Pawn and then captured by a different Pawn, so it would be included here if made available.

    LTN = Learn Chess Tactics (2004), by John Nunn

    Nunn has "Trapped Piece" as Chapter 6, from pages 56-61, with both examples (5 games) and exercises (16 games). Most of them are not included in the ChessGames.com database, though-- none of the games he used to show Trapped Bishops or Trapped Knights are here.

    ChessCoachClark (CCC) originated this game collection and he updates it on occasion. This project is a work in progress, culling games from various sources, including several chess training books and personal research. The games are ordered by date (oldest first), not by importance.

    Be well.
    Be safe.

    38 games, 1910-2017

  3. Trébuchet Position-- OTB Examples
    A well-known Zugzwang for both players, the Trébuchet Position should be a chess lesson that is learned more often. Try pronouncing it as "TRAY-boo-shay" and its more precise spelling is Trébuchet. "Whoever has the turn to move will lose the game" is the common description and the Exeter Chess Club has described it as a full-point mutual Zugzwang.

    The side with the move needs to place its King too far away from its Pawn to keep it protected. Thus, that Pawn is lost and careful play should see to it that the other Pawn gets the Promotion and a trivial win.

    There is also a Quasi-Trebuchet Position (the two Pawns are on the same rank), but its details and results are substantially different. HOW TO PLAY CHESS ENDINGS, by Eugene Znosko-Borovsky, shows them both on page 13.

    The vast majority of games I have found with these positions are not included in the ChessGames.com database, yet. :) More than 120 games are in my list so far by a few simple searches elsewhere. Therefore, it is not a rare position. Too many endgame books do not cover this tactic and those that do cover it only provide minimal coverage.

    Some database search results show a game which ends with the Trbuchet Position as a draw, so a little care is warranted.

    As I find more OTB Trebuchet Position games, I will append them here.

    ChessCoachClark (CCC) originated this game collection and he updates it on occasion. This project is a work in progress, culling games from various sources, including several chess training books and personal research. The games are ordered by date (oldest first), not by importance.

    Be well.
    Be safe.

    6 games, 1892-2013

  4. Tripled Corridor Mate Examples
    This game collection is for those games where three contiguous files are used to bring the checkmate with the Queen and both Rooks, with the defending King sitting in the middle file. Either the Queen or one of the Rooks actually makes the final attack.

    ChessCoachClark (CCC) originated this game collection in October 2024 and he updates it on occasion. This project is a work in progress, culling games from various sources, including several chess training books and personal research. The games are ordered by date (oldest first), not by importance.

    Be well.
    Be safe.

    5 games, 1967-2015

  5. Two-Pawn Mate Examples
    One major piece with help from its King is able to mate a lone King. Two minor pieces with their King's support are able to mate a lone King. Pawns are not pieces at all.

    However, two Pawns with support from their King may force a checkmate when certain constraints are being observed. So, here we have another case to demonstrate the power of the Pawn. It deserves our respect, so I always capitalize its name and capitalize on its limited powers whenever possible.

    This mate pattern could also be called a Seventh Rank Pawn Mate. I have only done it once, but it certainly deserves to be well-known.

    Also, a novice should be informed that this mate is much more efficient than simply getting Promotion and then planning a mate from there. Making a quick checkmate is a sure sign of skill! (It also forestalls any blunders possible in lengthier mating squences.)

    The two Pawns must be on adjacent files and come face-to-face with the other King. Both of them will have reached the seventh rank by the time this mate will have been made. The supporting King always needs to sit directly behind both Pawns and protect them. Sometimes this King also needs to cover the escape square of the King in danger. This escape square will always be on the seventh rank as well.

    The rival King is either on the edge of the board or in the corner. At the edge of the board, this group of chessmen in the Two-Pawn Mate will make a triangle pointing towards the Queenside (QS) or a triangle pointing to the Kingside (KS). The escape square will be on the opposite side in each case, thus forming a diamond in conjunction with the chessmen every time.

    Two-Pawn Mate configuration pointing KS:


    click for larger view

    Two-Pawn Mate configuration pointing QS:


    click for larger view

    It is interesting to note that there are two additional versions of the Two-Pawn Mate when the targeted King is in the corner. One form has the two Kings on the same file (SF), while the other form has the Kings on adjacent files (AF).

    Two-Pawn Mate configuration with Kings SF:


    click for larger view

    Two-Pawn Mate configuration with Kings AF:


    click for larger view

    One of my students asked for this game collection, in order to look at OTB instances. I hope that she and others will gain some benefit from this work.

    ChessCoachClark (CCC) originated this game collection and he updates it on occasion. This project is a work in progress, culling games from various sources, including several chess training books and personal research. The games are ordered by date (oldest first), not by importance.

    Be well.
    Be safe.

    31 games, 1905-2017

  6. Under-Promotion Tactic-- OTB Examples
    Specific examples from real games where it was necessary to promote to a piece other than the Queen.

    One must look and think before you move!

    Do not let an "automatic" move bring you into a disadvantage. Too many times it can make the difference between a win and a loss; at best a win and a draw.

    ChessCoachClark (CCC) originated this game collection and he updates it on occasion. This project is a work in progress, culling games from various sources, including several chess training books and personal research. The games are ordered by date (oldest first), not by importance.

    Be well.
    Be safe.

    21 games, 1849-2018

  7. Vukovic Mate Examples
    IM Vladimir Vuković (b. 1898; d. 1975) was both Serbian and Jewish. He showed an essential and particular kind of Knight and Rook checkmate pattern in his book, THE ART OF ATTACK IN CHESS, Chapter 4: Mating Patterns, under "Typical Mates without Enemy Pieces," pages 66-67 (AAV, 66-67).

    The mating pattern was not labeled with a name there, but several chess writers honor IM Vuković by naming this pattern after him. Unlike several other named mates in history, it does not appear that IM Vuković used this mate in one of his own games. However, the recorded body of his games is limited.

    This kind of checkmate intrigued me, so I chose to start a collection of games for my students to learn about it. Of course, the games are most likely to need continuations to see the Vuković Mate, since the general case is for modern players to resign when their games are clearly lost, rather than proceed until the mate is achieved. A foregone conclusion avoids the conclusion, literally then.

    The original demonstrative position (AAV, 66) for both the Arabian Mate and the Vuković Mate is as follows, but note that the processes are different, as detailed in the book:


    click for larger view

    I have placed the White King at a random location because IM Vuković omitted it from the starting position.

    One series of moves from this root position brings an Arabian Mate: 1. ♘f6+ ♔h8 2. ♖h7# and the other set 1. ♘f6+ ♔f8 2. ♖f7# brings "a mating pattern which is worth remembering (AAV, 67)."

    IM Vuković did not illustrate either finale, so here is the example Arabian Mate position:


    click for larger view

    This is the 'Vuković Mate' position then:


    click for larger view

    This situation is more common than some would think, i.e., one position that could end in more than one way. One often sees a given position that can lead to either a Bishop and Knight Mate or a Knight and Bishop Mate (the distinction being which piece actually completes the mate with its attack, not being a helper, only).

    One suggestion for a memorization aid is to notice that the defending King, attacking Rook and supporting Knight form a line. Another chessman must be employed, however, to protect the mating Rook-- the Pawn could be on either diagonal "behind" the Rook. Obviously, a higher ranking unit could be the Rook's protector also, even your own regent, itself.

    That mnemonic line is normally a file. The other orientation for the Vuković Mate would be visualized along a rank, then. Examples of such sideways Vuković Mates will be included below as they are encountered.

    From one of the games played by two women cited below, T Gueci vs A Balaian, 2013, here is a sideways Vuković Mate:


    click for larger view

    Some chess authorities would claim them as different mates altogether, as the move order differs. Do allow me to politely and firmly disagree. I maintain that an important aspect of chess visualization is being able to see a mating pattern in different parts of the board and in different orientations.

    The defending King need not be in the corner in order to effect this mate. Most frequently, it is on the edge of the board and the protector for the Rook is a Pawn. Other locations and other protectors may be encountered, as evidenced by some of the games that are listed below.

    This kind of Rook and Knight mate is not an Arabian Mate. Further, the name Arabian Mate should not be applied to the Hook Mate, either. I have compiled a game collection on the Hook Mate as well: Game Collection: Hook Mate Examples. For those interested, my game collection for the Arabian Mate is Game Collection: Arabian Mate Examples

    The Hook Mate differs dramatically from the Vuković Mate, as the King and Rook have reversed position or one could say that the defending King is "between" the Rook and Knight. See this game: Lenderman vs Samuel Herring, 2015 and its final position with the Hook Mate:


    click for larger view

    There should be a formal, technical name for this mating position; something like a Rook and Knight Mate with Helper and some other qualifiers. I had been describing it fancifully for my students as an <In-His-Face Rook Mate> before I saw the <Vuković Mate> designation. My preference, as always, it to keep names short and simple (KISS), so I much prefer 'Vuković Mate' and it is the more colorful and easier to remember moniker.

    Similarly, I prefer Pandolfini's use of <Rook Roll> rather than the more mundane and yet proper <Double Rook Mate>. (My younger club members irrepressibly smile when I use a giant chess set with a tablecloth "board" and then watch me literally roll it up as the mating net proceeds!)

    The game V Saravanan vs Sasikiran, 1999, 79 moves, 0-1, is the archetype for most Internet citations (without being identified). Continuation in that game gives us this diagram:


    click for larger view

    The Vuković Mate may be expressed in several forms, although in every case, the "victimized" King, friendly Rook and friendly Knight are contiguous and in a straight line, with the Rook directly against the opposing King. Further, there may be two protectors for the Rook (i.e., the threat of the final position of Spassky vs Larsen, 1968, would have both the friendly King and a Pawn aiding him). Here is its diagram:


    click for larger view

    Some commentators on this game have made the mistake of declaring that it ends with an Arabian Mate threat. You, gentle readers, know better now.

    Another point of interest may be the similarity between the Vuković Mate and the <Seventh Rank Mate>, which Nimzowitsch called the <Blind Swine Mate>.

    This connection is most evident when the protector is a distant Queen or Rook on the same rank as the Rook adjacent to the rival King. Now the Knight is acting as a 'stopper' in the drain of the sink-- the targeted King has no outlet for safety.

    Both the end of this game J Aagaard vs A Ismagambetov, 2012 and its continuation to mate for two relevant cases showing the Black Knight as a stopper, keeping the White King in a tight box.


    click for larger view

    is the EOG position.


    click for larger view

    is the position with mate.

    Another case is from S Nikolov vs M Petrov, 2001 with two curiosities. One is the mate in the corner and the other the Blind Swine Mate family resemblance. An outdated analysis engine still finds a continuation for a Vuković Mate in this game, however, as an M3 line: 32. ... ♕xe1+ 33. ♖xe1 ♘b4 34. ♖e7 g5 35. ♖xh7#. It brings us to this position, then:


    click for larger view

    This position is a typical Blind Swine Mate


    click for larger view

    which is from this game: W Hartston vs A Whiteley, 1974. For other examples, see my game collection Game Collection: Seventh Rank Mate Examples.

    Currently, Stockfish 17 (d33) finds much better play. A Vuković Mate as the top option takes much longer, i.e., an M8 line: 32... ♕xe1+ 33. ♖xe1 ♖ab8 34. ♕c7 ♖f6 35. ♖e7 ♖f1+ 36. ♔h2 ♖h1+ 37. ♔xh1 ♖b1+ 38. ♔h2 ♖h1+ 39. ♔xh1 ♘b4 40. ♖xh7#. The illustration of that solution is as follows:


    click for larger view

    At one point, I thought that the earliest Vuković Mate was J Moller vs H Jonsson, 1901, 38 moves, 1-0. However, Staunton vs E Williams, 1851, 78 moves, 0-1, far precedes it. G Ferenczy vs Charousek, 1897, 37 moves, 0-1, is another prior game.

    Of course, there could still be another predecessor out there. The first point to recognize from this is that the Vuković Mate is not a new checkmate pattern, merely newly named. The second point is that the mate predates its namesake, since IM Vuković was born in 1898.

    Games where the Queen gets positioned in the place of the Rook will be included here because a beginner and some intermediates need to be reminded to be ready to use that variation of the usual pattern. Also, it visually fits, but the Knight is redundant in most cases. In a very technical sense, it is a different mate though, so you may choose to omit these games. They are readily identified with =QV= (for Queen Variation) to make such an abridgement simpler.

    To accommodate the brevity of the headers (63 characters) for each game, only the color and type of the protector for the Rook will be given. Also, =C= is used when the targeted King is mated in a corner, =M= when a game was played to the mate, =W= is used for games where both players are women, =G= indicates both players are girls and =ftb= for credit to fredthebear for insightful comments he made. Further, =Un= is given for players 14 years old or younger, so =U8= applies to a game where both players were eight years old.

    The notation <Qn> is for identifying quadrants of the chessboard, clockwise from upper right and governed by the position of the defending King. So, <Q2> is the second quadrant, which includes the h1 corner. The sideways mate position shown earlier, then, is in <Q2> mainly because the White King has remained in that quadrant after the partial King Hunt even though other dynamic participants are in both <Q1> and <Q2> there.

    ChessCoachClark (CCC) originated this game collection prior to 2015 and he updates it on occasion. CCC has mixed feelings about ChessGames.com members who have cloned my tedious work without citing anyone as its originator. The cloning feature is provided by ChessGames.com for these game collections altogether, but such imitation-- without the credit that is due-- does not evoke flattery. Further, it is worse when another chess player removes all references to ChessCoachClark and lets himself/herself be indicated as the author of the given collection, which is obviously false!

    This project is a work in progress, culling games from various sources, including several chess training books and personal research. The games are ordered by date (oldest first), not by importance.

    Be well.
    Be safe.

    77 games, 1851-2019

  8. X-Ray Tactic-- OTB Examples
    The X-Ray tactic should be part of your toolbox of chess techniques. The X-Ray has three chessmen all on the same line in either of two ways. First, when there are two attackers and one target/defender, where the target is between the two attackers. This situation is the offensive form and the attackers cannot "see" each other. Second, when an attacker is between two defenders. This situation is the defensive form and the defenders cannot "see" each other.

    You also need to realize that you need to spend a little more time learning it then, since you can play it to attack one piece or to protect one of your own. You would be using the X-Ray as a Double Attack or for mutual protection, that is, two levels of protection for one chessman.

    Only line pieces can carry out an X-Ray tactic and those are the Queen, Rook and Bishop. It can only be done on the ranks, files or diagonals and then over several squares on one of those lines. So, the Pawn, Knight and King are not able to handle the X-Ray technique.

    This game collection features some games that I find interesting and which demonstrate the X-Ray tactic well. I use other games as well when teaching, but they are not available at ChessGames.com, yet.

    ACB = The Art of Combination, by Maxim Blokh

    TCSC = Tactical Chess Training, by Shamkovich and Cartier

    ICNT = Improve Your Chess Now, by Jonathan Tisdall

    ChessCoachClark (CCC) originated this game collection and he updates it on occasion. This project is a work in progress, culling games from various sources, including several chess training books and personal research. The games are ordered by date (oldest first), not by importance.

    Be well.
    Be safe.


    42 games, 1834-2017

<< previous | page 5 of 5 | next >>

SEARCH ENTIRE GAME COLLECTION DATABASE
use these two forms to locate other game collections in the database

Search by Keyword:

EXAMPLE: Search for "FISCHER" or "HASTINGS".
Search by Username:


NOTE: You must type their screen-name exactly.
Home | About | Login | Logout | F.A.Q. | Profile | Preferences | Premium Membership | Kibitzer's Café | Biographer's Bistro | New Kibitzing | Chessforums | Tournament Index | Player Directory | Notable Games | World Chess Championships | Opening Explorer | Guess the Move | Game Collections | ChessBookie Game | Chessgames Challenge | Store | Privacy Notice | Contact Us

Copyright 2001-2025, Chessgames Services LLC