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Jan-06-14 | | Patriot: 24.Qh7+ Kxh7 25.Bf7# |
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Jan-06-14
 | | Phony Benoni: Easier than yesterday's. |
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Jan-06-14
 | | gawain: This is a pretty one. 24 Qh7+ and the offer can neither be accepted nor denied. 24... Kf8
25 Qh8#
or 24...Kxh7
25 Bf7# |
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Jan-06-14 | | M.Hassan: 24.Qh7+ Kxh7
25.Bf7#
Neat!
Declining the Queen does not work either
24........Kf8
25.Qh8# |
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Jan-06-14 | | lost in space: I love Mondays!
24. Qh7+ Kxh7
(24...Kf8 Qh8#)
25. Bf7# |
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Jan-06-14 | | Cheapo by the Dozen: That was easy. Happy Monday! |
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Jan-06-14 | | TheoNov: Traditional Monday Q sac.
Seems like Black (a GM!) only fooled himself with this opening. After the horrible 11... Ng6?, Black is already lost! 12. Ng5!! (+3.6 Houdini 1.5)  click for larger viewActually, finding White's 12th move would be a good Sunday puzzle! |
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Jan-06-14 | | Amadori: A Polish opening ends with a Greek tragedy! |
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Jan-06-14 | | abuzic: 24.Qh7+ Kxh7 25.Bf7#; 24...Kf8 25.Qh8#.
24.Qh7+ Kxh7 25.Bf7#; 24...Kf8 25.Qh8#.
Some backward analysis:
<13.Nxh7, a nice sac although not the strongest move, after 13...Nxe5 14.Nxf8 Qxf8 15.Rh4 f5 16.Qh5 Nbc6 17.Be3 Qd8?> (17...Bd8 18.Qh8+ Kf7 19.Qxf8 Kxf8 20.Rh8+ Kf7 21.Be2 g5 22.Nc5 Bc8 white wins the exchange, but no clear overwhelming win) Stronger and probably winning was
13.exf6 gxf6 14.Nxh7 Ne5 15.Qh5 Rf7 16.Rh4 Rg7 17.Nxf6+ Kf8 <17...Qxf6 18.Qe8+ Qf8 19.Rh8+ Kxh8 20.Qxf8+ Rg8 21.Qh6#> 18.Nh7+ Ke7 19.Bg5+ Kd6 20.Be4 Bxe4 21.Rd1+ Kc6 22.Na5+ Bxa5 23.Bxd8 Nf3+ 24.Kf1; also strong was 13.Qh5 fxg5 14.Bxg5 Rxf2 15.Rxf2 Bxf2+ 16.Kxf2 Qf8+ 17.Rf4 Qe8 18.Rh4 <18.Nc5 Ng6?> (18...Bxc5); Stronger and winning was 18.Bxf5 exf5 19.Qh7+ Kf7 20.Qxf5+ Qf6 21.Qxf6+ gxf6 22.Bxb6. <22.Be2 forces mate: 22... Be7 23.Bh5 Bxg5 24.Qf7+ Kh8 25.Bg6+ Bh6 26.Rxh6+ gxh6 27.Qh7#> and 22.Qh7+ mates a move earlier: 22...Kf7 23.Be2 e5 24.Qxf5+ Kg8 25.Bc4+ d5 26.Qe6#. |
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Jan-06-14 | | morfishine: 24.Qh7+ Kxh7 (or 24...Kf8 25.Qh8#) 25.Bf7#
*****
<TheoNov> Why would 12.Ng5 be a good move for a Sunday POTD? I don't see anything insane or difficult about this move ***** |
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Jan-06-14 | | agb2002: White has a rook for a knight.
Black threatens 24... Nxg6.
White can deliver mate in two with 24.Qh7+:
A) 24... Kxh7 25.Bf7#.
B) 24... Kf8 25.Qh8#. |
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Jan-06-14 | | TheaN: Happy New Year to CG, new year new chances. Starting with a Monday puzzle to get off the bat easily. After <24.Qh7+> white exposes Black to the deadly power of the light squared Bishop. After 24....Kf8 25.Qh8# he covers f7, after <24....Kxh7 25.Bf7#> he shield off g6 and g8, which means the rook mates. |
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Jan-06-14 | | gars: Yes, tid. That's where. First. We pass through grass behush the bush to. Whish! A gull. Gulls. Far calls. Coming, far! End here. Us then. Finn, again! Take. Bussoftlhee, mememormee! Till thosendsthee. Lps. The keys to. Given! A way a lone a last a loved a long the riverrun, past Eve and Adam's, from swerve of shore to bend of bay, brings us by a commodious vicus of recirculation back to Howth Castle and Environs. |
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Jan-06-14
 | | Penguincw: Hmm. If only my mine could be more creative. :| |
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Jan-06-14 | | abuzic: <TheoNov: Actually, finding White's 12th move would be a good Sunday puzzle!> Indeed, 12.Ng5 is a storng move, prepairing for Qh5, Nxf7 and Bxg6: a) 12...h6 13.Nxf7 Rxf7 14.Bxg6 Re7 15.Bg5 Nc6 16.Qh5 b) 12...Bc6 13.Rb4 h6 <13...a5 14.Rxb6 Qxb6 15.Qh5 h6 16.Nxf7> 14.Nxf7 Rxf7 15.Bxg6 c) 12...Nc6 13.Qh5 h6 14.Nxf7 |
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Jan-06-14 | | zb2cr: Monday and a Queen sacrifice. 24. Qh7+ does it. Black can't decline, since 24. ... Kf8 is refuted by 25. Qh8#. Accepting it, however, leads to the very visually pleasing discovered check mate 24. ... Kxh7; 25. Bf7#. |
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Jan-06-14 | | nomamiblu: which was the ELO of black??? |
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Jan-06-14 | | jrbleau: Black's elo was 2415 |
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Jan-06-14 | | StevieB: Polish defense = disaster imho. One of the worst defense choices. |
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Jan-06-14
 | | playground player: I like 1.b4, the Polish Opening, but I've never tried this Polish Defense. Does it always turn out as badly as this? |
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Jan-06-14 | | BOSTER: Patriot vs PB 1 - 0 . Congrat. |
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Jan-06-14 | | Once: There is a hint of hobbit about this puzzle today. Or, more correctly, an extract of effervescent essence of elf. If you look closely ... and I mean really closely ... you can see the delicate footsteps of the denizens of the woodland realm. Let me take you to the hallowed lands of Middle Earth where small creatures with unfeasibly hairy toes do remarkably brave things whilst slightly larger (but still small) creatures with hairy chins eat and drink a lot. Or, more precisely, come with me and the Best Boy in the World to the Odeon cinema in Guildford, Surrey where the low-lying areas are doing a fair impersonation of that rubbish film with Kevin Costner. Not, not that one. Or that one. Waterworld - that's the one. Anyhoo, we pay a king's ransom to put 3D glasses on top of my 2D glasses and watch The Hobbit 2, the Desolation of Smaug. Great film, not as good as the book, Sherlock Holmes and Dr Watson are in it!, but most of all .... ... we are introduced to the concept of the ninja elves. These guys are CGI awesome. They can stab an orc to the left, reverse the blade to kill an orc to the right and then a backwards under the arm jab to kill a third orc, before firing off a single arrow which eviscerates not one but two nasties who just happened to be conveniently standing one in front of the other. And all that before the annoyingly noisy family behind us could munch through ... ooh at least three or four pieces of popcorn. Now I like a bit of cartoony orc-despatching as much as the next man. But there comes a point where all this "killing two orcs with one blow" stuff starts to get a bit unrealistic. I mean, can you really believe that Legolas could stand with one foot on a dwarf's head (said dwarf being in a barrel being swept down a series of rapids) whilst his other foot is on top of another dwarf's head engaged in a similar act of liquid locomotion and be able to fire an arrow to kill two orcs at once? I mean, really! Like. And other youthful expressions of suspension of disbelief. You would never be able to do something like that in the far more sensible world of chess. Except that sometimes you can. With 24. Bf7+, white simultaneously puts his bishop en prise, blocks off g8, blocks off g6 and unveils a check which also happens to be mate. Discovered check - the ninja elves of the chess world. All the bishop would need would be a straight blond wig and blue eyes and we would be rolling our rrrrs with every Moorrdorrr... Incidentally, the BBITW has got me hooked on this ... http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uE-1... |
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Jan-06-14
 | | Domdaniel: The Polish Defence is fine - it can also transpose into the St George, usually reached via 1.e4 a6.
I'm always bemused when posters express their amazement or befuddlement at entire opening systems. Almost all are playable. |
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Jan-06-14
 | | perfidious: <Dom>: Maybe you can help this 1100 player, then. I am befuddled as to why any non-GM would wish to play the Black side of the Berlin Wall. Playing this for a win in random swisses against weaker opposition would utterly stupefy me. |
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Jan-06-14
 | | FSR: 1.d4 b5 is a very risky defense. Spassky had a soft spot for it - five games on this list: http://www.chessgames.com/perl/ches... |
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