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kingdawar 26-Aug-11, 19:02 » Report abuse |
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blue1 26-Aug-11, 22:33 » Report abuse |
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Low solve rate The first thing I noticed is that after h4+ the pawn is poisoned because of Rh1+ then Rh5++. That leaves the only move as Kf5. From here the king stalemated so all you have to do is figure out how to check him with the rook along the f-file. It is just a matter of move order now. The pawn check first does not work because after fe e.p. 3.Rf1 e2 attacking the rook. That means the rook must move first. Black has no useful moves to stop 3.e4+ and 4.Kg2++. |
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bishopstaff 19-Apr-21, 08:01 » Report abuse |
solutionWhat appears to me is if the king takes the pawn rh1+ then rh5+ moves king to kf5. but to get the king in checkmate on F you need the pawn at h4 to threaten g5. if he's not there the king can wander merrily between the two files forever. I mean you can probably get there eventually but I don't see a FORCE in 4 moves if the king takes the pawn. |
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ambmitra 19-Apr-21, 08:13 » Report abuse |
White h pawn is a poison pawn because2. K X f4 If 2. ..... <Black king does not move, then, 3. Rh1#> If 2. ..... Kh3 (no other place), then: 3. Bd5. |
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bishopstaff 19-Apr-21, 08:34 » Report abuse |
4 or 5 moves |
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ambmitra 19-Apr-21, 09:29 » Report abuse |
If the pawn is taken, then checkmate in 41. .............. K X h4 2. K X f4 If 2. ..... <Black king does not move, then, 3. Rh1#> If 2. ..... Kh3 (no other place), then: 3. Bd5. No matter what Black does in 3. ......., move 4 white is a checkmate. In other words, if Black King takes the white pawn on h4, then checkmate in 4 by while under any black defence. |
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Poisoned pawn2. Rh1+ Kg5 (only legal move) 3. Rh5 checkmate So taking the pawn is mate in 3. Only 1...Kf5 leads to a mate in 4 |
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bishopstaff 19-Apr-21, 10:58 » Report abuse |
thanks |
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