Zlatko Ilincic vs Fabiano Caruana, Budapeste (Hungria), 2007. Código FEN: 8/5pk1/1p1p2p1/3Pp2r/2P1P1q1/PQ2R1P1/5PKn/2R3Nr b - - 0 1. |
Um problema muito difícil: as Pretas jogam e dão xeque-mate em 8 lances!
(A very hard problem: Black to play and give checkmate in 8 moves!)
PCFilho
Este comentário foi removido pelo autor.
ResponderExcluirTags: Mating Net, Remove the Defender, Mate in 3+
ResponderExcluirEste comentário foi removido pelo autor.
ResponderExcluir1. ... Rxg1+ was also my first try, but after
ResponderExcluir1. ... Rxg1+
2. Kxg1 Qh3
3. Re2
there is no checkmate soon...
Are you sure that's not 3 Rf3? (That move defeated all my tries.)
ResponderExcluirNever mind my last post, Paulo.
ResponderExcluirI've got nothing. #pcfilhoisasadist
ResponderExcluirHEHEHE!
ResponderExcluirAs I wrote in the other Caruana post:
Fabiano Luigi Caruana impressed the world this week, with a spectacular performance in the Sinquefield Cup, in St. Louis, Missouri, one of the strongest tournaments ever held, featuring six of the world's top ten players.
Playing only against top grandmasters (Magnus Carlsen, Veselin Topalov, Maxime Vachier-Lagrave, Levon Aronian and Hikaru Nakamura), he scored astonishing SEVEN wins and three draws in ten games.
This feat is already being described by experts as the greatest ever in chess history.
Fabiano Caruana, born 30 July 1992, is an American-born Italian chess grandmaster. His current FIDE rating is 2801, ranked #3 in the world.
...
Only a brilliant mind like this one could have found 1. ... Nf1!!... a Knight sacrifice!!
Possible continuations:
1. ... Nf1!!
2. Kxf1 Rxg1+!! {let me sacrifice the Rook too}
3. Kxg1 Qh3
4. f3 Qh1+
5. Kf2 Rh2#
1. ... Nf1!!
2. Re2 Rxg1+!! {let me sacrifice the Rook too}
3. Kxg1 Rh1+!! {how about sacrificing the other Rook too?}
4. Kxh1 Qh3+
5. Kg1 Qh2+!! {now take the Knight}
6. Kxf1 Qh1#
1. ... Nf1!!
2. Rc2 Nxe3+
3. Qxe3 Rxg1+!! {sacrifice the Rook, of course}
4. Kxg1 Qd1+
5. Qe1 Qxe1+
6. Kg2 Qh1#
1. ... Nf1!!
2. Re2 Rxg1+!! {let me sacrifice the Rook}
3. Kxg1 Rh1+!! {how about sacrificing the other Rook too?}
4. Kg2 Qh3+
5. Kf3 Qh5+
6. Kg2 Rg1+!! {yes, sacrificing the Rook again}
7. Kxg1 Qh2+!! {take the Knight}
8. Kxf1 Qh1#
Very nice, isn't it?
This puzzle has equaled this blog's record for most sacrifices in a mating sequence - 3 pieces, the same as that fantastic Ignazio Calvi's mate-in-4.
:)