Home of the Meson Chess Problem Database and the BDS Ladder

Chess Problem 1978g6b501

BDS

3rd HM., British Chess Magazine, 1978

1S6/2p*3r1*3r2/1pP1SpK*3b/1k1*3R2p1/1P4*3B1/PP*3R4p/1P3*3B*3q1/3s3*3b

#2
LEO g2
PAOs c3, d5; d7, f7
VAOs f2, g4; h1, h6

1.Kxf6!   (2.VAxd7#)

1...LEf1+  2.VAc5#
1...LExc6+ 2.Sc5#
1...LExb2+ 2.PAcc5#
1...PAd6+  2.Sxc7#
1...PAd8   2.Sxc7#
1...PAe7   2.Sd4#

The white king makes the key – unpinning the white VAOg4 and threatening mate by capture of d7 – and walks into four checks. In the three checking defences by the black LEO, Black unguards the white PAOd5 as the black LEO no longer acts as a hurdle for the defending black VAOh1. All of these LEO checks are over a white hurdle, which then moves to c5 as a hurdle for the white PAOd5 – typical anti-battery cross-checks. The PAO check on d6 is a little different: the white piece that acts as a hurdle over which Black checks White still moves to give mate, but this time no anti-battery is involved. As a Chinese Piece can only capture by jumping over a hurdle, any move of the black PAOd7 is a defence, and, as well as the check on d6, it can also move to d8 and e7. Both of these are simple unguards, the former of c7 (leading to a repeat of the mate after the check on d6) and the latter of d4.


HTML5 logo

Developed and maintained by Brian Stephenson.
Implemented with HTML5, MySQL, Perl (with, inter alia, CGI::Simple, HTML::Template & XML::LibXML) & CSS/Javascript (jQuery, Bootstrap & DataTables).