King and Pawn ending
This is an actual position from a recent game I played:Black to move
Each side's king is dealing with connected passed pawns and at first I expected there would be nothing to do but babysit the pawns and we would draw. Unfortunately, this was a blitz game so there wasn't time to figure it out. Without the time to calculate, I just played Kc4 in the hopes that my pawns being further advanced was enough to win. My opponent obliged with the losing Kd1, which was probably a premoved king shuffle trying to draw, but this is now easily losing -- a6 would have led to both sides queening and a draw.
But black does have a winning idea in this position. Your name might be Likesforests if you get it right away.
1. ... Ka6 2. Kd1 d2! 3. Ke2 Kb5 4. Kd1 Kxb4! In this position black is close enough to queening even if white runs with the a-pawn due to a mating threat. 5. a6 Kc3 and now 6. a7 is mate in two with 6. ... Kd3 and 7. ... e2# while 6. Ke2 Kc2 threatens to promote with check so the black queen has time to stop white's pawn.
7 Comments:
always a great pleasure. thank you. warmly, dk
Great stuff. In a practical game finding a move that is winning because it loses a tempo is very difficult.
Excellent position. It was very entertaining to solve. And lol, I did not see the answer instantly! :)
Nice example of a double attack in the endgame! Gotta love those king and pawn endgames.
Love it!
I followed this until the very last move. I must be missing something here. 6.Ke2 Kd2 has two Kings side by side. Is there a mistakes somewhere?
Any news on your chess engine?
I finally got mine compatible with Winboard, so now it's playing on FICS and has a current rating of 1534 (RD 55). Not very much of course, but there's much left to do, and I didn't do anything for months. And it's better than expected -- I guessed 1300 in my account-application. :D
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