PRACTICAL
CHESS ENDGAME
*www.chessending.com*
Editor: Brian Gosling
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
The new position will appear at the
beginning of each new month.
You are invited to solve it. I
will be pleased to
receive feedback
about the positions and the analysis. The solution will be published
the following month with the new position. Some of these positions
will come from actual historical games. Others will be composed
endgame studies, but they will be relevant to the practical game. The
site has over 400 chess endings and endgame studies and and has been running for over
eight years.
A database of chess
endings
Thanks to Antonio Senatore
THIS MONTH
POSITION 375
Black to play and WIN
FEN:5r2/4b1R1/p3p2p/1p2Pk2/1Pp2P2/P2rBK1P/8/R7 b - - 0
1
It is good training to try initially to
solve the endings without the assistance of a chess playing
programme.
Solution for the above,
plus new position: 1st JUNE 2006.
LAST MONTH, POSITION 374
Vasily Smyslov, (1921-
).
Soviet International Grandmaster. World
Champion 1957-8. Recently Smyslov celebrated his 85th
birthday. His was the first new face on the world chess scene after
the Second World War and he was to be a World Championship candidate
for over four decades ! In the 1950s he had three matches with
Botvinnik for the World Championship. He drew the first match (1954),
won the second (1957) and lost the third (1958) thus holding the
title for just one year. In his endgame play, Smyslov comes close to
Capablanca and Rubinstein. To Smyslov both music and chess follow the
intangible rules of beauty and harmony.
Chess to him was more than a sport or a science but supremely
an expression of art.
Smyslov
vs Reshevsky
World Championship
Hague/Moscow 1948
White to play and WIN
FEN:rn5k/1p2q1p1/pB1pp2p/4p3/4P1Q1/2P3P1/PP3P1P/3R2K1 w - -
0 1:
This game is of great historical interest. It was played in
Moscow as part of the match-tournament to decide who would succeed
the deceased Alekhine to the World Championship title. The
contestants were the Soviets, Botvinnik, Smyslov, Keres, the
American, Reshevsky and the former Dutch World Champion, Euwe. In the
final phase of the game 2000 spectators were present to see the
American champion lose to the new rising star.
In this ending White has an obvious positional plus with the
White Rook controlling the semi-open d-file and bearing down on the
weakened d-pawn. White seeks to exchange Queens and thus remove the
only defender to the d-pawn. The following are the actual moves
played in the game
1.Qh4! Qd7
No better is 1...Qxh4
2.gxh4 Nc6 (if 2...Nd7 3.Rxd6 Nf6 4.Rxe6 Re8 5.Rxe8+ Nxe8 6.Kg2 g6
7.f4 exf4 8.Kf3 Kg7 9.Kxf4+-) and the pawn still falls: 3.Rxd6 Re8
4.Rd7 Re7 5.Rxe7 Nxe7 6.h5 Kg8 7.Bc7 Nc6 8.a4 Kf7 9.b4 b5 10.axb5
axb5 11.f3 Ke7 12.Kf2 Kd7 13.Bb6 Nb8 14.Bc5 Ke8 15.Ke3 Nd7 16.Bd6 Kd8
17.Kd3 Kc8 18.c4+-;
2.Qd8+ Qxd8
3.Bxd8 Nd7
Black cannot save the pawn.
3...Nc6 4.Bb6 d5 5.exd5
exd5 6.Rxd5 Re8 7.Rd7 +-;
4.Bc7 Nc5
4...Nf6 5.Rxd6 Rc8
6.Bb6 Nxe4 7.Rxe6 Nd2 8.Re7 Nc4 9.Bc7 e4 10.b3 Nd2 11.c4 Nf3+ (if
11...b5 12.cxb5 axb5 13.Be5 Nf3+ 14.Kg2 Nxe5 15.Rxe5 Ra8 16.Rxe4 Rxa2
17.Re5 b4 18.Re4 Kh7 19.Rxb4+-) 12.Kg2 Ne1+ 13.Kf1 Nf3 14.Be5+-;
5.Rxd6! ...
This is much better than ...Bxe6 which would lead to
the Bishop being pinned wth ...Rd8.
5... Rc8
6.Bb6 Na4
Black goes for an active attack on the queenside
knowing that White will gain a passed e-pawn after mopping up the
Black central pawns.
7.Rxe6 Nxb2
8.Rxe5 Nc4
9.Re6 Nxb6
Reshevsky exchanges down to a Rook and pawn ending
hoping that it gives him the best chance to draw.
10.Rxb6 Rxc3
11.Rxb7 Rc2
12.h4 Rxa2
It is very instructive to see
how Smyslov wins this R&P ending. The white Rook will take the
7th rank and at the same time keep the a-pawn under surveillance. The
White King will advance under the cover of its own pawns so that it
is impossible for Black to check the enemy King and queen his
a-pawn.
13.Kg2 a5
14.h5 a4
15.Ra7 Kg8
16.g4 a3
16...Ra3 17.f3 Kf8
18.Kg3 Ra1 19.Kf4 Ra3 20.e5 Kg8 21.Kf5 Rxf3+ 22.Kg6 a3 23.Rxg7+ Kf8
24.Ra7 Rg3 25.Kxh6 Rxg4 26.Rxa3 Kf7 27.Ra6 Re4 28.Rf6+ Kg8 29.e6 Re1
30.Rg6+ Kh8 31.Kg5+-
17.Kg3 Re2
18.Kf3 Ra2
19.Ke3 Kf8
20.f3 Ra1
21.Kf4 a2
22.e5! ...
22.Ke5? Rf8 23.Rxa2
Rxf3 and the win is still difficult.
22... Kg8 23.Kf5 Rf1 24.Rxa2 Rxf3+
25.Kg6 Kf8 26.Ra8+ Ke7 27.Ra7+ (Black loses his Kingside
pawns.) Black Resigned.
|
PRACTICAL
CHESS ENDINGS CD
ChessDevon, in collaboration with PCE has
produced a CD that includes practically all the endgame
positions that have appeared on this site. This CD
contains 363 endgame positions taken from games and
studies. Nearly all the positions are preceded by a
pen portrait of the player or composer. A built-in
programme is provided on the CD to play through the
endings.
"PRACTICAL CHESS ENDINGS" is available at
£12:50 (including UK postage) from
"ChessDevon".
Order by
E-Mail from: bill@frostw170.fsnet.co.uk
Chess Devon:
http://www.chessdevon.co.uk
(Chess news and games from Devon and the West of
England.)
|
8X8 Basic Endings for
Success
|
Kashdan vs Flohr
Hamburg, 1930
White to play and
WIN
|
Simple endings are full of surprises. White has to
calculate the resulting Queen ending very carefully to come
up with the only winning move for this position.1.Kf5!! h4 2.e6 h3 3.e7 h2 4.e8Q Black
is aware of the check on the long white diagonal so
plays 4... Kg2! instead
of queening the pawn. 5.Kg4!
Black would usually have the draw in a QvP ending with the h-pawn on the 7th but
the White King is too close. Black
Resigned. He is in a mating net. If 5... h1Q 6.Qe2+ Kg1 7.Kg3! and
Black cannot escape mate.
|
I would like to briefly summarise the type of
endings found on the site. These are; (a) Basic endings. (b)
Practical chess endings. (c) The Endgame study.
All these are
interrelated and important and you cannot understand (b) or (c)
without a knowledge of (a).
(a) Basic
Endings. These are theoretical positions
in which we know the correct result with optimum play by both sides.
They may consist of three pawns or less and also include all the
non-pawn and five piece endings which have now been extensively
analysed by computer and of which we have tablebases. In the days
when we had adjournments some of these endings could be looked up in
text books to give us some idea how to play the position. As we no
longer can do this, knowledge and memory of these endings has become
important in practical play. Fundamental Chess Endings (2001) by Muller and Lamprecht
and Basic Endings
(1992) by Balashov and Prandstetter and the earlier
A Pocket Guide to Chess
Endgames (1970)
by David Hooper are good introductions to
these endings.
(b) Practical
Endings. These occur in over-the-board play where
usually more pawns are present. The above ending is an example of
this type. Some of these endings are in the process of being
transformed to basic endings but often they finish before this stage
is reached. Endgame strategy is very different from the middlegame
and has its own set of rules and exceptions. Fine's book
Basic Chess
Endings (1941,2003) recently revised by Pal
Benko and Batsford Chess
Endings (1993) by
Speelman, Tisdall and Wade are about basic and practical endings and
both can be recommended.
(c) Endgame
Studies. These are positions which have
been composed and will contain elements of one or both of the above
types of endings. But there are important differences between
these types and the study, such as artistic form and economy of
construction. An endgame study has to follow strict rules of
composition, especially if it is entered into a composing
competition. One of these rules states there should only be one
solution. If there is an unintended second solution then the study is
unsound and said to be "cooked".
Endgame studies are
important to the practical player because they enhance his
imagination and help him learn and enjoy areas of theory without too
much effort.
John Nunn's Endgame
Challenge (2002)
is an excellent introduction to using endgame
studies as a training tool. Walter Korn's American Chess Art (1995) is a basic introduction to the endgame study
and a more
comprehensive work is John Roycroft's Test Tube
Chess (1972).
Pre 17/10/04
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