My apologies to Emanuel Lasker for yesterday's arrogance (albeit tongue-in-cheek). I didn't come close to solving this one. Talk about out of one's league. Mr. von Bargen, thank you for the lessons in both chess and humility.
The defender's king position -- so remote that it looks irrelevant -- turns out to be his fatal vulnerability. Because it is on h1, a _white square,_ it enables White to control the entire eighth rank.
Very proud to say I found this making it three puzzles in a row, especially since I initially had no idea what to do. Doing these puzzles every morning has really improved my thinking over time. Thanks!
Excellent thought process, thats what I keep learning in each of your puzzles. You teach us the thought process behind a strategy which is required in real chess games. Thank you very much and God bless you.
😂yes, this is what I thought, it ought to be... I really almost had it and came quite close. One of the things I can do best, is surely to let other people do the right work for me 😂 this one is great😊
1:45 What if you move the bishop to e6? Threatening a potential check on the King while threatening the Rook directly? Could you chase the Rook down with the King and attempt to fork them both with the Bishop if they try to retreat to the left corner?
Missed😢. I tried other moves with the same piece but I didn't consider that in the correct variation there is a double attack😤. Nice theme of domination!🙂
@@ismailabdelirada9073 Should be, but really? It's not so clear cut. You still have to pin the king somewhere, and that's a tricky thing, especially if you have to protect your own king. Now, if it were a bishop vs a queen, I'd definitely say it's only a matter of time. But against a rook? 50 moves is possible, and you can play for a draw.. Most humans couldn't pull it off, but a computer?
My apologies to Emanuel Lasker for yesterday's arrogance (albeit tongue-in-cheek). I didn't come close to solving this one. Talk about out of one's league. Mr. von Bargen, thank you for the lessons in both chess and humility.
Thank you so much sir, you are a saint!
@@Chess-strategy Perhaps, but I'm certainly not the patron saint of chess! You are very welcome.
It takes a bigger man to admit he was wrong than to insist that he was right. Well played.
The defender's king position -- so remote that it looks irrelevant -- turns out to be his fatal vulnerability.
Because it is on h1, a _white square,_ it enables White to control the entire eighth rank.
Very proud to say I found this making it three puzzles in a row, especially since I initially had no idea what to do. Doing these puzzles every morning has really improved my thinking over time. Thanks!
There should be a time stamp in the vid separating all the wrong variants from the right solution!
Busy life, eh? ;)
Yessss, agreed
Well what about almost at the end?
Nice domination of R by B, not easy to find. Thank you.
R by BpK...
Excellent thought process, thats what I keep learning in each of your puzzles. You teach us the thought process behind a strategy which is required in real chess games. Thank you very much and God bless you.
😂yes, this is what I thought, it ought to be... I really almost had it and came quite close. One of the things I can do best, is surely to let other people do the right work for me 😂 this one is great😊
1:45 What if you move the bishop to e6? Threatening a potential check on the King while threatening the Rook directly? Could you chase the Rook down with the King and attempt to fork them both with the Bishop if they try to retreat to the left corner?
Tolles Rätsel! Danke
I found this, though I have to say the low number of valid starting moves helped! But still this was a really fun one!
Missed😢. I tried other moves with the same piece but I didn't consider that in the correct variation there is a double attack😤.
Nice theme of domination!🙂
Thanks
Thanks a lot! You're my hero ❤
شكرا🎉❤
Solved
😮
Well, I made a trial and Stockfish with a queen only could not defeat itself with a rook only. Stuck by the 50 move rule.
Thankfully humans generally can't do perfect play
It's tablebase, nothing to calculate...
@@rohdri: Even if they did, Q vs. R should be a win. A grueling win, but still a win.
@@ismailabdelirada9073 Should be, but really? It's not so clear cut. You still have to pin the king somewhere, and that's a tricky thing, especially if you have to protect your own king. Now, if it were a bishop vs a queen, I'd definitely say it's only a matter of time. But against a rook? 50 moves is possible, and you can play for a draw.. Most humans couldn't pull it off, but a computer?