Well in the first case: Kh1, Nf2 check, Rxf2 forced, Nxc4 discover check and from there you have two choices: the first one is Qf3, Bxf3, Rxf3 and Nxf3, where you lose your Queen and a Rook for a Knight and a Bishop, so probably lost, the second one is Rg2 and Qxg2#
also another thing to add if king doesn't take the rook then you still can SACRIFICE DA ROOK to G8 (another brilliant move) and you can solve by yourself if you want to
Its about catching the white queen by the knight, after king takes rook, black knight to g5 will target the white queen, while the king will be checked by the black queen(a8), hence the white will loose the queen
@@Belarus2012 KxNh7 - h5 and the black knight cant move because of the white queen in short the knight will fall and black will be forced to take with the pawn (not the king cause its check) its somewhat a fair trade but black loses the positional play as tthe structure would crumble giving it opennings for a potential attack
No, he sacrificed the rook just to remove the protection from h3 and white's queen could not take black's queen. Without the sacrifice, both white and black would have lost their queens and their forces would have been equal.
Pawn takes queen, bishop takes the pawn, king moves out of check, white knight sacrifice by checking king, black pawn takes knight, white pawn takes the black pawn opening rook, mate.
@@trongtinnguyen6697 White Rook capture on C8 (check) Black rook capture back. White rook Capture the knight on a6 (check again) Black pawn capture the rook. White bishop to g2 (a beautiful check mate.) he can block it with Rook but it is mate anyway, after capturing the rook.
Opponent is forced to eat the rook with queen(if with bishop mate in zero). Then you just eat that dark squared bishop since the queen is reflected, checkmate