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Your humor never fails to disappoint. Equating Scholar's Mate attempts with ppl who listen to Tik Tok videos in public with the volume turned up. ROFL!
Thank you, Igor, for another wonderful lesson. Although the moves won't match in real-life games, but the ideas will definitely help. The solution of the puzzle around 10.20, is queen takes d5 knight (Qxd5), sacrificing the queen to deliver Bb6# checkmate.
You need something more forcing. Qxd5 is not guaranteed. There's Qc7 or Qc6 where it's protected by 2 pawns. Or after Qxd5 you can move d6 which will give your king some breathing room.
@@mrnelgin But White's regained the piece with obvious advantage. Black's King is stuck in the middle of the board and he's behind in development in open position, even if White has no immediate tactical win.
► Chapters 00:00 3 Rules to PUNISH Early Attacks in Chess 00:11 Early Queen Attacks 00:43 Rule-1 02:12 Rule-2 03:44 Rule-3 05:52 Using ALL 3 Rules Together! 09:32 Activity overpowers material advantage 10:11 Puzzle of the day
Bb6+, forcing the following sequence: ... Nxb6, Qxb6+, Qc7, Qe3, (threatening Qe7#), Qe5, Qxe5, after which mate in two with via Qd6 and Qb6# is unstoppable.
@@McGrrrrrowl Clever, but then Qg2 pins the pawn to the Queen, and Black doesn't seem to have an obvious way to stop Ra1-d1, threatening Rxd6. Bg4 is easily countered by f3, and while this does allow Qc5+, Kh1 evades that and leaves the queen with no attack. But then again, Qxd5 is ALSO beaten by Qc7 and d6, so... maybe this attack isn't as simple as Igor thought?
@@asteriondeltoro124 Qxd5 ends with white queen on f7 with black having lost a knight, queen and pawn (and possibly taking another pawn on f6) with white losing the bishop. Black doesn't need to move the d7 pawn in this sequence
At 1:40, you say Black would like to play 4...d5 to open the center; however, it drops a pawn and so is not really playable. Actually, the move seems fine. If White responds 5. exd5, Black has 5...e4, immediately regaining the pawn. And if White responds 5. Bxd5, Black can play 5...Nxd5 6. exd5 Nxe7 7. c4 c6, and now (a) 8. Nc3 cxd5 9. cxd5 Ng3 should favor Black - he has the two bishops, and White's horribly weak pawn on d5 should fall in due time; (b) 8. dxc6 Nxc6 also should favor Black, thanks to Black's two bishops and superior pawn structure. The 8. dxc6 variation reminds me of the Scandinavian line that goes 1. e4 d5 2. exd5 Nf6, when 3. c4? c6 4. dxc6 Nxc6 is considered good for Black.
qxd5 assuming one qc7 - because qxd5 by black queen results in checkmate ; so black queen should go to c7 or c6 guarding against Bb6 checkmate if qc7 -white queen will go g5 & check - f6 only option inturn qxg7 chasing the rook or advantage then capture f6 - if re7 , qf8 if re8 -Bg5 done if qc6 - qd5 xqc6 ; have to d7 x c6; bb6 +, kd7 - Rd1 done
My notation is terrible but here goes. bB6 nXb6 qXb6# (So Bishop to b6. Knight is forced to capture the bishop. Queen takes the knight for checkmate) Am I right?
No, black queen can move down to block. You want to move their queen so take the knight, if queen takes then it is mate with bishop. If not then it is a free knight but queen would have to block mate at c7
I read this as: Qxd5 Qxd5 # If Black's not greedy, then Qxd5 Qc7 . This prevents Bb6#. The material is equal, but Black needs Rb8 before his b pawn can advance and let his Bishop out. Qb6 would be funny. If Black takes, Bb6#, if White takes, Kxc7 , which could keep White busy for a while. Have I missed something?
Qxd5!! If QxQ, then Bb6# Q will likely go to C7, seeing this, then you QG5+, f6, QxG7 - and should be a somewhat straight forward barrage ahead until white gets mate
Puzzle - I am new to chess but I don't see a way for mate and it is bugging the hell outta me!! If Qxd5, black queen must block at c7, then if Qxf7, black queen can come back out to d6 to block bishop checks at b6 and g5. I mean black loses a lot of material but it's not mate
I ended up putting this into lichess board analysis and stockfish says there's no checkmate. The best it can come up with is a +20.8 but still no mate.
after four years of following this awesome channel (since i started chess) unfortunately i decided to unsubscribe and the reason (if you care to know) is the open ended “puzzle of the day” every other GM channel teaches us till the end of the line..why this happens here i don’t know maybe a bad marketing tactics advise or for any reason im not criticizing im just giving the reason for unsubscribing..wish you well