starts with rook sacrifice by playing Rh7 then king takes the rook happily the we play queen to h4 check then white have only move that king to g1 then we can easily mate him by playing knight to e2 check mate.....but what happen if white doesn't capture the rook and play king to g1 then we play the same move queen to h4 and white plays knight captures d4 then we play rook to h1 check mate......❤️👍🔥
Your first part of calculation was correct, buy in the second part, if the king refuses to capture the rook and instead goes on g1 then you can't waste time by getting your queen to h4 because that will allow your opponent to give repeated checks with his queen leading to a draw. Therefore after Kg1, Ne2+ wins, King will capture rook and then Qh4 will be a checkmate.
Not necessarily. Sometime trading queens simplifies the position on the board, sometimes keeping the queens aids the players for their attack/defense position, so the key decision of whether to trade queens or not to trade, all boils to the given situation on the board.
@@YouMeAndChessPrerna Madamji... Perpetual check or Repeated move 3 times on same square... Its draw...though it is a in sequence... 5:55 (Qe2+, Qg4) 6:22 (Qe2+, Qg4) 6:35 (Qe2+, Qg4) 6:43 (Qe2+, Qg4) 6:05 (Qe5+, Qg5) 6:25 (Qe5+ Qg5) 6:45 (Qe5+, Qg5)
@@YouMeAndChess Prerna Madamji Perpetual check three time, on sane square... Though it is not in sequence... Its draw... Time details I have given above...
@@chetanl1579 But the position of the b pawn had changed. Please refer my video for threefold repetition to understand the concept better. And you cannot claim draw due to perpetual checks unless the same exact position repeats 3 times.