Play chess online, free online chess games, chess league, chess games database, chess clubs, chess games, online games, chess puzzles, free chess online, chess teams, board games and more...

Tags: online chess, play chess, chess, online chess, play chess, online chess, online backgammon

Chess Forum
beck-web.com   << online chess - < chess - chess > - chess online >>
FromMessage
Posted by tjaalzchess
beck-web.com

10/26/2008
07:15:13

Play online chess
Subject: Endgame K + Q vs K+ Q + N

Message:
First of all I am not asking for any help for one of my endgame, just some clarification.

In a game I am playing I have a Queen and a Knight left, against a Queen only. ( there are however still some pawns, but it doesn't really matter because my question is in general )

Can a game K+ Q + N vs K + Q be won? Or is this always a draw? Or only win if you are a very good player?

Thanks in advance

tjaalz


Posted by gt2win
beck-web.com

10/26/2008
08:54:39

Play online chess
K + Q vs K+ Q + N

Message:
Should be a draw if there are no pawns left on the board. If the person with the N has any left though, they should win.

Posted by andy94
beck-web.com

10/26/2008
13:42:21

Play online chess


Message:
Well tjaalz, I watched endgames like those and it's 99% draw, even if the opponent who hasn't the N has got a pawn and the other player has not it. Anyway, you don't win that endgame if you are a very good player, but if your opponent is a very bad one!
———
For 2nd Year, Younger Women Beat Older Men at Czech Event — In chess, men almost always outperform women, and younger chess players often beat older ones. But which group — women or older players — has the advantage when they face each other? The annual Czech Coal Chess Match provides a clue. For now, the answer seems to be women. In last year’s tournament, the women, all of them young, and whom the organizers called the Snowdrops, edged the Old Hands team of men, 16.5 to 15.5. This year, the women won even more decisively, 18 to 14, despite losing the last round, 3 to 1. The women were led both years by Humpy Koneru of India, who is No. 2 on the list of top women chess players. She was the tournament’s top scorer this year, with ...
Posted by pavel76
beck-web.com

10/27/2008
05:03:13

Play online chess


Message:
I think gt2win opinion is the correct answer
———
Vishy Anand and Magnus Carlsen lead the field for London Classic — Last year's London Classic at Olympia attracted large audiences, so its 2010 version on 8-15 December, with the reigning world chess champion Vishy Anand now in the field, will be of great interest. Its added spice is the rivalry at the top of the world chess rankings between Anand, Norway's 20-year-old Magnus Carlsen, and Russia's ex-champion and current world No4, Vlad Kramnik. The global chess body, Fide, still hopes to persuade Carlsen to rescind his withdrawal from the May 2011 candidates matches and has announced a new date of 22 December for contract signing. How he performs in London, just a week before the contract deadline, may affect the talks and whether he can take ...
Posted by ionadowman
beck-web.com

10/27/2008
11:44:57

Play online chess
In general ...

Message:
... one would expect the KQN vs KQ to be no more than a draw. But there will probably be some special positions in which the stronger side can win. Such cases will crop up if the weaker side's mobility is for some reason limited.

The following is a simple example:
b

Black wins by
1...Ne4+
[A] 2.Ke1 Qf2#
[B] 2.Ke2 Nc3+ etc
[C] 2.Kd3 Nf2+ etc.

The position of the Black king is not particularly significant in this diagram, by the way.

Cheers,
Ion
———
The Man With Too Much Chess Talent — Dragoljub Velimirovic used to be one of the world's most feared attackers, always looking for the impossible. His imaginative play was compared to the colorful world chess champion Mikhail Tal's razzle-dazzle. His playing style was unique, daring and often falling off the edge. He made risky moves and so many of them that you wondered how much punishment his chess pieces could take. He loved to create confusion on the chessboard, always believing he could find a beautiful escape from a bad situation. He had enough talent to pull it off, perhaps "too much talent" as Bobby Fischer once put it when we discussed the play of the Serbian grandmaster and champion. At 68, Velimirovic doesn't seem to ...