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January 1st
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MatPlus.Net Forum General Best #2 cross-check problems
 
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(21) Posted by seetharaman kalyan [Monday, Aug 16, 2010 17:17]

I composed a cross check problem with four checks by the black king starflight. I forgot the position as it was symmetric and was ignored in the tourney I entered. Probably it is anticipated. Anybody know the predecessor?
 
   
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(22) Posted by Michael McDowell [Monday, Aug 16, 2010 17:26]

I'm fairly sure that starflight cross-checks were shown by P.C.Thomson in The Problemist around 1967, but the problem is not in Meson. Maybe someone who has WinChloe can check.
 
   
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(23) Posted by Hauke Reddmann [Monday, Aug 16, 2010 18:20]

A request to Udo Degener will resolve such very specific
#2 quests very quickly ;-)

BTW, I dimly recall a crosscheck by Kofman (?) with star+
1 bonus flight. Had a doublecheck key, though (son of ?),
which gave them all.

Hauke
 
   
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(24) Posted by Joost de Heer [Monday, Aug 16, 2010 18:41]

 QUOTE 

I'm fairly sure that starflight cross-checks were shown by P.C.Thomson in The Problemist around 1967, but the problem is not in Meson. Maybe someone who has WinChloe can check.

It's not in Winchloe either, but it is in yacpdb: http://dt.dewia.com/yacpdb/?id=172971
 
 
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(25) Posted by Joost de Heer [Monday, Aug 16, 2010 18:52]

 QUOTE 

I composed a cross check problem with four checks by the black king starflight. I forgot the position as it was symmetric and was ignored in the tourney I entered. Probably it is anticipated. Anybody know the predecessor?

The following is in WinChloe:

Kalyanasundram Seetharaman
2506 Sinfonie Scacchistiche 49 (Jul 1977)
Kh5 Qe8 Rb7 Bf1 f8 Sc5 d3 Pa2 a6 b4 d2 e3 e4 - Kb5 Ra5 Sb6 Pa3 d7 (13+5)

With Kh5 on g5, this is by Joseph C.J. Wainwright, St. Louis Globe Democrat, 1914.
 
   
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(26) Posted by seetharaman kalyan [Monday, Aug 16, 2010 20:24]; edited by seetharaman kalyan [10-08-16]

Thanks Joost for locating my problem. and the anticipation so old, not what i thought !!
 
   
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(27) Posted by Vladimir Tyapkin [Monday, Aug 16, 2010 23:08]

how about this one? dt.dewia.com/yacpdb/?id=36866
 
   
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(28) Posted by Geoff Foster [Saturday, Sep 18, 2010 10:51]

An article of mine called "A Cross-Check Matrix" has just appeared in the latest issue of "The Problemist Supplement". The following problem was the first one in the article.

Konstantin Gavrilov, Tidskrift for Schack, 1908
Kc1 Qh1 Re8 f3 Bc8 g3 Se6 f4 Pc2 d5 f2 f6 h4 - Ke4 Rg5 g6 Bh6 Pb4 g7 h5 (13+7) #2
1.Se2! zugzwang
1...R~+ 2.S6f4
1...Rxd5+ 2.Sg5
1...Re5+ 2.Rf4
1...Rf5+ 2.Re3
1...gxf6,Rxf6 2.Rxf6
1...Kxd5 2.Rc3
1...b3 2.Sc3

There are 4 cross-check variations. The key grants a flight, but takes two other flights. By a remarkable coincidence, in the same issue of "The Problemist" Lu Citeroni quoted a version of this problem in his "Selected Problems" column. The version has a much better key move, because it doesn't take any flights.

Kh1 Qb2 Rd4 e8 Bc4 f8 Se4 e7 Pd2 d7 e3 f6 - Ke5 Qb7 Rc6 Bc8 Pb6 h6 (12+6) #2
1.Sg3! (2.Rd3)
1...R~+ 2.Sd5
1...Rd6+ 2.Re4
1...Re6+ 2.Rd5
1...Rxf6+ 2.Sc6
1...Kxf6 2.Rg4
1...Qxd7 2.Rxd7

Lu found the above version in the recent Jakov Vladimirov book on Russian twomovers. Does anybody know who composed the version?
 
   
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(29) Posted by Siegfried Hornecker [Saturday, Sep 18, 2010 18:42]; edited by Siegfried Hornecker [10-09-18]

http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Marjan_Kovačević&oldid=367365250

There's a nice twomover of Marjan.

EDIT: Oops, had mentioned that already. Instead, here's one of mine.

Ke4 Qb1 Bf6 g4 Sf4 Pf7 - Kd2 Rh8 Ba4 Pc3 e2 h2 (6+6)
Original
Mate in 2

1.Bg5!


And with the same idea but without cross-checks:
Kh1 Bc8 f4 Sc6 e5 Pb7 c5 e7 g5 - Kc7 Rb2 h8 Bg1 Pe3 h2 (9+6)
MatPlus 36
Mate in 2

1.Sa7!
 
   
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(30) Posted by Mikalai Sihnevich [Saturday, Sep 18, 2010 21:12]

 QUOTE 
Lu found the above version in the recent Jakov Vladimirov book on Russian twomovers. Does anybody know who composed the version?

It's a version of Yakov Valdimirov.
See #162, p.66, The Golden Book of Chess Composition 1850-1913 (by Y.Vladimirov, A.Selivanov)
 
   
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(31) Posted by Hauke Reddmann [Sunday, Sep 19, 2010 19:14]

On a tangent (but BBS IS tangent :-), did you note
the Umnow in the variant 1...Rxf6 2.Sc6#?

Obvious question: How many Umnows can you have
*on one single field* in several crosscheck variants
1...piece xy->here, 2.X->xy#, 1...piece xy->there, 2.Y->xy#,
and so on. Two I can do with my brain tied on my back
(and a check-provoking key as it should, with 10 pieces),
so everything from three upwards interests me. (Don't
hesitate to use a pawn as piece or X/Y.)

Hauke
 
   
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(32) Posted by Geoff Foster [Monday, Sep 20, 2010 01:00]

Michael Lipton has made two versions of the Gavrilov problem.

version by Michael Lipton
Ka1 Qd1 Rb6 c2 Ba6 d2 Sc3 Pc5 - Kb3 Qd5 Ra3 d4 Be5 Pa2 b5 e4 (8+8) 1.Sxb5!

version by Michael Lipton
Ka1 Qd1 Rb7 c2 Ba6 c3 Sb5 Pc5 - Kb3 Qd5 Rd4 Be5 Pa3 c6 d2 e4 (8+8) 1.Bxd2!

Both versions save a white knight and three white pawns compared to Vladimirov's version, but that version has a perfect key, while Michael's keys (and Gavrilov's) are bad, though thematic. Given these possibilities, is an even better version than Vladimirov's available?
 
   
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(33) Posted by seetharaman kalyan [Monday, Sep 20, 2010 02:10]

What is the point of saving units retaining same bad key?
 
 
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(34) Posted by seetharaman kalyan [Thursday, Apr 26, 2012 17:34]; edited by seetharaman kalyan [12-04-26]

Here is a crosscheck of mine. 2nd Prize, The Hindu , 1982.
Ke8 Qf1 Rc4 f5 Bc8 e5 Sa5 - Kd5 Qd4 Sc3 Pe7 (7+4)
#2. 1.Kxe7! (2.Bb7#). Nothing complicated, but very light. Four cross checks including a change from the set for 1...Qxe5.
 
   
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(35) Posted by Michael McDowell [Thursday, Apr 26, 2012 21:13]

This reminds me of a problem by Barry Barnes:

2nd Prize Problemas 1973

Kf8 Qa4 Rb5 f5 Be5 Sa5 c5 - Kd5 Qd4 Rd1 Sa1 Pe7 (7+5)
Mate in 2

Set
1...Qxc5 2.Qc4
1...Qxe5 2.Qxd1

1.Kxe7 (>2.Bxd4)
1...Qxc5+ 2.Bd6
1...Qxe5+ 2.Se6
1...Qh4+ 2.Bf6
1...Qe3 2.Qc4
1..Qd3 2.Sxd3
1...Re1 2.Qxd4
 
   
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(36) Posted by seetharaman kalyan [Thursday, Apr 26, 2012 23:35]

The skilled master works in another change! Very nice. But mine has pinmate after the key also :)
 
 
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(37) Posted by Administrator [Wednesday, May 2, 2012 17:10]

Few days ago I received a nicely produced booklet "The Two-Move Chess Problems of Godfrey Quack" (Keverel Chees Books 1997, ISBN: 0-9531321-0-2), a suprising shipment from the publisher Robert H. Jones. The collection contains 76 problems (75 #2 and one #3), most of which were composed in classic style. Among them is one twomover published in the booklet as original and this is a fitting place to quote it.

Godfrey Quack (1997)
Ka8 Qg7 Rc3 g6 Bc4 Sd6 Pa5 - Kc6 Qb1 Rc1 d1 Sb4 Pa2 a6 c7 (7+8)#2
1.Kb8! ~ 2.Qc7:#, 1... Sc2+,Sd3+,Sd5+,Kc5 2.Bb3,Sb7,Bb5,Sb7#
I can comment it with only one word: beautiful!

Other problems in the booklet are equally enjoyable and the publisher says that he still has a few copies left at price of £3.50 plus postage. If you are interested you can contact him at: jones_r53@sky.com
 
 
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(38) Posted by Siegfried Hornecker [Friday, Mar 8, 2013 13:26]

In re to my posting of 18 September 2010, I must have confused that twomover with another. So the correct source is not "MatPlus 36", but "Original".
 
 
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MatPlus.Net Forum General Best #2 cross-check problems