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(1) Posted by Eugene Rosner [Tuesday, Dec 2, 2014 13:40] |
what is a direct reflexmate? reflex mate, got that...semi reflex mate, got that too...
I chanced upon Michel Caillaud's G190 (dr#3)in the 2001-3 FIDE Album. After a little investigation, this is a direct reflexmate noir(black). It has the feel of a H#2.5 1.2.1.1.1. What is the exact definition of a dr#? Are there other examples? When was this condition first shown? |
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(2) Posted by Jan Hein Verduin [Tuesday, Dec 2, 2014 17:55] |
Your first question is answered in the same Fide-album on page 617. |
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(3) Posted by Eugene Rosner [Wednesday, Dec 3, 2014 03:36] |
thanks, that helps!! I get it...pardon the humor...it's a direct reflexmate! I'm trying to reason out how/why selected the conditions for his problem. He uses a lot of Einstein and Alsatian together to rule out a lot of moves along the way and afterwards. throw in the cavalier majeur and dr#3 you have a lot of square pegs and round holes...but it looks like it's all needed to form the correct batteries and arrange the correct blocks or guards around the king. |
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(4) Posted by Michel Caillaud [Wednesday, Dec 3, 2014 19:30] |
Thanks for interest, Eugene.
The goal of the problem was to honour the memory of Jean Zeller. He was an Alsatian (Alsace is a region in France).
The idea was to pack in a single problem all 4 fairy inventions by him, that he presented in articles published in diagrammes and feenschach.
That is how the "variations" were selected. |
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(5) Posted by Eugene Rosner [Wednesday, Dec 3, 2014 22:14] |
What a fascinating story about this problem Michel! Quite an evolution...and you truly combined these all in a very clever way. Alsatian and Einstein marry beautifully together. I know that Zeller created Alsatian but not the others... |
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