Author: Pierre Bourget
Date: 09:24:10 04/29/99
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On April 29, 1999 at 05:12:16, Robert Ericsson wrote: >On April 28, 1999 at 11:23:46, jose hernandez wrote: > >> >>White = Rb1, Rh1 , Be2, Kf2 , Qe3, Nd5, Ne7. >>pawns = c4, e4 , f3, g2 , h5. >> >> >>Black = Ra8, Bc8, Qa3, Rf8, Kg7, Nd4, Ne6 >>pawns = d7, d6, c5, f7, g6, h7. >> >> >> >> >>Please put this Beautiful Mate problem to Fritz. >> >>Fritz cant do it. >> >>What is the move ??? > >I have seen this position very recently in either a magazine or >on the web (Tim Krabbé's home page I thought but I can't find it). >In this article they showed not only this position but also some >similar games with the same mate. > >Who are the players? > >BTW: should the pawns really be on d7+d6? It seems so odd :-) I found this position as Schmid -N.N.(unknow) Heidelberg 1946 in Neishtadt book Queen Sacrifice ,page123 also in Anthology of Chess Combinations as P.Schmidt-Richter ,Heidelberg 1946 ,diagram # 1997 page 389.You can probably find it in other books on chess combinations.
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