I think the wedge pawn on D6 was very useful as it controlled the c7 and e7 square.
I think the wedge pawn on D6 was very useful as it controlled the c7 and e7 square.
I think the wedge pawn on D6 was very useful as it controlled the c7 and e7 square.
@ShpylykRuslan #5
Why are you so surprised by that move?
@HemaWorst yeah, why this move was done?
Serial cramper hehe
anyway good game, very entertaining to watch the life being squeezed out of your opponent
@ShpylykRuslan yeah, I thought the same. Like 6. Rg8 WTF who plays like that
Just found a captcha with 3 possible solutions lol
Speaking of that thread title...consider the position after Black's 21st move.
If only White could put his queen on c7, he would win a piece (oddly enough). And Qf6 would force either Qc8 or Rg8 (a very anemic choice indeed).
The problem isn't just the knight position (which is woeful enough); the king rook is also very awkwardly placed at the moment.
At any rate, 22 Rc1 looks pretty conclusive (threatening the queen win).
But of course there are many roads to Rome, and shadow 1414 picked another nice one. At any rate, I think that position is worthy of study, if only to see just how much one's attack can flourish whenever one of the opponent's pieces gets that misplaced.
Title… that’s what she said… 🙃
@shadow1414 I hope this might help:- https://lichess.org/study/PHwBzbDy/tmBbUXTM
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