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Alexander Baburin vs Gregory Shahade
"135 Degrees in Shahade" (game of the day Oct-11-2022)
Linklater Memorial (2001), San Francisco, CA USA, rd 6, Mar-03
Neo-Grünfeld Defense: Classical Variation. Modern Defense (D78)  ·  0-1

ANALYSIS [x]

FEN COPIED

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Kibitzer's Corner
< Earlier Kibitzing  · PAGE 1 OF 2 ·  Later Kibitzing>
Jul-01-04  qqq: Wow, a rare sight to seea B+N vs king
Jul-01-04  acirce: Took Black 40 moves to win, that goes to show that this is an ending worth playing on with the bare king.
Aug-05-05  PaulLovric: BEAUTIFUL............. I wonder if anyone can look at this ending and see how much sooner it may have occured?
Dec-03-05  Chopin: I'm currently studying endgames and these endings are very hard. Great game.
Dec-03-05  Saruman: This is a much faster win:

106. Kh5 Ke4 107. Kh4 Nf7 108. Kh3 Kf3 109. Kh4 Be5 110. Kh5 Kf4 111. Kh4 Ng5 112. Kh5 Kf5 113. Kh4 Bf4 114. Kh5 Bg3 115. Kh6 Ne6 116.Kh5 Ng7+ 117. Kh6 Kf6 118. Kh7 Bf4 119. Kg8 Kg6 120. Kf8 Bd6+ 121. Kg8 Nf5 122. Kh8 Be7 123. Kg8 Nh6+ 124. Kh8 Bf6#.

Dec-03-05  Saruman: Or

106. Kh3 Ng4 107. Kh4 Nf6 108. Kh3 Ne4 109. Kh4 Be5 110. Kh5 Bf6 111. Kg6 Kf4 112. Kf7 Kf5 113. Kf8 Ke6 114. Ke8 Nd6+ 115. Kf8 Bg5 116. Kg7 Kf5 117. Kh7 Kf6 118. Kg8 Bh6 119. Kh7 Nf5 120. Kg8 Kg6 121. Kh8 Bg7+ 122. Kg8 Ne7#.

Feb-23-07  DMBFan23: I've just started learning this endgame, not because I think I'll ever encounter it (though I did against a chess applet the other day!!!) but to learn about piece coordination, waiting moves, zugswang, the opposition, etc. I can force the king from the "safe" corner into the mating corner, but moving him from the center into the safe corner is really hard. impressive, especially cause it looks like there are some move repetitions indicating he found the solution OTB. go him.
Feb-01-08  achieve: <DMBFan> Hits the nail on the head there re. practising the KNB v K mate for many reasons he mentioned...

I've been spending a lot of time practising this myself the last few months, and one thing that strikes me (and I "invented" a term for it), which is:

VISUAL (IN)DEPENDENCE

What I mean is, that Black clearly doesn't see the possibility of a mate procedure (less than 20 moves) along the SIDE of the board (position after move 105) - i.e. forcing the lone King from h3 to h8/g8 - the corner of doom in this case - but spends 10 moves neither improving nor worsening his position, and then sees the light and works the lone King towards a1 - along the first rank...

What I encountered is the fact that it is very valuable, indeed necessary, to feel comfortable with BOTH colours and in all corners and along all 4 sides of the board-- in order to produce this procedure swiftly and decisively...

With myself I noticed a definite VISUAL DEPENDENCE during the first week of practising it.

Dec-20-08  WhiteRook48: 40 move rule in effect = draw. Lucky for Black that wasn't a rule.
Feb-08-09  WhiteRook48: he should have resigned earlier
Jul-05-10
Premium Chessgames Member
  SteinitzLives: Key to this ending is not only mating in the corner that is the same color as the bishop but also: 1) Get the opposition whenever possible until the lone K is on the rim. 2) Create an "L" shaped wall with the N and B either with one square in between them on rank or file, or diagonally next to eachother. 3) Keep the N and B out of the Kings' way (without giving up key squares) when your K must move side ways in relation to the lone K! 4) A big part of doing this right is not being afraid to let the lone K off the rim once you have him in the mate quadrant of the board; don't worry, the K, B and N with the right one or two square-controlling moves will put the lone K right back on the rim, and on the rim square where you need him to be. 5) Remember the piece to-search-for-a-move priority: a) look for best K moves first, b) look for best N moves second, and c) look for best B moves last. 6) Practice using Pandolfinis' endgame book where he has several mate in 2, 3, 4 and more problems, with K+B+N vs. lone K, then you can keep "goal positions" that have such forced mates following them, etched in your mind.

7) One of the best descriptions of this mate process comes from Paul Keres' old book "Practical Chess Endings" (a book title shared by several other authors and books BTW). Keres gives an absolute worst case scenario in this ending and shows you how to do it with clear descriptions.

Aug-17-10  patzer3844: what can i say?i am just a 1800 player that never studied chess seriously and find this mate very easy.Q vs rook is much moredifficult,i have tried it a few times and didnt do it
Dec-07-13  peristilo: Q vs R is way more difficult!
Jun-18-18  Omnipotent00001: After 57. b6 black can win in 46 moves.
Oct-11-22
Premium Chessgames Member
  An Englishman: Good Evening: White's Ba1 looked as if it might as well have come off the board and left Black with an extra piece. On move 31, it did. White deserves a lot of credit for hanging on as long as he did.
Oct-11-22
Premium Chessgames Member
  perfidious: <WhiteRook48: he should have resigned earlier>

<Omnipotent00001: After 57. b6 black can win in 46 moves.>

In either case, of course, this pun would not then have come to be.

Oct-11-22
Premium Chessgames Member
  HeMateMe: Love the pun. Who was Linklater?
Oct-11-22
Premium Chessgames Member
  MissScarlett: Charles Linklater, a member of the Mechanics Institute CC, who left them $500,000 in a bequest, which was used to support a number of events from the mid-1990s.
Oct-11-22  goodevans: <perfidious: ... In either case, of course, this pun would not then have come to be.>

I may be showing my ignorance here but could someone please enlighten me as to the significance of the '135' in the pun.

To be honest I'm not even sure whether 'Shahade' is standing in for the Arabic 'Shahada' or for the phrase 'the Shade' and in neither case does importance of the '135' leap out at me. Maybe I'm barking up the wrong tree entirely?

Oct-11-22
Premium Chessgames Member
  MissScarlett: <135 (one hundred [and] thirty-five) is the natural number following 134 and preceding 136.>

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/135_(...

Oct-11-22
Premium Chessgames Member
  Teyss: <goodevans> Was wondering the same, the only reference I could find was the world record temperature 134 F (in Death Valley for info), close enough, of course in the shade as all measurements go. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Highe...

Playing through that game there, don't know what would have melted first, the brain or the pieces.

Oct-11-22
Premium Chessgames Member
  Teyss: Help, Harrylime has come back! CG admin: How come my ignore list is not working?

Oh no, Missy changed her avatar again. She seems to browse through all famous figures.

Oct-11-22  Chessius the Messius: 97. Kg4 Be3 98. Kf3 Nf2 99. Kg2 Ke4 100. Kg3 Bd4 101. Kg2 Kf4 102. Kf1 Kf3 103. Kg1 Be5 104. Kf1 Bh2 105. Ke1 Ne4 106. Kd1 Ke3 107. Kc2 Nd2 108. Kb2 Bd6 109. Kc3 Ba3 110. Kc2 Bb4 111. Kd1 Nb3 112. Kc2 Na5 113. Kd1 Kd3 114. Kc1 Nc4 115. Kd1 Ba5 116. Kc1 Bd2 117. Kb1 Kc3 118. Ka2 Kc2 119. Ka1 Kb3 120. Kb1 Na3 121. Ka1 Bc3x
Oct-11-22  Chessius the Messius: Btw a mate pattern that is a bit of an anomaly:


click for larger view

1... Nc3 2. Kh1 Bg2+ 3. Kg1 Nd2x


click for larger view

Oct-11-22  goodevans: <MissScarlett: <135 (one hundred [and] thirty-five) is the natural number following 134 and preceding 136.>>

It's also a factor of 9,999,990 but I don't see a connection between that and the pun either.

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