White to move
I started to wonder what theory said about the position. Averbakh (see Averbakh's Convekta for a previous post on his work) only looks at Rook and two Pawns vs. Queen. He divides the positions into those with doubled Pawns, disconnected Pawns, and connected Pawns. In the first two cases, the side with the Rook looks to sacrifice one of the Pawns, leaving a theoretically drawn fortress. The third case breaks down into positions where the weaker King is either separated from its Pawns or close to them. In positions like the diagram, the White King behind its two Pawns has good drawing chances.
I also looked at positions like the diagram where I added a White Pawn on the e-file, i.e. Rook and four Pawns vs. Queen. Here the Queen also manages to hold the position. I tried to invent positions where the Queen finally loses, but they are not easy to find.
Given the new look of your blog,
ReplyDeleteis your audience aging? ;)
What new look? I haven't changed anything in 'ages'. - Mark
ReplyDeleteSince a week or so the font is much bigger.
ReplyDeleteI don't know what to say, because the font looks the same to me. How do my other blogs (listed in the right column) look? They use the same template. - Mark
ReplyDeleteYour other blogs are ok.
ReplyDeleteIt's a Firefox issue.
It turns out that Firefox zoom is site specific. - Mark
ReplyDelete