Nah, it's zugzwang. White is lost...Christopher Kreuzer wrote:Surely the starting position is already lost for Black?
Stalemate
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Re: Stalemate
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Re: Stalemate
It's certainly possible in principle to have a proof that the ten-move stalemate is the shortest one: create a list of all games ending on black's 9th move or earlier, and show that none of them end in stalemate. I'll leave you to figure out why this is unlikely to be workable in practice.
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Re: Stalemate
I can manage all the games ending on black's 1st move or earlier (421 of them, including the 'game' of no moves being made at all) - I leave the rest as an exercise for the interested reader.
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Re: Stalemate
While we're on the subject, Smeets - Short at the Olympiad was played out to stalemate.
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Re: Stalemate
A couple of examples from British Championships. First, 1966. The following position occurred in B N Green vs J M Aitken, after Black's 46th move:
/16/R6p/5npk/5p2/4q2P/5QP1/7K/
In a final try for a win White played 47.g4+ fxg3 48.Qxf5. only to run into 48. ... Qe1+ 49.Kg2 Qe2+ 50.Kg3 Qe5+ 0.5-0.5
J E Littlewood, writing in CHESS, rather extravagantly called this "one of the most surprising finishes seen in many a year" and "a study in itself". The whole game can be downloaded from BritBase.
Wind back nearly 40 years and we arrive in time to see this denouement in W A Fairhurst vs T H Tylor, 1929:
/5R2/1pr3kp/3p2p1/3Pb1B1/4P3/6r1/8/5R1K/ - Black to make his 37th move.
Here Tylor made the obvious grab with 37. ... Rxg5? and had to settle for a half-point after 38.R1f7+ 0.5-0.5 (If 38. ... Rxf7 39.Rxf7+ Kxf7 - otherwise perpetual check.)
This finish was cited by Harry Golombek in his famous (though now rather dated) primer The Game of Chess.
The full story of how Fairhurst set up and then sprang this trap is given in Edward Winter's "Chess Notes" #5145.
/16/R6p/5npk/5p2/4q2P/5QP1/7K/
In a final try for a win White played 47.g4+ fxg3 48.Qxf5. only to run into 48. ... Qe1+ 49.Kg2 Qe2+ 50.Kg3 Qe5+ 0.5-0.5
J E Littlewood, writing in CHESS, rather extravagantly called this "one of the most surprising finishes seen in many a year" and "a study in itself". The whole game can be downloaded from BritBase.
Wind back nearly 40 years and we arrive in time to see this denouement in W A Fairhurst vs T H Tylor, 1929:
/5R2/1pr3kp/3p2p1/3Pb1B1/4P3/6r1/8/5R1K/ - Black to make his 37th move.
Here Tylor made the obvious grab with 37. ... Rxg5? and had to settle for a half-point after 38.R1f7+ 0.5-0.5 (If 38. ... Rxf7 39.Rxf7+ Kxf7 - otherwise perpetual check.)
This finish was cited by Harry Golombek in his famous (though now rather dated) primer The Game of Chess.
The full story of how Fairhurst set up and then sprang this trap is given in Edward Winter's "Chess Notes" #5145.
"The chess-board is the world ..... the player on the other side is hidden from us ..... he never overlooks a mistake, or makes the smallest allowance for ignorance."
(He doesn't let you resign and start again, either.)
(He doesn't let you resign and start again, either.)