Attack Patterns in Chess
Attack Patterns in Chess
Attack patterns are configurations of the pieces that can help us find a combination
that will quickly lead us to win the game.
These types of patterns appear mainly in the middle game, or also in the last
phase of the opening . These phases are generally the most difficult to play,
especially for beginner players, because we have to develop our plans, and simply
following the general principles of chess is not enough.
They allow you to quickly identify positions where tactical options exist
Finalize technically won positions
Develop attacks from learned models
Anticipate possible rival attacks
Understand the tactical relationships between pieces
Incorporate typical sacrifices in offensive positions
Develop tactical intuition
Gain confidence in finishing positions
Grandmaster Sandro Mareco, one of our teachers. He is among the 80 people in the
world who know the most about patterns.
Typology
Introduction
As I explained, the patterns are practically infinite. However, in the attack patterns
course of our online academy, we have structured them following some attack
premises that seem to us to be the most important to get started.
Elementary Finishing
A shot in chess is the same as in soccer, it is a position in which you have to score a
goal, otherwise it is something like a resounding failure!
They are mates in attack positions that have gone down in history and that consist of
controlling the enemy king's escape squares. One of these patterns is the Anastasia
Mate.
Below I show you a class from our course on attack patterns so that you understand
how important they are, and above all how useful:
An example of this type of pattern is the one that occurs with the absence of the h-
pawn. Look at the following diagram, would you be able to win the game with white?
(leave me your comments with your solution).
Attacks based on bishop sacrifices
Bishop sacrifices are generally more complex than rook sacrifices, as the bishop has a
less natural movement for the human brain. Furthermore, these types of sacrifices
Deflection-based attacks
Deflection in chess is a fundamental technique that aims to bring one of our
opponent's pieces to a square that is ideal for our interests. There are many and very
complex attack patterns based on this technique.
Look at the following position, it is easy to finish it if we know the attack pattern of
the knight on the f7 pawn.
The whites play and win.
This type of pattern occurs when the following conditions are met:
Much of these advantages are due precisely because our brain develops new
connections when it learns these attack patterns (among others).
Intermediates:
Measure your chess strength volume 1.
Advanced:
Measure your chess strength vol. 3 (very high level)
Why is one chess player an average club player and another a master? There are
many skills that will make you a master, but one of the most important is pattern
recognition .
In an average position in the middlegame there are around 40-50 legal moves. A
beginner will examine the position and analyze the legal moves one by one (the
lower his level of play, the greater the number of moves he will consider), perhaps
ignoring the most important ones. Until he distinguishes the legal plays from the
illegal ones and then he will choose between the legal ones without too much criteria.
An intermediate player will look at the position and quickly see the legal moves
without any problems, but will have some difficulty determining which moves
deserve more consideration and which do not. A master, on the other hand, will
examine the position, see all the legal moves without even thinking about them,
decide quickly which is the best, almost instinctively , and begin examining the most
promising continuations.
How is it possible?
Pattern recognition
On the path to chess mastery, a player sees and studies many different types of
positions. Every time a teacher finds a new position, previous experience helps him or
her find the right path in the new position. This is pattern recognition .
Pattern recognition , in computer science for example, deals with the analysis of the
identity of input data, such as speech, images or a stream of text, by recognizing and
delineating the patterns it contains and their relationships.
For example, you can recognize your teachers, friends and also what "objects" you
can eat or not. Everything in the world has its own pattern. Our superiority over
computers as pattern recognizers has the practical advantage that pattern recognition
can be used, for example, to tell whether a person or a computer is trying to
access the Internet . The famous captcha characters that they ask us for when we try
to register on a website.
There are many studies and models that have attempted to address such a complex
matter, such as, for example, the Sperling model or the Rumelhart Model .
Pattern recognition
At The Zugzwang Members , our Chess Academy, we work a lot on this aspect and
we want to show you how with one of the classes we currently have in our Academy
in which we talk about typical mistakes of amateur players .
It is a position that we have extracted from lesson 2 of our course on amateur player
errors that has a lot to do with pattern recognition taught by Grand Master Herminio
Herraiz. It is a position that our intermediate level students mostly solve.
White plays how
you would play
As you see, there are multiple legal plays and multiple plays that may seem “good.”
An experienced player will very easily find the best solution .
For example, giving check with Qb5, threatening the rook with our strong pawn with
h7, taking our bishop to d4... We are not saying that these are good moves, they are
simply moves that are more than just legal moves. For example, Qc3 would be a legal
move, but it would make no sense because we would immediately lose our queen.
As you will see in the video, we are not only about which move is best in this specific
position but also how to integrate a fundamental chess concept such as which pieces
we should change, with the specific patterns that occur from the perspective of
structure and of the value of the pieces that we can later reuse in our chess games.
Below, we present a summary of the video, so you can review what you have learned.
To better organize the mating patterns, we will only talk about the most common ones
against the king in the center. And we will separate them into 3 categories : the weak
pawn of f7, the weak diagonal of h5-e8 and others.
At the start of the game, White's f7-pawn (or White's f2-pawn) is the weakest point in
Black's position. He is a pawn close to the king and his majesty is the only one who
defends him. That is why attacking this pawn is the easiest way to mate in the
opening.
The Legal Mate : This is probably the most spectacular mate in this section.
After 1.e4 e5 2.Nf3 d6 3.Bc4 h6? 4.Nc3 Bg4? Black loses material with
5.Nxe5! After 5…dxe5 6.Qxg4 white gains a pawn. But even worse is 5…
Bxd1? , which allows checkmate with 6.Bxf7+ Ke7 7.Nd5# . Wonderful
coordination of pieces in the center of the board.
Bxf7+ : A very common combination,
benefiting from the fact that the Bg4 is not well defended. It is similar to the
Legal mate, but in the reverse order. For example, in the second diagram
white plays and wins. (solution in the video)
Nxe5 : Sometimes, the same trick as in the Legal checkmate can be used, but
with another idea in mind. With a knight on e5, a check with Bb5 can be a
winner, as it is difficult to interpose a piece.
The weak diagonal of h5-e8 is closely related to the previous topic. If this line opens,
then a check can be fatal, since there are no pieces that can cover the f7 or g6 squares.
The Fool's Mate : I'm pretty sure that no one will let you mate with 1.f3 e5
2.g4 Qh4# in a game, but knowing the importance of this diagonal will give
you many winning ideas if the opposing king didn't castle quickly. Even GM
Nakamura forgot about this key tactical element!
Alekhine's Mate : The fourth World Champion was a tactical monster. When
he gave simuls, he used to display all his tactical skill to win miniatures
against his poor amateur rivals. In one of them, he used a queen sacrifice to
weaken the h5-e8 diagonal and create a nice variation of Fool's Mate. A great
example of how matte patterns can help us find combinations more easily.
Mate de la Coz : Also known as Lucena's
mate, this impressive queen sacrifice has the power to make any chess player
happy. If you think that this tactic has nothing to do with this topic, then you
should see one of the first examples of this combination, played by the great
Greco in 1620 (!). In the right position, black plays and wins. (solution in the
video)
Others
There are many other mating patterns that are important to know in order to destroy
the opponent's king position in the center. But I want to focus on two spectacular
dunks that have big names linked to them.
Today I bring you this article about positional assessment. It is part of the classes I
have with my students. This part is an introduction without the games related to the
class, but I think it can still help you have a better idea of what positional assessment
is and how it works. I hope you enjoy it.
Positional Assessment
If so, the rapid way in which White wins is a reflection of the difference in
valuation of both sides and the better knowledge of patterns on the part of
Cvitan who led White.
Matte Patterns
A mating pattern is a frequently occurring checkmate scheme in chess . In the
following diagrams it is the white ones that give mate.
Anastasia Mate
In Anastasia's Mate , a knight and a rook team up to trap the opposing king between
the edge of the board and a piece on their side. This mate gets its name from the novel
Anastasia und das Schachspiel by Wilhelm Heinse . 1
Anderssen Mate
Anderssen Mate
Anderssen's mate (named after Adolf Anderssen ), the rook or queen mates the
opposing king on the back rank, supported by a piece that attacks diagonally, such as
a pawn or bishop .
Arabic mate
Arabic mate
The Arab mate is the one given to the opposing king in a corner of the board with a
rook supported by a knight.
Back rank mate usually occurs when a rook or queen mates a king locked in his front
rank by his own pieces (usually pawns). It is also known as the " mate of the hallway
" or "death alley."
Bishop and Knight Mate
Bishop and knight checkmate against king occurs when a king, a bishop and a knight
of the same color checkmate the opposing king in one of the corners of the board
controlled by the bishop, or one of the squares adjacent to them. This mate is usually
the most difficult of the so-called basic mates, as it requires in some cases up to 35
moves to reach mate.
Blackburne Mate
Blackburne Mate
Boden Mate.
In Boden's mate, two bishops attack the opposing king through crossed diagonals,
obstructed by pieces from their side; usually a rook and a pawn. It is named after the
Englishman Samuel Boden .
Cozio Mate
Mate from Cozio. After 1.Qh6+, Black is forced to White plays 2.Qh2 mate.
play 1...Kg3
The Cozio mate is a common mate scheme. This is an inverted version of the nesting
mate . It was named after a study composed in 1766 by Carlo Cozio .
Mate Damiano's Bishop
Damiano's bishop mate is a classic mate scheme, which occurs with a queen
supported by a bishop. It is named after the Portuguese Pedro Damiano .
Damiano Mate
Damiano Mate
Damiano's mate is one of the oldest mate schemes. It occurs when a pawn controls
the escape squares in front of the opposing king and using the queen to deliver the
final blow. This scheme is often arrived at by sacrificing a rook, usually on the h7
square, then checking with the queen on the 'h' file and then mating with the queen.
This mate was first published by Pedro Damiano in 1512. 2
David and Goliath mate
The David and Goliath checkmate can take many forms, although it is generally
characterized by being executed by a pawn and in which the enemy pawns are
nearby.
The Double Bishop Mate is a classic method similar to Boden's mate, although
simpler. This mate involves two bishops attacking a king trapped behind a pawn on
its initial square.
Matte fitted
Matte fitted.
The nested mate occurs when a queen supported by any of her pieces mates a king
far from the board, whose pieces occupy one or more of its escape squares. The
pieces that enclose the opposing king can be any, different from an unpinned knight.
Epaulette Mate
Epaulette Mate.
An Epaulette or epaulette mate is, in the broadest definition, a mate where the
opposing king is enclosed by pieces that occupy their escape squares in the two
adjacent columns. The most common Epaulette mate is that of a king confined by his
two rooks in the back rank. It receives its name from the visual similarity of a king
between his towers and that of a soldier with his epaulets.
Example games
Greco Mate
Greco Mate.
Greco's mate , named after the Italian Gioachino Greco , occurs when a queen or a
rook mates the opposing king located in a corner of the board, who also has a pawn
on his side taking away the escape square immediately diagonally, and a bishop
controlling the escape square on the adjacent file.
hook mate
Hook mate.
The hook mate is a mate between a rook, a knight and a pawn of one side against a
king and a pawn of the other. The opposing king is trapped between the rook
(protected by the knight), the knight (protected by his pawn), and trapped by his side's
pawn.
Lolli Mate
Lolli Mate.
Lolli's mate (named after Giambattista Lolli ), is usually given against a king in a
fianchetto whose bishop has already been eliminated, or against a castling with
weaknesses in the surrounding squares.
Matte by Max Lange
Max Lange 's mate is another form of mate with a queen supported by a bishop.
Morphy Mate
Morphy's mate.
The Morphy mate , named after Paul Morphy , is a mate made by a bishop to a king
in a corner of the board, enclosed by an unmoved own pawn, and confined to the
edge by an enemy rook.
Mate of the Opera
The Opera mate is a variant of the mate on the h-file, given by a rook supported by a
bishop. It receives its name from the query game that Paul Morphy won in 1858 at
the Paris Opera against the Duke of Brunswick and the Comte d'Isouard.
Pillsbury Mate
This dunk is named after player Harry Nelson Pillsbury . It works like a windmill
between a rook and a bishop against a king locked in a corner.
Mate de Réti
Mate de Réti.
The Réti mate is named after the Czech player Richard Réti , who won in this way in
eleven moves against Savielly Tartakower in 1910, in the city of Vienna . It is a mate
given by a bishop protected by a queen or a rook, to a king attacked by a diagonal and
obstructed by his own pieces on the remaining squares.
Mate of the coz
Main article: Mate de la coz
suffocation mate
Suffocation mate.
"Swallowtail" mate.