A game in the train with Euwe
In Voorloper, the youth magazine of the KNSB, the Royal Dutch Chess Federation, autumn 2001, there is an amusing (fictional) story of Euwe playing a game of chess in the train. Euwe was a Dutch mathematician and has been world champion chess.Euwe tells that there is a man that asks him in the train if he can play chess. When Euwe affirms this, they start to play a game, and after some time, this is the position:
Euwe plays white. Black to move. |
Euwe did not want to get into an argument with his opponent telling him one could not promote a pawn to a king, so instead he found another way of winning this game ...
He moved his pawn from a7 to a8, and promoted it to a black king! Now, the game ended as follows: Black played Ka8-b8;
then white played h6-h7: then black played Kb8-a8: and then white played h7-h8Q; promoting to a (white) queen and mating all three kings at the same time.Disclaimer and remark
As I get often questions about the rules of chess, here a disclaimer: the rules of chess do not allow promotion to a king, and they also do not allow promotion to a piece of the opposite color. It might be nice to invent a chess variant that allows this kind of promotions?
Written by Hans Bodlaender. Thanks to Alfred Pfeiffer for noting an error.
WWW page created: October 30, 2001.