Interfering
In one of the previous lessons 4 possibilities to eliminate the defender have been shown:
- Capturing
- Attacking
- Interference
- Distracting
This chess lesson will be focussed on Interference, also known as blocking the defender. The general idea is to block the line between the defender and the piece or square it is trying to defend.
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Please note that it is only possible to block a horizontal, vertical, or diagonal line. It will be impossible to block a defending Knight, pawn or King.
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Black can block this defender by 1. …Ra5+, and White has to play 2. Qxa5 to prevent the mate, but also makes that his Queen will be captured 2…bxa5.
The mate can not be avoided 3. Kb1 Bg6+ 4. Rc2 Qf1+ 5. Ka2 Bxc2 6. Be1 Qxe1 7. d5 Qb1+ 8. Ka3 Qa1#.
A nice example of interference, showing that we have to consider more targets than the attacked pieces.
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White has a kind of double attack by means of a queen fork, but each of the rooks is defending the other one. The move 1. d6 blocks this line and Black will be unable to bring both rooks to safety at the same time. Black’s best move is probably 1…Raxd6, but then White will continue with 2.exd6. This example illustrates that it is not necessary for the inferfering piece to attack anything at all.
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You are invited to add the solution to the comments.
To give a clue: It is a combination of a discovered attack and interference.















[...] This game between Tarrash and Allies (Naples, 1914) is one of the most famous and illustrative examples of interfering. [...]
1. Bh7 Qxe2
2. Bxh6++
@genius
OK, but I don’t think that Black is going to play 1…Qxe2, but probably 1…Rxh7