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The exchange (chess)

In chess, the exchange is the material difference of a rook for a minor piece (i.e. a bishop or knight). Having a rook for a minor piece is generally advantageous, since the rook is usually more valuable. A player who has a rook for a minor piece is said to be up the exchange, and the other player is down the exchange. A player who wins a rook for a minor piece is said to have won the exchange, while the other player has lost the exchange. The opposing captures often happen on consecutive moves, but this is not strictly necessary. Although it is generally detrimental to lose the exchange, one may occasionally find reason to purposely do so; the result is an exchange sacrifice.

"The exchange" differs from the more general "exchange" or "an exchange", which refers to the loss and subsequent gain of arbitrary pieces; for example, to "exchange queens" would mean that each side's queen is captured.[1]

The minor exchange is the exchange of a bishop for a knight. This term is rarely used.

Value of the exchange edit

The value of the exchange (i.e. the difference between a rook and a minor piece) has been considered for decades. Siegbert Tarrasch put its value as 1½ pawns in the endgame, but not for the opening or the first part of the middlegame. That is widely accepted today, but Jacob Sarratt, Howard Staunton, and José Capablanca felt that the exchange was worth two pawns. Tigran Petrosian thought that one pawn was the right value. Wilhelm Steinitz said that a rook is slightly better than a knight and two pawns but slightly worse than a bishop and two pawns.[2]Cecil Purdy said that the value depends on the total number of pawns on the board. The reason is that when there are many pawns, the rooks will have limited mobility because there will not be open files. The exchange is barely worth 1½ points when there are 14 or more pawns on the board. Only when there are ten or fewer pawns may the exchange be worth 2 points .[3] Purdy gave the value as 1½ points in the opening and increasing to 2 points in the endgame. In the middlegame the value would be closer to 1½ than to 2.[4]Edmar Mednis gave the value as 1½ in the endgame.[5][6]Max Euwe put the value at 1½ in the middlegame and said that two pawns are more than sufficient compensation for the exchange.[7] Larry Kaufman's computer research puts the value as 1¾ pawns, but only 1¼ pawns if the player with the minor piece has the bishop pair.[8]Hans Berliner puts the difference between a rook and knight as 1.9 pawns and the difference between a rook and a bishop as 1.77 pawns.[9] In practice, one pawn may be sufficient compensation for the loss of the exchange, whereas two pawns almost always is.[10]

In the endgame edit

In the middlegame, the advantage of an exchange is usually enough to win the game if the side with the rook has one or more pawns. In an endgame without pawns, the advantage of the exchange is normally not enough to win (see pawnless chess endgame). The most common exceptions when there are no pawns are (1) a rook versus a bishop in which the defending king is trapped in a corner of the same color as his bishop, (2) a knight separated from its king that may be cornered and lost, and (3) the king and knight are poorly placed.[11]

In the endgame of a rook and a pawn versus a knight and a pawn, if the pawns are passed the rook is much stronger and should win. If the pawns are not passed, the side with knight has good drawing chances if its pieces are well-placed.[12]

In the endgame of a rook and a pawn versus a bishop and pawn, if the pawns are on the same file, the bishop has good chances to draw if the pawns are blocked and the opposing pawn is on a square the bishop can attack; otherwise the rook usually wins. If the pawns are passed the rook normally wins. If the pawns are not passed and are on adjacent files, it is difficult to assess but the bishop may be able to draw.[13]

Adams vs. Fine, 1940
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Black to move wins

In an endgame with more pawns on the board (i.e. a rook and pawns versus a minor piece with the same number of pawns) the rook usually wins.[14] This position is typical. The superior side should remember these things:

  1. the main idea is to get the king through to capture opposing pawns
  2. force as many opposing pawns as possible onto the same color square as the bishop
  3. some pawn exchanges may be necessary to open files, but keep pawns on both sides of the board
  4. try to keep the position unbalanced. A passed pawn almost immediately becomes a winning advantage.[15]

If the minor piece has an extra pawn (i.e. one pawn for the exchange), the rook should win, but with difficulty. If the minor piece has two extra pawns, the endgame should be a draw.[16]

Exchange sacrifice edit

An exchange sacrifice occurs when one player gives up a rook for a minor piece. It is often used to destroy the enemy pawn structure (as in several variations of the Sicilian Defence where Black captures a knight on c3 with a rook), to establish a minor piece on a strong square (often threatening the enemy king), to improve one's own pawn structure (creating, for example, connected passed pawns such as in A Yurgis–Botvinnik, 1931[17]), or to gain time for development. The exchange sacrifice contrasts with other sacrifices in that during the early-middle to middle game the board is sufficiently crowded to where the rook is not as effective as an active knight or a good bishop; this is why such exchange sacrifices happen usually from moves 20 to 30, and rarely occur in the later moves. When they do occur in the endgame, it is usually to create and promote a passed pawn.[18] Subsequently, the relative importance of the pieces might be different from the standardized Chess piece relative value system and takes advantage of the fluctuating values of the pieces during the progression of the game. The sacrifice might also be used to increase the influence of one's own minor pieces by eliminating opposition from their counterparts (such as in the Petrosian versus Spassky game below, where even a double exchange sacrifice was successful). A common example of this idea is the elimination an opponent's bishop, with the expectation that in doing so one's own bishop will increase in power from being unopposed on the color squares in which it resides. There is often more dynamic play and positional considerations such as pawn structure or piece placement compared to sacrifices due to a mating attack or a pawn sacrifice to gain the initiative. Sometimes the exchange can be sacrificed purely on long term positional objectives, as frequently demonstrated by former world champion Tigran Petrosian.

Sokolov vs. Kramnik edit

Sokolov vs. Kramnik
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Position before 33.Rxc7!

In this 2004 game[19] between Ivan Sokolov and World Champion Vladimir Kramnik, White gave up the exchange for a pawn to create two strong connected passed pawns. The game continued:

33. Rxc7! Qxc7
34. Rxf6 Rxf6
35. Qxf6 Rf8

and White won on move 41.[20]

Reshevsky vs. Petrosian edit

Reshevsky vs. Petrosian
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Position before 25...Re6!!

Tigran Petrosian, the World Champion from 1963 to 1969, was well known for his especially creative use of this device. He once responded (only half jokingly), when asked what was his favourite piece, as saying "The rook, because I can sacrifice it for minor pieces!"[citation needed] In the game Reshevsky versus Petrosian at the 1953 Candidates Tournament in Zurich,[21] he sacrificed the exchange on move 25, only for his opponent to sacrifice it in return on move 30. This game is perhaps the most famous and most frequently taught example of the exchange sacrifice.

There are no open files in this position for the rooks to exploit. Black sacrificed the exchange with

25... Re6!!

With the rook not on e7, the black knight will be able to get to a strong outpost on d5. From there the knight will be attacking the pawn on c3, and if the white bishop on b2 does not move to d2, it will be of little use. In addition, it will be practically impossible to break Black's defense on the white squares. The next few moves were:

26. a4?! Ne7!
27. Bxe6 fxe6
28. Qf1! Nd5
29. Rf3 Bd3
30. Rxd3 cxd3

The game was drawn on move 41.[22]

Petrosian vs. Spassky edit

Petrosian vs. Spassky, 1966
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Position after 20...Bh3, before 21.Ne3!
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Position before 24.Rxf4!

In the tenth game from the 1966 World Chess Championship between defending champion Tigran Petrosian and challenger Boris Spassky contained two exchange sacrifices by White.[23] Black had just moved

20... Bh3?! (first diagram)

White responded with an exchange sacrifice:

21. Ne3!

White had no choice: 21.Rf2? Rxf4 22.Rxf4 Qg5+, etc. The game continued:

21... Bxf1? 22. Rxf1 Ng6 23. Bg4! Nxf4?! (second diagram)

And now a second exchange sacrifice:

24. Rxf4! Rxf4

Black is helpless, despite being two exchanges ahead. White won back an exchange on move 29. On move 30 White forced the win of the other rook and the exchange of queens. Black resigned because the position was a winning endgame for White (two knights and five pawns versus one knight and four pawns).[24] Petrosian won the match by one game to retain his title.

Kasparov vs. Shirov edit

Kasparov vs. Shirov
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Position before 17.Rxb7!!

In a 1994 game between World Champion Garry Kasparov and Alexei Shirov,[25] White sacrificed a pure exchange (rook for a bishop) with the move 17. Rxb7!!. As compensation for the sacrifice, Black became weak on the white squares, which were dominated by White's bishop. The exchange sacrifice also deprived Black of the bishop pair and his remaining bishop was a bad bishop. During the game, many spectating grandmasters were sceptical whether White's compensation was enough. Black returned the exchange on move 28, making the material equal, but White had a strong initiative. Black missed a better 28th move after which White could have forced a draw, but would have had no clear advantage. White won the game on move 38.[26]

Minor exchange edit

The minor exchange is the trade of the opponent's bishop for the player's knight (or, more recently, the stronger minor piece for the weaker).[27] Bobby Fischer used the term,[28] but it is rarely used.

In most chess positions, a bishop is worth slightly more than a knight because of its longer range of movement. As a chess game progresses, pawns tend to get traded, removing support points from the knight and opening up lines for the bishop. This generally leads to the bishop's advantage increasing over time. In general, bishops have relatively higher value in an open game and knights have relatively higher value in a closed game.

Traditional chess theory espoused by masters such as Wilhelm Steinitz and Siegbert Tarrasch puts more value on the bishop than the knight. In contrast, the hypermodern school favored the knight over the bishop. Modern theory is that it depends on the position, but that there are more positions where the bishop is better than where the knight is better.[29]

Occasions when a knight can be worth more than a bishop are frequent, so this exchange is not necessarily made at every opportunity to do so.

Black to move
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Two bishops and two pawns in return is often more than sufficient compensation for the loss of the exchange.

Many of the Classicists of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century claimed that two bishops versus rook and knight were equivalent. Today, the view is that a pair of bishops shouldn't be underestimated, but the rook and knight are still superior. A pair of active bishops is frequently adequate compensation for a pawn - or even the exchange in a middlegame position. Adding the better cooperation of the rook with the bishops, many Soviet theoreticians believed that, in active positions, rook and two bishops outperform two rooks and a knight. The modern consensus is that the side with the two bishops need at least a pawn when facing rook and knight, even then the side with the two bishops is underdog. William Steinitz reckoned that often two bishops and two pawns are superior against rook and knight.

A rook and bishop usually work better together than a rook and knight in the endgame.[30][31] José Raúl Capablanca stated that a queen and knight work better together than a queen and bishop in the endgame.[32] More recently, John Watson has stated that from his study of this endgame that an unusually large proportion of queen and knight versus queen and bishop endings are drawn, and that most decisive games are characterized by the winning side having one or more obvious advantages (for example, having a knight against a bad bishop in a closed position, or having a bishop in a position with pawns on both sides of the board, particularly if the knight has no natural outpost). Watson states that positions in this endgame in general "are very volatile, and often the winning side is simply the one who starts out being able to win material or launch an attack on the opposing king".[33]Glenn Flear agrees with that assessment for endgames. He could not find an endgame by Capablanca that supported his statement. The statistics for queen and bishop versus queen and knight endgames are about even. Most decisive games were won because of a significant advantage from the middlegame and only a limited number of positions show an inherent superiority for one over the other.[34]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ (Hooper & Whyld 1992, p. 130)
  2. ^ (Soltis 2004:110)
  3. ^ (Soltis 2004:134)
  4. ^ (Purdy 2003:146–52)
  5. ^ (Mednis 1978:120)
  6. ^ (Mednis 1987:107)
  7. ^ (Euwe & Kramer 1994:38)
  8. ^ (Soltis 2004:110)
  9. ^ (Berliner 1999:14)
  10. ^ (Soltis 2004:110)
  11. ^ (Nunn 2002:9, 31)
  12. ^ (Müller & Lamprecht 2001:260–63)
  13. ^ (Müller & Lamprecht 2001:274–79)
  14. ^ (Müller & Lamprecht 2001:256–91)
  15. ^ (Fine & Benko 2003:478–79)
  16. ^ (Fine & Benko 2003:478ff)
  17. ^ "A Yurgis vs. Botvinnik, 1931". Chessgames.com.
  18. ^ (Soltis 2004:115)
  19. ^ "Ivan Sokolov vs. Vladimir Kramnik (2004)". Chessgames.com.
  20. ^ (Soltis 2004:110)
  21. ^ "Reshevsky vs. Petrosian, 1953". from the original on 2009-12-01. Retrieved 2009-04-26.
  22. ^ (Kasparov 2004:14)
  23. ^ "Tigran V Petrosian vs. Boris Spassky (1966)". Chessgames.com.
  24. ^ (Kasparov 2004:72–74)
  25. ^ "Garry Kasparov vs. Alexey Shirov (1994)". Chessgames.com.
  26. ^ (Nunn 2001:149–58)
  27. ^ (Soltis 2004:169)
  28. ^ (Benko 2007:192, 199, 216)
  29. ^ (Mayer 1997:7)
  30. ^ (Mayer 1997:201–8)
  31. ^ (Beliavsky & Mikhalchishin 2000:141)
  32. ^ (Mayer 1997:209–18)
  33. ^ (Watson 1998:73)
  34. ^ (Flear 2007:422)

Bibliography edit

Further reading edit

  • Peter Wells, "The Exchange Sacrifice Revisited – Part 1", ChessBase Magazine, #111, April 2006, pp. 18–24.

exchange, chess, this, article, about, specific, exchange, minor, piece, rook, general, concept, exchanging, pieces, chess, exchange, chess, chess, exchange, material, difference, rook, minor, piece, bishop, knight, having, rook, minor, piece, generally, advan. This article is about the specific exchange of a minor piece for a rook For the general concept of exchanging pieces in chess see Exchange chess In chess the exchange is the material difference of a rook for a minor piece i e a bishop or knight Having a rook for a minor piece is generally advantageous since the rook is usually more valuable A player who has a rook for a minor piece is said to be up the exchange and the other player is down the exchange A player who wins a rook for a minor piece is said to have won the exchange while the other player has lost the exchange The opposing captures often happen on consecutive moves but this is not strictly necessary Although it is generally detrimental to lose the exchange one may occasionally find reason to purposely do so the result is an exchange sacrifice The exchange differs from the more general exchange or an exchange which refers to the loss and subsequent gain of arbitrary pieces for example to exchange queens would mean that each side s queen is captured 1 The minor exchange is the exchange of a bishop for a knight This term is rarely used Contents 1 Value of the exchange 2 In the endgame 3 Exchange sacrifice 3 1 Sokolov vs Kramnik 3 2 Reshevsky vs Petrosian 3 3 Petrosian vs Spassky 3 4 Kasparov vs Shirov 4 Minor exchange 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Bibliography 7 Further readingThis article uses algebraic notation to describe chess moves Value of the exchange editFurther information Chess piece relative value The value of the exchange i e the difference between a rook and a minor piece has been considered for decades Siegbert Tarrasch put its value as 1 pawns in the endgame but not for the opening or the first part of the middlegame That is widely accepted today but Jacob Sarratt Howard Staunton and Jose Capablanca felt that the exchange was worth two pawns Tigran Petrosian thought that one pawn was the right value Wilhelm Steinitz said that a rook is slightly better than a knight and two pawns but slightly worse than a bishop and two pawns 2 Cecil Purdy said that the value depends on the total number of pawns on the board The reason is that when there are many pawns the rooks will have limited mobility because there will not be open files The exchange is barely worth 1 points when there are 14 or more pawns on the board Only when there are ten or fewer pawns may the exchange be worth 2 points 3 Purdy gave the value as 1 points in the opening and increasing to 2 points in the endgame In the middlegame the value would be closer to 1 than to 2 4 Edmar Mednis gave the value as 1 in the endgame 5 6 Max Euwe put the value at 1 in the middlegame and said that two pawns are more than sufficient compensation for the exchange 7 Larry Kaufman s computer research puts the value as 1 pawns but only 1 pawns if the player with the minor piece has the bishop pair 8 Hans Berliner puts the difference between a rook and knight as 1 9 pawns and the difference between a rook and a bishop as 1 77 pawns 9 In practice one pawn may be sufficient compensation for the loss of the exchange whereas two pawns almost always is 10 In the endgame editIn the middlegame the advantage of an exchange is usually enough to win the game if the side with the rook has one or more pawns In an endgame without pawns the advantage of the exchange is normally not enough to win see pawnless chess endgame The most common exceptions when there are no pawns are 1 a rook versus a bishop in which the defending king is trapped in a corner of the same color as his bishop 2 a knight separated from its king that may be cornered and lost and 3 the king and knight are poorly placed 11 In the endgame of a rook and a pawn versus a knight and a pawn if the pawns are passed the rook is much stronger and should win If the pawns are not passed the side with knight has good drawing chances if its pieces are well placed 12 In the endgame of a rook and a pawn versus a bishop and pawn if the pawns are on the same file the bishop has good chances to draw if the pawns are blocked and the opposing pawn is on a square the bishop can attack otherwise the rook usually wins If the pawns are passed the rook normally wins If the pawns are not passed and are on adjacent files it is difficult to assess but the bishop may be able to draw 13 Adams vs Fine 1940abcdefgh8 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 877665544332211abcdefghBlack to move wins In an endgame with more pawns on the board i e a rook and pawns versus a minor piece with the same number of pawns the rook usually wins 14 This position is typical The superior side should remember these things the main idea is to get the king through to capture opposing pawns force as many opposing pawns as possible onto the same color square as the bishop some pawn exchanges may be necessary to open files but keep pawns on both sides of the board try to keep the position unbalanced A passed pawn almost immediately becomes a winning advantage 15 If the minor piece has an extra pawn i e one pawn for the exchange the rook should win but with difficulty If the minor piece has two extra pawns the endgame should be a draw 16 Exchange sacrifice editAn exchange sacrifice occurs when one player gives up a rook for a minor piece It is often used to destroy the enemy pawn structure as in several variations of the Sicilian Defence where Black captures a knight on c3 with a rook to establish a minor piece on a strong square often threatening the enemy king to improve one s own pawn structure creating for example connected passed pawns such as in A Yurgis Botvinnik 1931 17 or to gain time for development The exchange sacrifice contrasts with other sacrifices in that during the early middle to middle game the board is sufficiently crowded to where the rook is not as effective as an active knight or a good bishop this is why such exchange sacrifices happen usually from moves 20 to 30 and rarely occur in the later moves When they do occur in the endgame it is usually to create and promote a passed pawn 18 Subsequently the relative importance of the pieces might be different from the standardized Chess piece relative value system and takes advantage of the fluctuating values of the pieces during the progression of the game The sacrifice might also be used to increase the influence of one s own minor pieces by eliminating opposition from their counterparts such as in the Petrosian versus Spassky game below where even a double exchange sacrifice was successful A common example of this idea is the elimination an opponent s bishop with the expectation that in doing so one s own bishop will increase in power from being unopposed on the color squares in which it resides There is often more dynamic play and positional considerations such as pawn structure or piece placement compared to sacrifices due to a mating attack or a pawn sacrifice to gain the initiative Sometimes the exchange can be sacrificed purely on long term positional objectives as frequently demonstrated by former world champion Tigran Petrosian Sokolov vs Kramnik edit Sokolov vs Kramnikabcdefgh8 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 877665544332211abcdefghPosition before 33 Rxc7 In this 2004 game 19 between Ivan Sokolov and World Champion Vladimir Kramnik White gave up the exchange for a pawn to create two strong connected passed pawns The game continued 33 Rxc7 Qxc7 34 Rxf6 Rxf6 35 Qxf6 Rf8and White won on move 41 20 Reshevsky vs Petrosian edit Reshevsky vs Petrosianabcdefgh8 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 877665544332211abcdefghPosition before 25 Re6 Tigran Petrosian the World Champion from 1963 to 1969 was well known for his especially creative use of this device He once responded only half jokingly when asked what was his favourite piece as saying The rook because I can sacrifice it for minor pieces citation needed In the game Reshevsky versus Petrosian at the 1953 Candidates Tournament in Zurich 21 he sacrificed the exchange on move 25 only for his opponent to sacrifice it in return on move 30 This game is perhaps the most famous and most frequently taught example of the exchange sacrifice There are no open files in this position for the rooks to exploit Black sacrificed the exchange with 25 Re6 With the rook not on e7 the black knight will be able to get to a strong outpost on d5 From there the knight will be attacking the pawn on c3 and if the white bishop on b2 does not move to d2 it will be of little use In addition it will be practically impossible to break Black s defense on the white squares The next few moves were 26 a4 Ne7 27 Bxe6 fxe6 28 Qf1 Nd5 29 Rf3 Bd3 30 Rxd3 cxd3The game was drawn on move 41 22 Petrosian vs Spassky edit Petrosian vs Spassky 1966 abcdefgh8 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 877665544332211abcdefghPosition after 20 Bh3 before 21 Ne3 abcdefgh8 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 877665544332211abcdefghPosition before 24 Rxf4 In the tenth game from the 1966 World Chess Championship between defending champion Tigran Petrosian and challenger Boris Spassky contained two exchange sacrifices by White 23 Black had just moved 20 Bh3 first diagram White responded with an exchange sacrifice 21 Ne3 White had no choice 21 Rf2 Rxf4 22 Rxf4 Qg5 etc The game continued 21 Bxf1 22 Rxf1 Ng6 23 Bg4 Nxf4 second diagram And now a second exchange sacrifice 24 Rxf4 Rxf4Black is helpless despite being two exchanges ahead White won back an exchange on move 29 On move 30 White forced the win of the other rook and the exchange of queens Black resigned because the position was a winning endgame for White two knights and five pawns versus one knight and four pawns 24 Petrosian won the match by one game to retain his title Kasparov vs Shirov edit Kasparov vs Shirovabcdefgh8 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 877665544332211abcdefghPosition before 17 Rxb7 In a 1994 game between World Champion Garry Kasparov and Alexei Shirov 25 White sacrificed a pure exchange rook for a bishop with the move 17 Rxb7 As compensation for the sacrifice Black became weak on the white squares which were dominated by White s bishop The exchange sacrifice also deprived Black of the bishop pair and his remaining bishop was a bad bishop During the game many spectating grandmasters were sceptical whether White s compensation was enough Black returned the exchange on move 28 making the material equal but White had a strong initiative Black missed a better 28th move after which White could have forced a draw but would have had no clear advantage White won the game on move 38 26 Minor exchange editThe minor exchange is the trade of the opponent s bishop for the player s knight or more recently the stronger minor piece for the weaker 27 Bobby Fischer used the term 28 but it is rarely used In most chess positions a bishop is worth slightly more than a knight because of its longer range of movement As a chess game progresses pawns tend to get traded removing support points from the knight and opening up lines for the bishop This generally leads to the bishop s advantage increasing over time In general bishops have relatively higher value in an open game and knights have relatively higher value in a closed game Traditional chess theory espoused by masters such as Wilhelm Steinitz and Siegbert Tarrasch puts more value on the bishop than the knight In contrast the hypermodern school favored the knight over the bishop Modern theory is that it depends on the position but that there are more positions where the bishop is better than where the knight is better 29 Occasions when a knight can be worth more than a bishop are frequent so this exchange is not necessarily made at every opportunity to do so Black to moveabcdefgh8 nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp nbsp 877665544332211abcdefghTwo bishops and two pawns in return is often more than sufficient compensation for the loss of the exchange Many of the Classicists of the late nineteenth and early twentieth century claimed that two bishops versus rook and knight were equivalent Today the view is that a pair of bishops shouldn t be underestimated but the rook and knight are still superior A pair of active bishops is frequently adequate compensation for a pawn or even the exchange in a middlegame position Adding the better cooperation of the rook with the bishops many Soviet theoreticians believed that in active positions rook and two bishops outperform two rooks and a knight The modern consensus is that the side with the two bishops need at least a pawn when facing rook and knight even then the side with the two bishops is underdog William Steinitz reckoned that often two bishops and two pawns are superior against rook and knight A rook and bishop usually work better together than a rook and knight in the endgame 30 31 Jose Raul Capablanca stated that a queen and knight work better together than a queen and bishop in the endgame 32 More recently John Watson has stated that from his study of this endgame that an unusually large proportion of queen and knight versus queen and bishop endings are drawn and that most decisive games are characterized by the winning side having one or more obvious advantages for example having a knight against a bad bishop in a closed position or having a bishop in a position with pawns on both sides of the board particularly if the knight has no natural outpost Watson states that positions in this endgame in general are very volatile and often the winning side is simply the one who starts out being able to win material or launch an attack on the opposing king 33 Glenn Flear agrees with that assessment for endgames He could not find an endgame by Capablanca that supported his statement The statistics for queen and bishop versus queen and knight endgames are about even Most decisive games were won because of a significant advantage from the middlegame and only a limited number of positions show an inherent superiority for one over the other 34 See also editChess piece relative value Chess strategy Chess tactics Chess theory Exchange chess References edit Hooper amp Whyld 1992 p 130 Soltis 2004 110 Soltis 2004 134 Purdy 2003 146 52 Mednis 1978 120 Mednis 1987 107 Euwe amp Kramer 1994 38 Soltis 2004 110 Berliner 1999 14 Soltis 2004 110 Nunn 2002 9 31 Muller amp Lamprecht 2001 260 63 Muller amp Lamprecht 2001 274 79 Muller amp Lamprecht 2001 256 91 Fine amp Benko 2003 478 79 Fine amp Benko 2003 478ff A Yurgis vs Botvinnik 1931 Chessgames com Soltis 2004 115 Ivan Sokolov vs Vladimir Kramnik 2004 Chessgames com Soltis 2004 110 Reshevsky vs Petrosian 1953 Archived from the original on 2009 12 01 Retrieved 2009 04 26 Kasparov 2004 14 Tigran V Petrosian vs Boris Spassky 1966 Chessgames com Kasparov 2004 72 74 Garry Kasparov vs Alexey Shirov 1994 Chessgames com Nunn 2001 149 58 Soltis 2004 169 Benko 2007 192 199 216 Mayer 1997 7 Mayer 1997 201 8 Beliavsky amp Mikhalchishin 2000 141 Mayer 1997 209 18 Watson 1998 73 Flear 2007 422 Bibliography edit Beliavsky Alexander Mikhalchishin Adrian 2000 Winning Endgame Strategy Batsford ISBN 0 7134 8446 2 Benko Pal 2007 Pal Benko s Endgame Laboratory Ishi Press ISBN 978 0 923891 88 6 Berliner Hans 1999 The System A World Champion s Approach to Chess Gambit Publications ISBN 1 901983 10 2 Euwe Max Kramer Hans 1994 The Middlegame Book One Static Features Hays ISBN 978 1 880673 95 9 Fine Reuben Benko Pal 2003 Basic Chess Endings 1941 McKay ISBN 0 8129 3493 8 Flear Glenn 2007 Practical Endgame Play beyond the basics the definitive guide to the endgames that really matter Everyman Chess ISBN 978 1 85744 555 8 Golombek Harry 1977 Golombek s Encyclopedia of Chess Crown Publishing ISBN 0 517 53146 1 Hooper David Whyld Kenneth 1992 The Oxford Companion to Chess 2nd ed Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 866164 9 Kasparov Garry 2004 My Great Predecessors Part III Everyman Chess ISBN 978 1 85744 371 4 Mayer Steve 1997 Bishop versus Knight The Verdict Batsford ISBN 1 879479 73 7 Mednis Edmar 1978 Practical Endgame Lessons McKay ISBN 0 67914 102 2 Mednis Edmar 1987 Questions and Answers on Practical Endgame Play Chess Enterprises ISBN 0 931462 69 X Muller Karsten Lamprecht Frank 2001 Fundamental Chess Endings Gambit Publications ISBN 1 901983 53 6 Nunn John 2001 Understanding Chess Move by Move Gambit Publications ISBN 978 1 901983 41 8 Nunn John 2002 Secrets of Pawnless Endings 2nd ed Gambit Publications ISBN 1 901983 65 X Purdy C J S 2003 C J S Purdy on the Endgame Thinker s Press ISBN 978 1 888710 03 8 Soltis Andy 2004 Rethinking the Chess Pieces Batsford ISBN 0 7134 8904 9 Page 110 24 is about the exchange Watson John 1998 Modern Chess Strategy Advances Since Nimzowitsch Gambit Publications ISBN 1 901983 07 2Further reading editPeter Wells The Exchange Sacrifice Revisited Part 1 ChessBase Magazine 111 April 2006 pp 18 24 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title The exchange chess amp oldid 1179746132, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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