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Zwischenzug

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(Redirected from Intermezzo (chess)) Chess tactic This article is about the move interposition tactic. For the disadvantageous requirement to move, see Zugzwang.

The zwischenzug (German: pronounced [ˈtsvɪʃənˌtsuːk], "intermediate move"; also called an in-between move) is a chess tactic in which a player, instead of playing the expected move (commonly a recapture), first interposes another move posing an immediate threat that the opponent must answer, and only then plays the expected move. It is a move that has a high degree of "initiative". Ideally, the zwischenzug changes the situation to the player's advantage, such as by gaining material or avoiding what would otherwise be a strong continuation for the opponent.

Such a move is also called an intermezzo (lit. 'intermediate move') or in-between move. When the intermediate move is a check, it is sometimes called an in-between check, zwischenschach, or zwischen-check.

As with any fairly common chess tactic, it is impossible to pinpoint when the first zwischenzug was played. Three early examples are Lichtenhein–Morphy, New York 1857; RosenthalDe Vere, Paris 1867; and TartakowerJosé Raúl Capablanca, New York 1924. The first known use of the term zwischenzug, however, did not occur until 1933, when the prolific American chess authors Fred Reinfeld and Irving Chernev used it in their book Chess Strategy and Tactics.

This article uses algebraic notation to describe chess moves.

History

Lichtenhein vs. Morphy, 1857
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8a8 black rookd8 black queene8 black kingh8 black rooka7 black pawnc7 black pawnd7 black bishopf7 black pawng7 black pawnh7 black pawnc6 black pawnc5 black bishopd5 black pawne5 white pawne4 white bishopa2 white pawnb2 white pawnc2 white pawnf2 white pawng2 white pawnh2 white pawna1 white rookb1 white knightc1 white bishopd1 white queene1 white kingh1 white rook8
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Position after 10.Bxe4

No one knows when the first zwischenzug was played, but it was evident long before the term itself existed. One early example was Lichtenhein–Morphy, New York 1857. In the diagram, White has just captured Black's knight on e4 and surely expected the recapture 10...dxe4 11.0-0, when White's king is safe and he has the better pawn structure. Morphy, the strongest player of the day, instead played the zwischenzug 10...Qh4! with the threat 11...Qxf2#, so White cannot save the bishop (11.Bf3?? Qxf2#). Moreover, 11.0-0 would be met by 11...Qxe4 12.Nc3 Qg6 (not 12...Qh4? 13.Nxd5!), when "Black has the two bishops and a compact position without serious weakness". Instead, White correctly played 11.Qe2 (forcing Black to weaken his pawns), but then erred with 11...dxe4 12.Be3? (after 12.0-0!, Black has only a slight advantage) Bg4! 13.Qc4? Bxe3!! and Morphy went on to win a brilliancy.

Rosenthal vs. De Vere, 1867
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8c8 black rookf8 black rookg8 black kinga7 black pawnb7 black pawnd7 black bishopf7 black pawng7 black pawnh7 black pawnb6 black queene6 black pawnd5 black pawne5 white pawnb4 white bishopf4 white pawng4 black knightd3 white bishopf3 white knighta2 white pawne2 white queeng2 white pawnh2 white pawna1 white rookb1 white knighte1 white kingf1 white rook8
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Position after 16.Bxb4

Rosenthal–De Vere, Paris 1867, is another 19th-century example of a zwischenzug. De Vere (Black) had earlier sacrificed a piece for two pawns. White has just played 16.Bxb4. Instead of recapturing with 16...Qxb4+, De Vere first played the zwischenzug (specifically, a zwischenschach) 16...Rc1+! After 17.Kd2 Rxf1 18.Qxf1 Qxb4+ 19.Ke2 Qxf4 20.Qg1 Nxe5, De Vere's zwischenzug had netted him two more pawns, leaving him with the material advantage of four pawns for a knight. White resigned after twelve more moves.

Tartakower vs. Capablanca, 1924
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8a8 black rookb8 white bishopc8 black bishopd8 black queene8 black kingh8 black rooka7 black pawnb7 black pawnf7 black pawng7 black pawnh7 black pawnf6 black knightb4 black bishopc4 black pawnd4 white pawna2 white pawnb2 white pawne2 white bishopg2 white pawnh2 white pawna1 white rookb1 white knightd1 white queenf1 white kingg1 white knighth1 white rook8
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Position after 9.Bxb8

Another prominent example that brought the concept of zwischenzug, albeit not the term itself, to public attention was Tartakower–Capablanca, New York 1924. This was a game won by the reigning World Champion at one of the strongest tournaments of the early 20th century. In the position in the diagram, Tartakower (White) has just played 9.Bxb8, thinking he has caught Capablanca in a trap: if 9...Rxb8, 10.Qa4+ and 11.Qxb4 wins a bishop. However, Capablanca sprang the zwischenzug 9...Nd5!, protecting his bishop and also threatening 10...Ne3+, forking White's king and queen. After Tartakower's 10.Kf2 Rxb8, Capablanca had regained his piece and went on to win in 20 more moves. Note that after 10.Bf4 (instead of 10.Kf2), Black would not play 10...Nxf4??, which would still allow 11.Qa4+, winning a piece. Instead, after 10.Bf4 Black would play a second zwischenzug, 10...Qf6!, attacking the bishop again, and also renewing the threat of 11...Ne3+. After a move like 11.Qc1, Black could either take the bishop or consider yet a third zwischenzug with 11...Bd6.

Alekhine, Reinfeld, and Tartakower and du Mont do not call 9...Nd5! a "zwischenzug" in their books (originally published in 1925, 1942, and 1952, respectively). Instead, they refer to it as, respectively, "a bit of finesse", a "sly interpolation", and an "intermediary manoeuvre".

Euwe vs. Breyer, 1921
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8c8 black kingd8 white bishopa7 black pawnc7 black pawnh7 black pawng6 black rooke5 black pawnf5 black knightg4 black knightc3 white knighta2 white pawnb2 white pawnc2 white pawng2 white pawnh2 white pawnf1 white rookh1 white king8
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Position after 27.Bxd8

The earliest known use of the term zwischenzug did not occur until after all of these games. According to chess historian Edward Winter, the first known use was in 1933. Fred Reinfeld and Irving Chernev, annotating the game Max EuweGyula Breyer, Vienna 1921, called Breyer's 27th move, 27...Nge3!, "an important Zwischenzug". The game can be played over here.

Additional examples

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8g8 black kingb7 black queenf7 black pawng7 black pawng6 black pawna5 black pawnh5 black rookd4 white queenh4 white rookg3 black rookh3 white pawng2 white pawnf1 white bishopg1 white king8
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Black to move plays 1...Rxh4?

The diagram shows another example. Black, on move, plays

 1... Rxh4?

expecting White to play 2.Qxh4, when Black retains a material advantage. However, White has a zwischenzug:

 2. Qd8+!

which is followed by

 2... Kh7
 3. Qxh4+ Kg8
 4. Qxg3

and White has won a rook, leaving him with a winning position.

Mieses vs. Reshevsky

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8e8 black rookg8 black kinga7 black pawnb7 black pawnf7 black pawng7 black bishoph7 black pawng6 black pawnb5 white pawnd5 black queena4 white pawnc4 black pawnc3 white pawnf3 white knightg3 white pawnc2 white queenf2 white pawnh2 white pawnc1 white rookg1 white king8
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Position before 29.Nd4

A zwischenzug occurred in MiesesReshevsky, Margate 1935. From the position in the diagram, play continued:

 29. Nd4 Bxd4
 30. cxd4

White must have expected 30...Qxd4 31.Qxc4 Re1+ and then 32.Kg2 gets him out of trouble, but Black has a zwischenzug:

 30... Re4!

Making a double attack on the d-pawn and preventing the capture of his own pawn. Now if 31.Qxc4, 31...Re1+ forces 32.Rxe1 and White loses his queen.

L. Steiner vs. Helling

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8a8 black rookc8 black bishopf8 black rookg8 black kingc7 black pawnf7 black pawng7 black pawnh7 black pawna6 black pawnd6 black bishopb5 black pawnd4 white pawnh4 black queenb3 white bishopc3 white pawnf3 white queenh3 white pawna2 white pawnb2 white pawnf2 black knightg2 white pawna1 white rookb1 white knightc1 white bishope1 white rookg1 white king8
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Position after 15...Nxf2

L. Steiner–Helling, Berlin 1928, provides another example of the zwischenschach (in-between check). Black has just captured White's pawn on f2 with his knight (see diagram). White responded with

 16. Qxf2

expecting the skewer 16...Bg3??, which he would refute with 17.Qxf7+! Rxf7 18.Re8#. Instead, Black first played the zwischenschach

 16... Bh2+!

Now 17.Kxh2 Qxf2 loses White's queen. The game continued

 17.Kf1 Bg3!

Not seeing the point, White blithely continued with his plan:

 18. Qxf7+?? Rxf7+

Now White realized that he is in check (that was the point of 16...Bh2+!), so his intended 19.Re8# is illegal. The forced 19.Bxf7+ Kxf7 would leave Black with queen for rook, an easily winning material advantage, so White resigned.

Kerchev vs. Karastoichev

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8a8 black rookf8 black rookg8 black kinga7 black pawnb7 black pawnf7 black pawng7 black bishoph7 black pawnd6 black pawng6 black queend5 black pawnc4 white pawne4 black knightf4 white pawne3 white pawnf3 white rookh3 white pawna2 white pawnb2 white pawnc2 white queene2 white bishoph2 white kinga1 white rooke1 white bishop8
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Black to move

In the game Zlatozar Kerchev–Emil Stefanov Karastoichev, 1965 (diagram), Black moved

 1... Ng5

discovering an attack on White's queen.

 2. Qxg6

If White moves the queen to another square, Black's knight captures White's rook on f3, winning the exchange. Instead of immediately recapturing the queen, Black played

 2... Nxf3+

and White must get out of check. After

 3. Bxf3 hxg6

Black had won the exchange.

Carlsen vs. Anand

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8a8 black rookh8 black rooka7 black pawnd7 black bishope7 black kingg7 black pawnh7 black pawnb6 white pawnc6 black pawne6 black pawne4 black pawna3 white pawne3 white pawnf3 white bishopb2 white pawng2 white pawnh2 white pawnc1 white kingd1 white rookh1 white rook8
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Position after 20...fxe4

In game 5 of the 2013 World Chess Championship match, Carlsen had captured a bishop with 20.cxb6, and Anand maintained material balance by capturing a knight with 20...fxe4, also attacking White's bishop (see diagram). Instead of immediately taking the pawn with 21.Bxe4, which would have given Anand the opportunity to fix his queenside pawn weaknesses with 21...axb6, Carlsen played the zwischenzug

 21. b7

After the necessary

 21... Rab8
 22. Bxe4 Rxb7

Anand's a- and c-pawns remained isolated. Black's weaker pawn structure was an important factor to Carlsen's initiative in this first decisive game of the match.

See also

Notes

  1. (Hooper & Whyld 1992:460)
  2. (Golombek 1977:354)
  3. (Cox 2007:216)
  4. (Kasparov 2008:208)
  5. (Burgess 1997:494)
  6. (Horowitz & Reinfeld 1954:180–97)
  7. (Horowitz & Reinfeld 1954:183–85)
  8. (van Perlo 2006:479)
  9. (Mednis 1997:270)
  10. National Master Dennis Monokroussos observes that "just because authors didn't use the word 'zwischenzug' doesn't mean they didn't use the concept – perhaps they simply used 'in-between move' instead". Fred Reinfeld and the Zwischenzug Archived August 7, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  11. ^ "Lichtenhein vs. Morphy, New York 1857". Chessgames.com.
  12. ^ Lichtenhein–Morphy, First American Chess Congress, 1857
  13. (Reinfeld & Soltis 1974:53)
  14. Encyclopedia of Chess Openings, Volume C, Third Edition, Šahovski Informator, 1997, p. 301 n.72.
  15. (Réti 1976:32–36)
  16. (Reinfeld & Soltis 1974:51–54)
  17. "Rosenthal vs. De Vere, Paris 1867". Chessgames.com.
  18. (Hooper & Whyld 1992:107–8)
  19. "Tartakower vs. Capablanca, New York 1924". Chessgames.com.
  20. Chessmetrics ranks New York 1924 as the ninth strongest tournament between 1900 and 1930. Strongest Tournaments 1900–1930 Archived May 30, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  21. (Tartakower & du Mont 1975:295)
  22. (Alekhine 1961:208 note h)
  23. (Reinfeld 1974:230)
  24. (Alekhine 1961:208 note e)
  25. (Reinfeld 1974:230)
  26. (Tartakower & du Mont 1975:296)
  27. Edward Winter, Earliest Occurrences of Chess Terms. Retrieved on 2009-04-27.
  28. (Reinfeld & Chernev 1933:48)
  29. Tutorial
  30. "Mieses vs. Reshevsky, Margate 1935". Chessgames.com.
  31. (Chernev 1965:211)
  32. "L. Steiner vs. Helling, Berlin 1928". Chessgames.com.
  33. (Horowitz & Reinfeld 1954:178–80)
  34. (Golombek 1977:354)
  35. (Burgess 2000:47)

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