Chess - Weakening Your Castled Position
by:
James Wilson
It stands to reason that leaving the King in the center often means exposing the King
to a dangerous, very possibly fatal, attack. This leads us to the conclusion that castling
is the best way to safeguard the King.
The castled position, then, is the King's safeguard. But, though the King is better
protected when castled than when in the center, that does not mean that castling alone
assures you complete immunity from attack. If your opponent has an overwhelmingly superior
development, he can concentrate more forces for attack than you can supply for defense.
Sometimes brilliant sacrifices are made to smash down a defender's barriers.
But we are now concerned mainly with Pawn weaknesses in the castled position. In the case
of castling on the King-side, three Pawns are involved: the King Rook Pawn, the King
Knight Pawn, and the King Bishop Pawn. As long as all three Pawns are still on their
original squares, the castled position remains strong and difficult to take by storm.
Yet once a single member of the trio advances, the defender is headed for trouble. For
example, suppose the King Knight Pawn advances one square. Then immediately the squares it
formerly protected--KR3 and KB3--must receive protection from pieces. Worse yet, these
squares become targets for enemy occupation. Let a hostile Queen and Knight, or Queen and
Bishop, occupy these squares, and you will see the castled position totter and crumble.
The advance of the King Rook Pawn is also dangerously weakening. Very often the attacker
is able to sacrifice a piece for the Pawn on KR3, in this way ripping up the castled
position and leaving it wide open for large-scale invasion. The advance of the King Bishop
Pawn creates similar problems, and very often opens up a vital diagonal for the hostile
Bishop.
Another serious consequence of any of these Pawn advances is that they enable the attacker
to open lines by advancing his own Pawns and forcing Pawn exchanges. Thus, after Blacks
plays . . . P--KN3, White may reply P--KR4 and P--KR5, exchanging Pawns and thus opening
the King Rook file for attack. Or, after White plays P--KR3, Black may react with . . .
P--KN4 and . . . P--KN5, likewise obtaining an open file for attack.
Once the attacker succeeds in forcing open a line leading to the castled position, he has
enormously improved his prospects of taking the hostile King by storm. As long as the
Pawns remain on their original squares, they form a road block for the attacking pieces.
After one of the Pawns has advanced, the barrier is much more likely to be breached --by
exchanges, by sacrifices, by violent line-opening.
To sum up: you have seen that Pawn advances in front of the castled King can be
weakening--even dangerous. You should therefore avoid such advances. Sometimes you are
forced to make such advances--but at least you can avoid making them needlessly. Avoid
such Pawn moves if it is at all possible to avoid them!
Queen-side castling, which we rarely encounter, presents difficulties for the
inexperienced player. The castled King has a wider area to guard than on the King-side.
Hence the temptation to meet threats with Pawn advances is much stronger in the case of
Queen-side castling. This makes it more likely for the defense on this broader front to be
upset by violent sacrifices.
Want tons of proven chess tips, techniques & tactics that you can start using
today?...
Grab Your Copy of "Chess Success Secrets" Now - visit
www.Chess-Success.com
About The Author
James Wilson is the publisher of "Chess Success Secrets" - a brand new guide
designed to help chess enthusiasts take their game to the next level. "Chess Success
Secrets" reveals tons of proven chess tips & strategies that you can implement
today to start winning more games! Visit www.Chess-Success.com for more information.
|
This article was posted on February 08, 2006