How does white checkmate?
Thanks guys for the insight. I am white in this example and offered my opponent a draw after about 40 moves with the current setup. He still declined and insisted he was positive he could win even if I didn't make any blunders. He wants to continue the match until he wins or finds out he can't win. This was our eighth match, with me leading 6-1. LOL, as you can see he really wanted the win and not a draw.
Additionally, I appreciated the attempt with the macro diagram, but it contained several blunders essentially handing the match over to black.
Thanks guys for the insight. I am white in this example and offered my opponent a draw after about 40 moves with the current setup. He still declined and insisted he was positive he could win even if I didn't make any blunders. He wants to continue the match until he wins or finds out he can't win. This was our eighth match, with me leading 6-1. LOL, as you can see he really wanted the win and not a draw.
Additionally, I appreciated the attempt with the macro diagram, but it contained several blunders essentially handing the match over to black.
Ahh, I made a few blunders? I'm pretty sure both sides played somewhat solidly in my diagram. Could you point out where white could have played better? I'll see if I can't clear up why I moved the way I did XD
I realize that, but relocating to the back rank is white's only move in the situation I presented. If white moves anywhere else, he's one to two moves from losing his rook no matter what. The back-rank move actually prolongs death for an extra turn...
Barring any blunders, how does a King and Queen checkmate a King and Rook in this situation? Here's the board with white to move:
White is only playing for the draw, but I am curious as to whether or not black can win this game outright. Thanks for the help!