Today’s winning chess move involves a way to collect your opponent’s queen on just the fifth move! Unfortunately, you are not likely to find an opponent falling for this famous trap in the Damiano Variation of Petrov’s Defense. Still, as the great California chess ambassador George Koltanowski shows us, it’s an opening trap worth knowing. In fact, this trap is so easy to use, you can play it blindfolded just like Grandmaster George Koltanowski did in his 1960 blindfold exhibition given at the Mechanics’ Institute in San Francisco.

George Koltanowski playing chess while blindfolded.

On 4 December 1960, in San Francisco, California, Koltanowski played 56 consecutive games blindfolded at a rate of ten seconds per move. George went undefeated with a score of fifty wins and six draws. The position below comes from his blindfold victory over Karl Diller. Mr. Diller (Black) has just played 4… Nd6. Koltanowski’s fifth move was a crushing blow which caused Karl Diller to resign immediately. What was George Koltanowski’s (White’s) winning move?

What is white’s winning move (Koltanowski – Diller, San Francisco, 1960)?



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