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Na1+ Kc3
Rf1
Na1+ bxa1
Rxa1
This way im up a rook and can now win the game..
hi
My name is Manny Backus.
I’m known in investment circles as the “Stock Trading Whiz Kid,” or “the untutored prodigy of stock investing” — because I’m only 26 years old, and yet I’ve created a powerful Model Portfolio for swing traders called Portfolio Crafter, whose returns are usually 12 to 13 times higher than those achieved by the most seasoned trading professionals and investment funds.
What not many people know is that I’ve been a highly skilled chess player since childhood. At one point, I was rigorously trained to become a professional chess player, partly thanks to my certified genius I.Q. of 157.
But during my teenage years, my passion for the game of chess took a back seat to my obsession with online trading. After participating in several stock-picking competitions, I noticed certain people continued beating the market consistently.
There were only a handful of these super traders, but that reaffirmed my belief there must exist some sort of secret technique to earn money consistently in the stock market.
That’s when I decided to parlay the tactical ability, the power to focus, and the schematic thinking that I learned from playing chess into the skill of picking winning stocks.
You see, chess is part tactics, and part ability to focus and remain unemotional. In chess, the player is always trying to challenge himself to try to guess the next move on the board. In stock trading, the trader is always trying to challenge himself to try to predict the next move of a stock. They’re very similar disciplines.
Chess-playing is also based on war. You have to kill or be killed. A “killer move” is one wherein you have to kill on the first move. I used this “killer move” technique to devise the quickest way to make a killing with stocks that are getting ready to skyrocket or plummet. This resulted in the creation of my ‘shortcut’ methodology, which I’m about to tell you about in more detail.
Win for white 1. Na1+ if bxa1 Rxa1 and there is no defense for the f pawn. If Kb3 2. Rb1 creates an impasse in the corner and the white king should not take the the f pawn. It becomes a battle for the e pawn is between the kings. The a pawn can become the wild card promoting to victory.
The white knight moves to A-1. This results in the black king having only one place to move: square C-3. The white rook moves from E-1 to C-1. Checkmate.
Na1+ is the answer. Black is forced to take the knight and the resulting R+B vs B ending is a comfortable win.
Paulie
Na1+ is the answer. Black will have to take the Knight now or later and White will win the ensuing R+B vs B ending. e.g.
Na1+ bxa1
Rxa1 Be1
Ke2 Kb2
Rd1 Kxa2
Bxf2 etc.
I think.
1. Na1+ should be enough.