Fortress (chess) - Opposite-colored Bishops

Opposite-colored Bishops

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8 8
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1 1
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Drawing fortress with bishops on opposite colors, Black to move.

In endings with bishops of opposite colors (i.e. where one player has a bishop that moves on light squares, while the other player's bishop moves on dark squares), it is often possible to establish a fortress, and thus hold a draw, when one player is one, two, or occasionally even three pawns behind. A typical example is seen in the diagram at right. White, although three pawns behind, has established a drawing fortress, since Black has no way to contest White's stranglehold over the light squares. White simply keeps his bishop on the h3 to c8 diagonal (Dvoretsky 2006:92).

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