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According to Michael McDowell, in 1902 the chess columnist of the English newspaper "Southern Weekly News" invited suggestions for a term to replace the cumbersome "pure and economical mate". H.D'O. Bernard came up with "model mate" and the term caught on throughout Britain.
It is certainly not a good idea to give a helpmate model mate as example -- for just that reason. An example should be selected to help readers.
213.67.148.6 (
talk)
18:52, 28 July 2008 (UTC)reply
I see your point, but as nowadays model mates are most usually used in helpmates and selfmates and helpmates are currently the most popular genre, helpmate example is not a bad idea in my view. Moreover, there are no technical pieces in this case, thereby emphasizing the visual impact of model mate.
I am deleting the recent addition suggesting that the checkmate appearing in the
famous game played by
Paul Morphy was model. In fact it wasn't model mate as f8 was not accessible to bK in the final position due to two reasons: block by bishop as well as attack by the mating wR. --
Ruziklan (
talk)
16:40, 25 May 2009 (UTC)reply
You are correct. At the same time, the Opera game's final position DOES satisfy the definition of an
economical mate, a related concept. Therefore, I've added sourced language at the Opera game's article itself, identifying its final position as an economical mate but not as a pure mate (much less a model mate or an ideal mate), validating your remark here.
MinnesotanUser (
talk)
01:55, 22 October 2022 (UTC)reply
Rook and King Mate?
Is it necessary for the mated king to be off the edge of the board?
If not, I think model mates are actually pretty common.
In the common rook and king mate, the rook checks the king and control the two squares along the edge of the board that it is on, while the king guards the three squares that the king could escape to. That seems like a model mate to me.
Either the definition needs to state that the king cannot be on the edge of the board, or the statement that it is extremely rare in practical play needs to be revised. — Preceding
unsigned comment added by
2601:546:C300:8FF0:2C75:B4A3:820A:150B (
talk)
19:31, 20 March 2019 (UTC)reply