Outflanking
Learn how to outflank the opposing king — approaching from the side when direct opposition fails — to win a King and Pawn endgame.
Experimentar lição interativaIntrodução
Conteúdo da lição
The outflanking move! Instead of heading straight toward the pawns (Ke4 draws), White's king goes sideways to c5. This is the key idea: when the direct path is blocked by opposition, go around. From c5, the king threatens to march up the queenside (Kb6) where Black's king cannot maintain the blockade. Only Kc5 wins — every other move draws.
Lances alternativos
Black moves toward the center, trying to stay near the pawns. This is the best defense — keeping the king close to the critical e-file where the pawns are locked.
White continues the outflanking maneuver, pushing further up the queenside. The king on b6 is now on the 6th rank — a crucial achievement in King and Pawn endgames. From here, White can swing back toward the center with decisive effect.
Lances alternativos
Black retreats to the back rank. The king on d8 tries to cover the c-file approach, but White's king is already too far advanced on the queenside.
Now the king swings back toward the center from the 6th rank. This is the payoff of outflanking — the king has bypassed Black's defense and reached c6, controlling the critical d7 square. The outflanking maneuver (Kc5-Kb6-Kc6) has effectively gone around the black king.
Black steps to e7, the best defense. The king tries to stay near the e6 pawn and prevent White from approaching it.
White pushes to the 7th rank, getting behind the black king. This is a dominant position — the white king on c7 controls d8, d7, and d6, severely restricting Black's options.
Black retreats to the back rank. The king is running out of safe squares as White's king dominates the queenside and center.
The king returns to the center, now on the 6th rank next to the pawn. This is the ideal position — the king is on a key square (d6 for the e5 pawn), guaranteeing that the pawn will eventually promote. The outflanking maneuver has achieved its goal.
Black flees to f7, trying to stay near the e6 pawn. But White's king on d6 is perfectly placed to attack the pawn from the side.
White advances to d7, keeping pressure on the e6 pawn and pushing Black's king further away. The king on d7 controls e6, e8, and c8 — Black is being squeezed.
Black retreats to the corner. The king on g8 can no longer defend the e6 pawn — White will capture it next move.
The decisive capture! White wins the e6 pawn, creating a passed pawn on e5 with the king perfectly positioned ahead of it on the 6th rank. This is now a won King and Pawn vs King ending — the king on the 6th rank ahead of the pawn guarantees promotion.
Black stays near the promotion square e8, trying to block. But White's king on e6 controls it, and the pawn will march forward with full support.
White's king moves to d7, clearing the e-file for the pawn while controlling e8. The technique is textbook: king ahead of the pawn, escorting it to promotion.
Black's king moves away, unable to contest the promotion path. The e-file is clear for the pawn.
The pawn advances to e6. With the king on d7 controlling e8, the pawn marches forward safely. Two squares to promotion.
Black approaches the pawn from the side, but it's too late. The white king on d7 protects both the pawn and the promotion square.
The pawn reaches the 7th rank — one square from promotion. The king on d7 directly guards e8. Nothing can stop the pawn.
Black gives up, unable to prevent promotion. The king moves away from the promotion square.
Promotion with check! The pawn becomes a queen, delivering check. From here, King and Queen vs King is a basic checkmate covered in another lesson. The entire victory was made possible by outflanking — White's king went Kc5-Kb6-Kc6-Kc7, approaching from the queenside to bypass Black's defense. The direct approach (Ke4) would have drawn.
Pontos-chave
- When direct opposition blocks your path, go around — outflank from the side
- The outflanking king aims to reach the 6th rank, where it controls the key squares for promotion
- After outflanking, swing back toward the center to attack the opponent's weaknesses
- Outflanking works because the defending king cannot guard both sides simultaneously
- In locked pawn positions, king activity is everything — the king that penetrates first wins