Lucena Position
Learn the most important rook endgame winning technique — building a bridge with the rook to escort the pawn to promotion.
Experimentar lição interativaIntrodução
Conteúdo da lição
The first step of the bridge! The rook moves to the 4th rank. This seemingly quiet move is the key to the entire Lucena technique. From e4, the rook serves two purposes: it can later shift to the b-file to block checks, and it can give a check to drive Black's king away. The rook on the 4th rank is far enough from the back rank to provide a useful interposition later, but close enough to remain active.
Lances alternativos
Black's best defense — the king stays near the pawn to prevent White from stepping aside. From d7, the Black king controls c8 and c7, keeping the White king trapped on b8. But White has a way to drive the king back.
Drive the king away! The rook swings to d4 with check, forcing Black's king to retreat. This is a critical intermediate step — by pushing the king back, White creates room to escape from b8. The further the king retreats, the less it can interfere with White's plan.
Black retreats to e6, staying as close as possible. This is the best defense — Ke7 and Kc6 lose faster. From e6, the king no longer controls c7 or c8, which means White's king can finally escape from b8.
The king escapes! With Black's king driven to e6, White steps to c7 — clearing the promotion square b8. The pawn can now promote once the king moves aside. But Black has a defensive resource: rook checks from the c-file.
Lances alternativos
The check from behind! This is Black's main defensive idea — the rook gives check along the c-file, trying to prevent the king from reaching a safe square. If White's king has nowhere to hide from the checks, the pawn can never promote. This is exactly why the bridge technique exists.
White marches the king toward the checking rook. This is counterintuitive but essential — the closer the king gets to the rook, the fewer checking squares remain. The king is heading down the board, and soon the rook on d4 will be able to interpose.
Lances alternativos
Black repositions the rook, preparing for further defensive moves. The rook retreats from the c-file since the White king has moved past it. Black's plan is to either attack the pawn from behind or keep giving checks.
The bridge is built! The rook moves to b4, completing the Lucena technique. From b4, the rook performs a dual role: it defends the b-file (protecting the pawn's advance) and it stands ready to block any lateral check on the 4th rank. If Black tries to give checks from the side, the rook on b4 interposes — this is the "bridge" that gives the technique its name.
Black sends the rook behind the pawn on b7, attacking it from the rear. This is the last practical try — if the pawn advances, the rook can capture it. But White's king and rook are perfectly coordinated to push the pawn through.
White's king steps to c6, clearing the path for the pawn. The king no longer blocks the b-file, and the rook on b4 guards against any interference. The pawn is ready to advance to b8.
Black plants the rook directly on b8, physically blocking the promotion square. This forces White to deal with the blockade before the pawn can promote.
The rook advances to b5, defending the pawn on b7 from behind while keeping the bridge structure intact. Now if Black's rook leaves b8, the pawn promotes immediately. Black is in a bind — the rook must stay on b8 but has no useful moves there.
Black moves the rook off b8 — a concession. With the rook no longer blocking the promotion square, the pawn can advance. Black has run out of defensive resources.
Promotion! The pawn becomes a queen. With Queen + Rook vs Rook, the position is trivially won. The bridge technique worked perfectly: the rook went to the 4th rank, drove the defending king away, the king escaped, and the rook blocked any interference — building a bridge all the way to promotion.
Pontos-chave
- The Lucena Position arises when you have a pawn on the 7th rank with your king in front — the key challenge is stepping aside without allowing perpetual checks
- Place the rook on the 4th rank first — this is the foundation of the bridge technique
- Drive the defending king away with a rook check before moving your own king
- March your king TOWARD the checking rook, not away — the closer you get, the fewer checking squares remain
- The "bridge" is when your rook interposes to block a lateral check, shielding the king and allowing promotion