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Deep Fork

Are you sure? It is pretty obvious that a knight fork is better, since it just simplifies. The computer probably saw an attacking line with the rook, queen, and knight.


I’ve seen this one in other books, or at least one other book. Maybe Alburt’s Chess Training Pocket Book.

I think letting the Black Queen on the board is more dangerous. Being up the exchange and a distant pawn looks almost unstoppable.
This position, offered in Secrets of the Russian Chess Masters: Beyond the Basics by Lev Alburt and Larry Parr, demonstrates a most unlikely fork that gives White a winning game from what seems to be essentially an inferior position.