Toe up to the starting line and click below to display the problems and start the clock. Good luck! You can check your solutions by clicking on Read More. Afterwards, click here to cast your vote for the type of speed problems you prefer.
(This article has been edited subsequent to original publication due to valuable reader input. As a result you have three problems instead of two!)
Problem One (very hard for a timed problem)
Problem Two (medium difficulty, original erroneous diagram corrected)
Problem Three (quite hard, as originally published)
Solutions
Problem 1
27-24 19-23 25-30 16-20 A,B 31-27 23-32 30-26 20-27 26-31 White Wins. A neat block.
A 23-27 24-20 White Wins. A double exposure slip.
B 28-32 24-20 16-19 31-27 White Wins.
We're not sure who created this problem, but it's a nice one, and has the didactic advantage of displaying more than one possible tactical motif.
Problem 2
A 7-10 14-7 3-10 2-7 B White Wins.
B Not 2-6?? 25-21! Red Wins.
We had published this with a White man on 14 instead of a king; obviously this was incorrect and alert reader Brian Hinkle caught it within a few hours of publication. But see Problem Three below.
Problem 3
6-2 7-11 (7-10 loses as in Problem 2) 17-21 and now if 25-30 (or 25-29) White plays a pretty three for three shot and wins on the move: 18-15! 11-18 2-7! 3-17 21-32 White Wins. Pretty tough going for a speed problem.