Lacny

The Lacny or Lacny cycle is a chess problem theme named after Ľudovít Lačný, the first person to demonstrate the idea in 1949.

It is an example of lines of play being cyclically related: in one phase of play, the Black defences a, b and c are answered by the White mates A, B and C respectively; in another phase, those same defences a, b and c are answered by the White mates B, C and A respectively.

Ľudovít Lačný, 1949
abcdefgh
8
d7 black pawn
e7 white king
a6 black bishop
d6 black pawn
d5 white queen
h5 white bishop
a4 black queen
b4 white rook
c4 black pawn
f4 white knight
g4 black knight
a3 black rook
e3 black king
f3 white knight
g3 white bishop
a2 black rook
b2 white rook
c2 black pawn
a1 black knight
g1 black bishop
8
77
66
55
44
33
22
11
abcdefgh
White to play and mate in two

The theme can be understood by reference to the problem to the right: this is the first problem to demonstrate the idea, by Lacny himself (first prize at the Przepiorka Memorial, 1949); it has been much-reproduced. The set play is:

1...Nh2 [a] 2.Qd4# [A]
1...c1=Q [b] 2.Ng2# [B]
1...c3 [c] 2.Qe4# [C]

The key to the solution is 1.Nd2 (threatening 2.Nf1#), after which the mates are changed thus:

1...Nh2 [a] 2.Ng2# [B]
1...c1=Q [b] 2.Qe4# [C]
1...c3 [c] 2.Qd4# [A]

As well as in set play (as in this example) the theme can be shown in tries, more than one solution or twins.

The scheme can be expanded to include more defences; in a fivefold Lacny, for example, the defences a, b, c, d and e are met with the mates A, B, C, D and E respectively in one phase and B, C, D, E and A respectively in another. The cycle can also be extended over three phases to make a complete Lacny cycle; here, the defences a, b and c are answered by the mates A, B and C respectively in one phase; by B, C and A respectively in another; and by C, A and B respectively in a third. This is considerably harder to achieve than the "simple" Lacny, and there are relatively few examples.

In the related threat Lacny, short-cut Lacny or Dombro-Lacny, in one phase A is threatened, and defence b leads to mate B while defence c leads to mate C; in another phase B is threatened and defence b leads to mate C while defence c leads to mate A. Once, problems following this scheme were also called Lacnys, but now a distinction tends to be drawn between the two (Peter Gvozdjak in Cyclone suggests this scheme should be called the Shedey cycle after its originator, Sergei Shedey). There are a number of other themes featuring cyclic play in different phases, including the Kiss and Djurasevic cycles.

Further reading

External links

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