16. h10 came as a big surprise to me destroying the connection between j9 and j4. I thought 17. k7 will strengthens o9 and thereby allow to pass o7 on the right side. That did not work.
16. h10 came as a big surprise to me destroying the connection between j9 and j4. I thought 17. k7 will strengthens o9 and thereby allow to pass o7 on the right side. That did not work.
I missed |24.i19 25.p17 threatening M20. Fortunately even after that I could still use my P18 peg, as the game shows.
|26.s11 27.q9 28.o11 29.s10 did not work. Maybe |26.r10 would have worked.
If |31.h18 32.p10 33.q11 34.q12 35.r13 36.r14
Maybe 25.t8 is the solution.
27.q5 28.p5 OR
27.s5 28.p10 29.s10 30.t6 31.p7 32.p5 33.r3 34.s8 35.q5 36.r11
16. h10 came as a big surprise to me destroying the connection between j9 and j4. I thought 17. k7 will strengthens o9 and thereby allow to pass o7 on the right side. That did not work.
Later, 17. m16 came into my mind. That one emphasizes the connection from q14 to the south and just leaves j4 alone. Patterns like 17.m16 18.l12 19.o13 or 17.m16 18.n13 19.k11 20.k7 21.n7 22.m6 23.s8 look quite compromising for White...
However, always something to learn in Twixt.
16. h10 came as a big surprise to me destroying the connection between j9 and j4. I thought 17. k7 will strengthens o9 and thereby allow to pass o7 on the right side. That did not work.
Later, 17. m16 came into my mind. That one emphasizes the connection from q14 to the south and just leaves j4 alone. Patterns like 17.m16 18.l12 19.o13 or 17.m16 18.n13 19.k11 20.k7 21.n7 22.m6 23.s8 look quite promising for White...
However, always something to learn in Twixt.