Backrank mate (1 move)

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In back-rank mate, a rook or queen checkmates the king on the back-rank. The king cannot escape to the next rank because it is blocked in by its own pieces.

Explanation

The back-rank is called "weak" if no major pieces (rook or queen) are protecting it.

The king starts on the back-rank and usually stays there until the endgame. An unprotected back-rank allows the opponent's heavy pieces (queen and rooks) to attack the king from the side, leading to a forced back-rank mate, or winning material.

Examples

Black can deliver back-rank mate with Rb1#. The rook gives check, and the king cannot escape because the pawns on g2 and h2 block the escape squares.

Sometimes other pieces can help with the back-rank mate:

Here white can deliver back-rank mate with Rd1#. The queen on e5 guards the escape square h2, and the pawn on e3 guards f2.

Back-rank mate is rare in the opening, because you need some open lines, but it is possible - as in the following example after only seven moves:

The queen can give back-rank mate with Qc1#.

Pattern matching

The opponent's king is on the back-rank, with the escape squares on the next rank being blocked or controlled by your pieces. The back-rank is unprotected, protected insufficiently, or the pieces protecting it can be lured away.

Related patterns

If the checkmating rook is adjacent to the king and protected by a bishop, we get the Opera mate, or Mayet's mate.

A similar checkmate can happen on the a or h-file instead of the back-rank, see "high-striker mate".