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How to describe two knights defending each other?

Linked knights?

Doubled knights?


In Chinese Chess, two 马 (horse/knight)s protecting one another is quite common, and there is a standard terminology: "连环马".


There is a real case: "German Chess Prodigy Surprises Boris Gelfand With A Brutal Queen Sacrifice"(https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=l37hlb32Rs0)

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    It's been a long time since I've played Chinese chess, but I remember that linking horses like this was very common. Can any people who play both games explain why this is such a strong technique in one game and such a weak technique in the other? In Chinese chess, we can also disrupt this setup by blocking one of the spaces in between, whereas in standard chess you can never block a knight from hopping over an obstruction.
    – user1954
    Commented Oct 21, 2018 at 20:30
  • @BenCrowell It's weak in chess simply because one of the knights hinders the others' movement. As for Chinese chess, I'm only a casual player, but I would imagine it is because not many pieces are able to protect each other in Chinese chess.
    – Quintec
    Commented Oct 22, 2018 at 0:30
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    @Quintec No, in Chinese Chess, every kind of pieces can protect each other.
    – Zhang Jian
    Commented Oct 22, 2018 at 3:35
  • @Quintec except the general/king, of course.
    – Zhang Jian
    Commented Oct 22, 2018 at 3:41
  • They are simply covering each other. And, as always, when pieces cover each other they restrict the movement of each other,, but only by 1 field. Not a bad thing, usually.
    – TaW
    Commented Oct 22, 2018 at 8:39

3 Answers 3

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They're connected knights.

As the other answers said, this isn't typically that smart a thing for knights. OTOH, rooks are very often made stronger by connecting them (it allows them to thwart any queen intrusion). Thus you'll more often hear about it being “a good idea to connect rooks now”. But I think I've also heard the term used with knights. Just, knights tend to serve more of a tactical role than solid defense of the back-rank, and they're usually better protected by pawns or bishops, as these don't reduce their mobility in the way mutual knight defense does.

For pawns, the term connected of course means something different, since two pawns can never protect each other mutually.

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I've seen the term "redundant knights". In general, redundant pieces are pieces can get in each other's way. Here's a quote I could find about the general principle, but not specifically about knights:

Interestingly, two of Lasker’s other points were:

• The principle of redundancy: Two pieces that move the same way on the same squares can easily get in each other’s way, while two pieces that never get in each other’s way – like two bishops – are better coordinated. This was verified by computer analysis by Larry Kaufman 60 years later! Larry’s important contributions are noted in several places in this book.

Heisman, Dan. Elements of Positional Evaluation (Kindle Locations 1035-1039). SCB Distributors. Kindle Edition.

Googling specifically for "redundant knights" I found this (also by Dan Heisman):

For example, he calls two knights that guard each other “redundant knights” and notes that this is usually a weak setup.

https://chesscafe.com/coordination/

I don't have access to that article as I'm not a chesscafe.com member so I don't even know who "he" is (maybe Lasker or Kaufman?), so if anyone with full access to that article can provide more context, I'll happily edit my answer.

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As far as I know, there's no standard terminology for this. It is usually not the best configuration for two knights; they are stronger when positioned side by side, so that they cover a lot of squares in the same area. If I had to describe the situation, I'd go for something like 'mutually protecting knights'.

There's a related concept which is called the 'superfluous piece' or 'extra piece', which most often happens with two knights. One of them occupies an outpost, and the other one is basically doing nothing but waiting to recapture on or move to that square when the first one is exchanged.

Here, Black's next move was 11... Ne8, to make the c3 knight superfluous.

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    Black is faced with two threats, Nxf6 doubling the pawns and Nxc7. Black has two choices: 11...Nxd5 and 11...Ne8, the later is better because it makes the c3 knight redundant.
    – Akavall
    Commented Oct 21, 2018 at 17:43

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