I was looking at this tesuji in Sensei's Library today. I understand in the first example why the tesuji is necessary, because otherwise white will get 3 or more liberties and the black stones marked in the second diagram will be dead.
But I'm not seeing why the tesuji is useful in any of the other examples. For example, in this trick play, why can't black block white in a "normal" manner in the fourth diagram by playing move
below
(at b7) and move
above
(at b2), all on the second line? Why does the stronger reply require a knowledge of the "patting the raccoon's belly" tesuji?Same question for all the other examples on the first page. Why does a simple block on the second line not work in each case? Why is it necessary to play underneath on the first line?