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Subject: Re: Fritz-Blunder and Kramnik-fantastical! (diagrams)

Author: Marc van Hal

Date: 13:05:26 10/06/02

Go up one level in this thread


On October 06, 2002 at 15:34:17, Roy Eassa wrote:

>On October 06, 2002 at 15:30:30, Eduard Nemeth wrote:
>
>>First the game in PGN:
>>
>>
>>[Event "Brains in Bahrain"]
>>[Site "?"]
>>[Date "2002.??.??"]
>>[Round "2"]
>>[White "Vladimir Kramnik"]
>>[Black "Deep Fritz"]
>>[ECO "D27"]
>>[Result "*"]
>>
>>1. d4 d5 2. c4 dxc4 3. Nf3 Nf6 4. e3 e6 5. Bxc4 c5 6. O-O
>>a6 7. dxc5 Qxd1 8. Rxd1 Bxc5 9. Kf1 b5 10. Be2 Bb7 11. Nbd2
>>Nbd7 12. Nb3 Bf8 13. a4 b4 14. Nfd2 Bd5 15. f3 Bd6 16. g3
>>e5 17. e4 Be6 18. Nc4 Bc7 19. Be3 a5 20. Nc5 Nxc5 21. Bxc5
>>Nd7 22. Nd6+ Kf8 23. Bf2 Bxd6 24. Rxd6 Ke7 25. Rad1 Rhc8
>>26. Bb5 Nc5 27. Bc6 Bc4+ {Rest time: W = 31min, B = 57min.}
>>28. Ke1 Nd3+ 29. R1xd3 Bxd3 30. Bc5 Bc4 31. Rd4+ Kf6
>>32. Rxc4 Rxc6 33. Be7+ Kxe7 34. Rxc6 Kd7 35. Rc5 f6 36. Kd2
>>Kd6 37. Rd5+ Kc6 38. Kd3 g6 39. Kc4 g5 40. h3 h6 41. h4
>>gxh4 42. gxh4 Ra7 43. h5 Ra8 44. Rc5+ Kb6 45. Rb5+ Kc6
>>46. Rd5 Kc7 47. Kb5 b3 48. Rd3 Ra7 49. Rxb3 Rb7+ 50. Kc4
>>Ra7 51. Rb5 Ra8 52. Kd5 Ra6 53. Rc5+ Kd7 54. b3 Rd6+
>>55. Kc4 Rd1 56. Rd5+ *
>>
>>and 1-0
>>
>>Diagramm 1:
>>
>>
>>Kramnik - Deep Fritz
>>German: Fritz hat vermutlich ZU TIEF gerechnet! :)
>>
>>Fritz have only an problem: Deep, Deep, Deep, Deep and then a Blunder! :-)
>>
>>[D]r3k2r/1b1n1ppp/p3pn2/1pb5/8/1N2PN2/PP2BPPP/R1BR1K2 b kq - 0 1
>>
>>
>>german:
>>Nun zog Deep Fritz "unfassbar" für uns alle Lf8?? Da muss es sogar Kramnik fast
>>vom Stuhl gehauen haben! :)))
>>
>>Diagramm 2:
>>
>>
>>Kramnik - DEEPfritzDEEP (:))
>>
>>[D]r1r5/4kppp/2BR4/p1B1p3/Ppb1P3/5PP1/1P5P/4K3 w - - 0 1
>>
>>Rd4!! An fantastical move!!
>>
>>Gearman:
>>Es folgte nun Td4!! Das war weltmeisterlich, und im höheren Sinne der Gewinnzug!
>>
>>Eduard
>
>
>Yes, I believe that in this position, Kramnik knew that he would win via Rd4+!
>IMHO, his technique is superb enough that this is a win for him against any
>opponent, even though most (probably all) chess programs think it's about equal.


The entire game was not new for me it only shows that faster hardware doesn't
help much versus deep chessknowledge of the position.
Like I already mentioned when they start to speak about this match.
Rd4 was not !! but simply home preparetion.
Which never was left by Deep Friz.
So the in a deeper sence  the game was already won when Fritz played Bf8.
Much if not all of Kramniks moves also should have been played by Shredder5

Marc




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