Author: Uri Blass
Date: 01:56:17 11/20/00
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On November 20, 2000 at 03:13:22, Jouni Uski wrote: >[Event "KasparovChess Human-Machine Challenge"] >[Site "?"] >[Date "2000.11.15"] >[Round "9.2"] >[White "Alterman, Boris"] >[Black "Deep Fritz"] >[Result "1-0"] >[ECO "A03"] >[WhiteElo "2564"] >[PlyCount "173"] >[EventDate "2000.11.07"] > >1. f4 d5 2. Nf3 Nf6 3. e3 g6 4. Be2 Bg7 5. d4 O-O 6. c3 Bf5 7. Nbd2 e6 8. h3 >Ne4 9. g4 Ng3 10. Rg1 Nxe2 11. Kxe2 Be4 12. Ng5 Na6 13. b4 c6 14. Bb2 Qe7 15. >Ndxe4 dxe4 16. Nxe4 Rad8 17. Qb3 Qh4 18. Rh1 ... > >I wonder, that how can bean counter par excellence lose one pawn in the >opening?? Bug or positional sacrifice? > >Jouni It seems to be a positional sacrifice because the evaluation of Deep Fritz was only 0.31 for white(analysis by Deep Fritz 14.Ngxe4 dxe4 Nxe4... (0.31) is in the comments for the game that you can download at clubkasparov) Deep Fritz probably believed that the white king has problem because alterman did not castle when Fritz castled and Deep Fritz was wrong. Uri
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