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Subject: Re: analyzing the position a bit before commenting

Author: Vincent Diepeveen

Date: 15:05:53 02/05/01

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On February 05, 2001 at 13:01:41, Arturo Ochoa wrote:

>On February 05, 2001 at 12:59:27, Thomas Lagershausen wrote:
>
>>The following position is first published in 1993 by an forgotten austrian
>>computerchessmagazine called "modul" and later "pc schach".
>>I am shure it´s to difficult for any current chessprograme, but let´s have a
>>look.The white position is won, but the way to show this is to play Re6!.
>>Which programe have a positive score by showing Re6! on his screen?
>>CM 8000 shows nothing after an overnight analysis.Shredder 5 and Yace 0.99 only
>>kingmoves.I know one programe that will play Re6! but the evaluation is negative
>>and the variation looks like an loosingline.But it´s interesting to see this by
>>an very famous programe.I would say a programe that wins against best defence
>>this position is a grandmaster.
>>
>>[Event "3/93-63 MR-Test2 17 "]
>>[Site "?"]
>>[Date "1792.??.??"]
>>[Round "?"]
>>[White "Makagonov "]
>>[Black " Kasparjan"]
>>[Result "1-0"]
>>[SetUp "1"]
>>[FEN "2bq1b2/1p3k2/1r1p1p1p/pNpP1PpP/P1P3P1/6B1/7Q/2K1R3 w - -"]
>>
>
>[D]2bq1b2/1p3k2/1r1p1p1p/pNpP1PpP/P1P3P1/6B1/7Q/2K1R3 w - -

Hello What do you do after

1.Re6 Bxe6
2.Bxe6 Kg8
3.Qc2 Qe7
4.Be1 Ra6
5.Bc3 Bg7

I mean all other lines are a peanut to see here, but
this is a line where i get about draw score as both sides
can't do shit according to diep. and i catually don't see really
an easy win plan for white here. When i played it with white
i actually managed to lose it because DIEP managed Ra8-f8 and in
between b6 covering all problems.

3..Qe7 as played below is directly giving a good score for white here.

>>1. Re6 Bxe6 2. fxe6+ Ke8 (2... Kg8 3. Qc2 Qe8 4. Be1 Qe7
>>5. Bc3 Qg7 6. Qf5 Be7 7. Na7 Rb3 (7... Qf8 8. Nc8 Qxc8
>>9. Qg6+ Kh8 10. Bxf6+ Bxf6 11. Qxf6+ Kh7 12. Qg6+ Kh8
>>13. e7 Rb4 14. e8=Q+) 8. Kc2 Ra3 9. Nc8 Kf8 10. Qg6 Qxg6+
>>11. hxg6 Bd8 12. Nxd6 Rxa4 13. Nxb7 Bb6 14. Bxf6 Rxc4+
>>15. Kd3 (15. Kd3 Rxg4 16. e7+ Ke8 17. Nd6+ Kd7 18. e8=Q+
>>Kxd6 19. Qc6#)) 3. Qc2 f5 4. Qxf5 Qe7 5. Qg6+ Kd8 6. Be1 with the threads Ba5:
>>and Bc3 1-0
>>
>>Thomas Lagershausen



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