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Subject: Re: Deep Blue--Part III

Author: Robert Hyatt

Date: 11:06:34 05/11/98

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On May 11, 1998 at 02:27:47, Howard Exner wrote:

>On May 10, 1998 at 20:49:17, Robert Hyatt wrote:
>
>> round 1 was a lucky win by Kasparov...  one or two tempi
>>and things turn totally around...
>
>Could you elaborate on this assertion? The way I'm reading
>it know is, "You were lucky to mate me because I was just about
>to mate you!"


Here's what a GM told me in looking over this.  Basically, after
the fireworks were over, Kasparov had two passed pawns, while DB
had material.  in most positions, the passed pawns (only two) would
not be enough to win, they would be blockaded and won.  But in this
game, everything "just came together" to make this not happen.  But
if you move one of the pawns back a rank, or up a rank, or make some
other modification to the board, the outcome could be quite different.

Now the question is, did Kasparov "see" the ending, and *know* that he
could win?  Hard to say.  *if* he did, then there was no "luck".  But
I don't believe he calculated that deeply, and he relied on "intuition"
that just happened to work in that game.  In another game his "winning
intuition" was wrong and he drew what most thought was a won endgame
for him.

I've seen Crafty hit such positions, once in the GM match last week in
the first round against Roman.  bishops of opposite color.  What
appeared
to be dead drawn to all watching.  But everything was just set up so
that
it wasn't...  was it luck or skill?  Hard to say...  but luck certainly
smiled on silicon in that game, IMHO.  I'd bet that against a GM, Crafty
would draw 8 of every 10 such endgames.  I'd bet that against DB, Garry
would lose 8 of every 10 such positions...

But that's only an opinion, because I don't know what he really "saw".
I just suspect it didn't include what actually happened...



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