Author: Miguel A. Ballicora
Date: 09:27:27 05/16/02
Go up one level in this thread
On May 16, 2002 at 01:54:19, K. Burcham wrote:
>
>FIDE
>Gurevich, Mikhail g BEL 2641 22.02.1959 M
>Ranked 47
>
>
>congradulatons to Shay and Amir.
>
>amazing pressure by Junior7 throughout game.
>Junior7 advanced with every move.
>GM acted like he was so surprised at the pressure and level of attack,
> that he questioned when to advance.
>
>here is my opinion on this GM playing this opening against a top program.
>I say this based on the performance of this GM after last book move.
>
>1.c4? (d4,e4)
>3.g3? (d4)
>5.Qxc4? (Bg2)
>8.0-0? (a4)
>9.d3? (d4) last book move
>
>
>
>GM move 10.Bf4, traded bishops.
>GM move 12.a4? opens the a-file, places black bishop on open diagonal, forces
>black to castle and black rook is now in play.
>GM move 16.Qa5? now with 17.Na3 GM threatens to win pawn at b5. here I think
>maybe GM did not see 20...Rxb2 to even material.
>After the Queen exchange, and black winning back the pawn, GM finds
>that black is active and threatening, with white looking like the GM has
>no develoment and no plan.
>
>after 20...Rxb2.
>The GM has all his pieces tucked tight, and inside the third rank.
>GM worried about king safety?
>Junior7 has active pieces: bishop at a8, rook at b2, pawn at c5.
>Both sides are even in material.
> [D] b5k1/3n1ppp/4pn2/2p5/8/2NP1NP1/1r2PPBP/5RK1 w - -
>
>
>
>after 26...Ke7
>In this position, GM has traded one Knight, and retreated his other Knight to
>Ne1.
>GM has all white pieces inside third rank.
>Junior7 has advanced the g and h pawns, and advanced his king to the seventh
>rank.
>Both sides are even in material.
> [D] 8/3nkp2/4p1pp/2pb4/8/3P2P1/1r2PPBP/2R1NK2 w - -
>
>
>
>after 31.Nxg2
>In this position, GM has traded bishops, placed his Rook on the open a file.
>GM has all white pieces inside the third rank.
>Junior7 has advanced the f pawn to f5.
>Both sides are even in material.
> [D] 8/8/1n1kp1pp/2p2p2/8/3P2P1/1r2PPNP/R3K3 b - -
>
>
>
>after 38...f4
>In this position, GM has all white pieces inside third rank.
>Junior has advanced the f , g, and h pawns.
>Both sides are even in material.
> [D] 8/8/1nk1p3/2p3pp/1r3p2/3PNPP1/4PK1P/2R5 w - -
>
>
>
>after 47...Kd5
>in this position, Gm has all white pieces inside third rank.
>Junior7 has advanced the black knight to c2, Kd5, pawn e4 to e5.
>Both sides are even in material
> [D] 8/8/8/2pkp2p/5p2/3P1P2/1rn1P1NP/2R2K2 w - -
>
>
>
>after 78...Kg5
>GM has traded pawns.
>GM has all white pieces inside the third rank.
>GM has played Ng2 to Nh4 13 times.
>Both sides are even in material.
>Junior7 avoids three repetition draw.
> [D] 8/8/8/2p1p1kp/3n1p2/3P1P1P/3rP1N1/4RK2 w - -
>
>
>
>after 82...Nc1
>GM has all white pieces inside the third rank.
>Both sides are even in material.
>Junior7 has pushed rook and knight, now attack the white king, and threaten the
>d3 pawn.
>GM is lost, and blunders with 83.Ne1. program eval jumps +4 with this GM move.
>easy win for Junior7 from here.
> [D] 8/8/8/2p1pk1p/8/3PRP1P/3r2N1/2n2K2 w - -
>
>
>
>
>[Event "A match in KasparovChess Playing Zone"]
>[Site "www.KasparovChess.com"]
>[Time "Wed May 15 13:59:58 CDT 2002"]
>[White "Gurevich.Mikhail"]
>[Black "Junior.7"]
>[Result "{White resigned} 0-1"]
>[WhiteELO "2614"]
>[BlackELO "2651"]
>
>1. c4 e6 2. Nf3 d5 3. g3 dxc4 4. Qa4+ Nd7 5. Qxc4 a6
>6. Bg2 c5 7. Qb3 Ngf6 8. O-O Qc7 9. d3 b5 10. Bf4 Bd6
>11. Bxd6 Qxd6 12. a4 Bb7 13. axb5 Bd5 14. Qc3 axb5 15. Rxa8+ Bxa8
>16. Qa5 O-O 17. Na3 Rb8 18. Nxb5 Qb6 19. Qxb6 Rxb6 20. Nc3 Rxb2
>21. Rc1 Kf8 22. Nh4 Nd5 23. Nxd5 Bxd5 24. Kf1 g6 25. Nf3 h6
>26. Ne1 Ke7 27. Nc2 f5 28. Ne3 Kd6 29. Ra1 Nb6 30. Ke1 Bxg2
>31. Nxg2 g5 32. Ne3 Ke5 33. Rc1 Kd4 34. Nc2+ Kd5 35. Ne3+ Kc6
>36. Kf1 h5 37. f3 Rb4 38. Kf2 f4 39. gxf4 gxf4 40. Ng2 Nd5
>41. Rc2 e5 42. Rc1 Rb2 43. Nh4 Nb4 44. Rd1 Kd6 45. Ng2 Ke6
>46. Kf1 Nc2 47. Rc1 Kd5 48. Rd1 Nd4 49. Re1 Ke6 50. Kf2 Kf6
>51. Kf1 Ra2 52. Kf2 Kg5 53. Kf1 Rc2 54. h3 Kf6 55. Nh4 Rb2
>56. Ng2 Kf5 57. Nh4+ Kg5 58. Ng2 Kf6 59. Nh4 Ra2 60. Ng2 Kf5
>61. Nh4+ Kg5 62. Ng2 Kf6 63. Nh4 Rc2 64. Ng2 Kf7 65. Nh4 Rd2
>66. Ng2 Kf6 67. Nh4 Kg5 68. Ng2 Kg6 69. Nh4+ Kh6 70. Ng2 Rc2
>71. Nh4 Ra2 72. Ng2 Rd2 73. Nh4 Rb2 74. Ng2 Kg6 75. Nh4+ Kf7
>76. Ng2 Rd2 77. Nh4 Kf6 78. Ng2 Kg5 79. e3 fxe3 80. Rxe3 Kf5
>81. Kg1 Ne2+ 82. Kf1 Nc1 83. Ne1 Kf4 {{White resigned} 0-1}
>
>kburcham
I am far from any board (this is blindfold coming back from the final
position)but I think that:
62.... h4 wins (with the idea of Nf5-Ng3)
63. h4 draws. (not possible anymore because Nf5-Ng3 is answered by Ne3)
Is that right?
Miguel
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