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Subject: Re: The georgian pessant---test position>start your engines!

Author: Ernst Walet

Date: 00:48:58 10/20/02

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On October 19, 2002 at 16:51:05, Jonas Cohonas wrote:

>I found this wonderful position in Peter Durfeld's "Skakmyter" (Chessmyths)
>And the story is losely translated by me.
>
>The story behind it is equally wonderful:
>
>In this position:
>
>[D] 8/3P3k/n2K3p/2p3n1/1b4N1/2p1p1P1/8/3B4 w - - 0 1
>
>White chose to resign as he is behind with a knight and a few pawns, and
>promoting the d pawn results in a simple knight fork on f7...
>
>With this position starts the story of a young Georgian pessant who, while
>visiting the Zar capital had been a spectator to this game. The end position had
>made a great impression on him, the young chess enthusiast had instinctively
>sensed that white was not lost! He then wrote down the position and went home to
>his farm in the south of Russia.
>
>In the following days and weeks he increasingly became more and more fascinated
>with this position, until it became an obsession for him to figure out how white
>could save this game and maybe even win!
>
>He would frequently setup the position while working the fields and wherever he
>went and the weeks turned into months and the months turned into years.
>
>It would take more than 30 years before one day he ran off his field screaming,
>iv'e got it! white can win this game!
>
>He then sent his lifes analysis of this game to the then famous chess magazine
>"64" who's editor in 1963-69 was Tigran Petrosjan, but Petrosjan for unknown
>reasons never recieved the letter and the letter remained unopened until 1984
>when Karpov was editor, however the one to open the letter was no less than Tal
>who upon reading the letter was moved and excited by this complex solution, that
>turned out to be a forced mate in 14!
>
>They went out to his farm to congratulate him and shower him with some sybolic
>gifts for his remarkable analysis and dedication, but as it turned out the
>pessant had died 2 days prior...
>
>As far as i know this is a real life story and the solution i will provide
>tomorrow, it is truely spectacular, try and see if your program can solve it
>overnight, but don't get fooled by the eval, DF7 when fed the moves had as high
>as -11.20 before realizing it was lost for black! heck try and see if your prog
>can even find the first move :)
>
>Regards
>Jonas


This is what Hiarcs8 produced after an overnight analysis:

New game
8/3P3k/n2K3p/2p3n1/1b4N1/2p1p1P1/8/3B4 w - - 0 1

Analysis by Hiarcs 8:

1.Bc2+ Kg7 2.Nxe3 Nf7+ 3.Ke7
  -+  (-2.73)   Depth: 1   00:00:00
1.Bc2+ Kg7
  -+  (-3.77)   Depth: 2/10   00:00:00
1.Bc2+ Kg7
  -+  (-3.77)   Depth: 2/10   00:00:00
1.Nxe3 Ba5 2.Bc2+ Kg7
  -+  (-3.10)   Depth: 2/11   00:00:00
1.Nf6+ Kg6
  -+  (-1.71)   Depth: 2/11   00:00:00
1.Nf6+ Kg6 2.Bc2+ Kxf6 3.d8Q+ Kg7
  ³  (-0.62)   Depth: 2/11   00:00:00
1.Nf6+ Kg6 2.Bc2+ Kxf6 3.d8Q+ Kg7
  ³  (-0.62)   Depth: 3/14   00:00:00
1.Nf6+ Kg7 2.Nh5+ Kg6 3.Bc2+ Kxh5 4.Bd1+ Kg6 5.Bc2+ Kg7 6.d8Q
  µ  (-0.77)   Depth: 4/16   00:00:00
1.Nf6+ Kg7
  ³  (-0.51)   Depth: 5/20   00:00:00  12kN
1.Nf6+ Kg7 2.Nh5+ Kg6 3.Nf4+
  ³  (-0.27)   Depth: 5/20   00:00:00  16kN
1.Nf6+ Kg7
  =  (-0.02)   Depth: 6/23   00:00:00  31kN
1.Nf6+ Kg7 2.Nh5+ Kg6 3.Nf4+
  =  (0.00)   Depth: 6/23   00:00:00  45kN
1.Nf6+ Kg7
  =  (-0.25)   Depth: 7/23   00:00:00  94kN
1.Nf6+ Kg7 2.Nh5+ Kg6 3.Nf4+ Kf5 4.Ng2 Ne4+ 5.Kc6 Ba5 6.Nxe3+ Ke5
  -+  (-4.34)   Depth: 7/29   00:00:01  236kN
1.Nxe3 Ba5 2.Be2 Nb8 3.Bd3+ Kg8 4.Nc4 Bd8
  -+  (-2.97)   Depth: 7/29   00:00:02  342kN
1.Nxe3 Ba5 2.Be2 Nb8 3.Bd3+ Kg8 4.Ke7 Nc6+ 5.Kd6 Nd8 6.Kxc5
  -+  (-2.98)   Depth: 8/29   00:00:04  778kN
1.Nxe3 Ba5 2.Be2 Nb8 3.Bd3+ Kg8 4.Bf5 Kf7 5.Kxc5 Ke7 6.Nc4
  -+  (-3.02)   Depth: 9/29   00:00:08  1423kN
1.Nxe3 Ba5 2.Be2 Nb8 3.Bd3+ Kg7 4.Nf5+ Kg6 5.Ne3+ Kf7 6.Nf5 h5
  -+  (-3.02)   Depth: 10/29   00:00:19  3339kN
1.Nxe3 Ba5 2.Be2 Nb8 3.Bd3+ Kg7 4.Nf5+ Kg6 5.Ne3+ Kf7 6.Nc4 Bd8 7.Ne5+ Kf6
8.Ng4+ Kg7
  -+  (-3.13)   Depth: 11/30   00:00:46  8237kN
1.Kc6 Ne6 2.Nxe3 Nb8+ 3.Kd6 Nd8 4.Ba4 Ba5 5.Kxc5 Kg6 6.Bb5 Kf6
  -+  (-2.97)   Depth: 11/32   00:01:20  14141kN
1.Kc6 Ne6
  -+  (-2.72)   Depth: 12/33   00:01:58  20333kN, tb=3
1.Kc6 Ne6 2.Nxe3 Nb8+ 3.Kd6 Nd8 4.Ba4 Ba5 5.Kxc5 Kg6 6.Kc4 Ndc6 7.Nd5 Ne5+ 8.Kb5
  -+  (-2.62)   Depth: 12/33   00:02:04  21450kN, tb=3
1.Kc6 Ne6 2.Nxe3 Nb8+ 3.Kd6 Nd8 4.Bf3 Na6 5.Be2 Nb8 6.Bb5 Ba5 7.Kxc5 Kg6 8.Nc2
  -+  (-2.63)   Depth: 13/37   00:04:22  45676kN, tb=12
1.Kc6 Ne6 2.Nxe3 Nb8+ 3.Kd6 Nd8 4.Bf3 Na6 5.Be2 c4+ 6.Kd5 Ba5 7.Kxc4 Nb8 8.Bg4
Kg6
  -+  (-2.60)   Depth: 14/41   00:09:46  101762kN, tb=195
1.d8Q Nf7+ 2.Ke7 Nxd8 3.Kxd8 Ba5+ 4.Kd7 Bc7 5.Nxe3 Bxg3 6.Nd5 Be5 7.Kc6 Kg6
8.Bc2+ Kg5 9.Kb5 Nb4 10.Nxb4
  -+  (-2.59)   Depth: 14/42   00:20:52  214470kN, tb=1238
1.d8Q Nf7+ 2.Ke7 Nxd8 3.Kxd8 Ba5+ 4.Kd7 Bc7 5.Nxe3 Bxg3 6.Bc2+ Kh8 7.Nd5 Nb4
8.Nxb4 cxb4 9.Ke6 Kg7 10.Kf5 h5
  -+  (-2.52)   Depth: 15/42   00:25:36  259117kN, tb=4086
1.d8Q Nf7+ 2.Ke7 Nxd8 3.Kxd8 Ba5+ 4.Kd7 Bc7 5.Nxe3 Bxg3 6.Nd5 Be5 7.Kc6 Bd4
8.Kb5 Nb8 9.Kc4 h5 10.Bf3 h4 11.Nxc3 Bxc3 12.Kxc3
  -+  (-2.52)   Depth: 16/46   00:57:12  580307kN, tb=15373
1.Nf6+ Kg7
  -+  (-2.27)   Depth: 16/47   01:22:08  834815kN, tb=19955
1.Nf6+ Kg7 2.Nh5+ Kg6 3.Bc2+ Kxh5 4.d8Q Kg4 5.Kc6 Nf3 6.Qg8+ Kh3 7.Qe6+ Kg2
8.Qxe3 Nd4+ 9.Kb7 Nxc2 10.Qe2+ Kxg3 11.Qxc2
  ±  (1.30)   Depth: 16/49   06:32:01  4294836396kN, tb=82936

(Celeron 1.2GHz, 512MB hash, 3, 4 and 5 piece EGTB's 20.10.2002)


It's busy at 17 ply now, and I'll try to complete this depth.

Ernst.



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