Author: Jorge Pichard
Date: 05:44:14 03/22/03
Go up one level in this thread
On March 22, 2003 at 08:06:03, Jorge Pichard wrote:
>On March 22, 2003 at 08:00:51, Jorge Pichard wrote:
>
>>On March 22, 2003 at 04:09:03, Kurt Utzinger wrote:
>>
>>>Many thanks.
>>>Kurt
>>
>>
>>[Site "London"]
>>[Date "1996"]
>>[Round "?"]
>>[White "Graham Burgess"]
>>[Black "Fritz 4"]
>>[Result "1-0"]
>>
>>
>>128MB, Fritz8.ctg, A-2800 GHz
>>1. d4 e6 2. Nf3 d5 3. Bg5 Nf6 4. e3 h6 5. Bh4 c6 6. Bd3 Qb6
>>7. Nbd2 Qxb2 8. O-O Be7 9. e4 dxe4 10. Nxe4 Nxe4 11. Bxe4 Bxh4
>>12. Nxh4 Qb4 13. Qg4 Qxd4 14. Rad1 Qf6 15. Ng6 fxg6? by Fritz 4 back in 1996,
>>Pentium 300 Mhz was the Speed of the CPU. This is the critical Position that I
>>posted before: Burgess stated on his Book (The Mammoth Book of CHESS) that
>>15...Rg8 keeps a two-pawn advantage.
>>16. Bxg6+ Kf8 17. Rfe1 Na6 18. Re3 e5 19. Qg3 on this move Burgess stated Black
>>is in deep trouble 19...Be6 20. Rf3 Bd5 21. Rxf6+ gxf6 22. Qa3+ Kg7 23. Bf5 Here
>>at this point Burgess simply state the rest of the game is not so interesting
>>1-0.
>
>It is not clear that Burgess can still win today against an AMD XP 2800+ like
>mine using Fritz 4 from the ending position of this game:)
>
>[D]r6r/pp4k1/n1p2p1p/3bpB2/8/Q7/P1P2PPP/3R2K1 b - - 0 22
I was wrong, Burgess could have won this game easy against my XP 2600+ from the
ending position where he stated that is not so interesting:
23. Bf5 Rae8 {[%eval 206,6] [%emt 0:00:31]} 24. Qg3+
{[%eval 431,11] [%emt 0:00:08]} Kf8 {[%eval 469,12] [%emt 0:00:17]} 25.
Qg6 {[%eval 469,11] [%emt 0:00:06]} Nc5 {[%eval 500,11] [%emt 0:00:15]} 26.
Qxf6+ {[%eval 500,11] [%emt 0:00:10]} Kg8 {[%eval 647,12] [%emt 0:00:23]} 27.
Re1 {(c4) [%eval 550,9] [%emt 0:00:04]} Ne6 {[%eval 634,11] [%emt 0:00:19]} 28.
Re3 {[%eval 641,10] [%emt 0:00:04]} Ng5 {[%eval 791,12] [%emt 0:00:28]} 29. f4
{[%eval 697,10] [%emt 0:00:05]} Nf3+ {(a5) [%eval 797,11] [%emt 0:00:36]} 30.
gxf3 {[%eval 853,11] [%emt 0:00:07]} Bf7 (30... Rh7 {
[%eval 1369,15] [%emt 0:01:29]} 31. Bg6 Rg7 32. Rxe5 Rc8 33. Rxd5 cxd5 34. Qe6+
) 1-0
[D]2r3k1/pp4r1/4Q1Bp/3p4/5P2/5P2/P1P4P/6K1 b - - 0 33
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