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Subject: Re: The most intructive games of Chess played by Programs !

Author: bobby palacios

Date: 19:46:33 03/22/03

Go up one level in this thread


On March 22, 2003 at 18:57:15, Jorge Pichard wrote:

>I was setting different positions found in the book { The Most Instructive Games
>of Chess Ever Played) by Irving Chernev. We all know that these 62 Masterpieces
>of Chess Strategy were played by Humans, but after testing different positions,
>I found out that most of them were solved by today's top programs. It is about
>time for somebody to collect at least 50 great games played by top computer
>programs and publish it. Anyway, here is an interesting
>position played by Smyslov vs Reshevsky Moscow 1948.
>
>How many programs besides Fritz 8 and Shredder 7 play the correct move 26.Qh4!
>Quoted by Chernev as a Clever play! The idea is to force an exchange which rid
>the board of Black's Queen, the only defender of the Queen Pawn. There is no way
>to save the pawn, since 26...Qd7 is answered by Qd8+, and if QxQ 27. PxQ and the
>d6 pawn is beyond help.
>
>
>[D]rn5k/1p2q1p1/pB1pp2p/4p3/4P1Q1/2P3P1/PP3P1P/3R2K1 w - - 0 1

Wouldn't Qf3 followed by Qd3 win the pawn also, without ruining white's pawn
structure?  Hiarcs 8 like Qf3 better than Qh4.  While Chess Tiger 14.0 sees no
difference in the two moves.

Analysis by Hiarcs 8:

1.f4
  +-  (1.41)   Depth: 1   00:00:00
1.Qh4 Qd7
  ±  (1.04)   Depth: 4/13   00:00:00
1.Qh4 Qd7
  ±  (1.04)   Depth: 4/13   00:00:00
1.Qh4 Qd7
  ±  (1.04)   Depth: 4/13   00:00:00
1.Qh4 Qd7
  ±  (1.04)   Depth: 4/13   00:00:00
1.Qh4 Qd7
  ±  (1.04)   Depth: 4/13   00:00:00
1.Qh4 Qd7 2.f4 Nc6
  ±  (1.01)   Depth: 4/13   00:00:00
1.Qh4 Qd7
  ±  (1.26)   Depth: 5/13   00:00:00  3kN
1.Qh4 Qd7 2.Qd8+ Qxd8 3.Bxd8 Nd7 4.Ba5
  ±  (1.31)   Depth: 5/13   00:00:00  4kN
1.Qh4 Qd7 2.Qd8+ Qxd8 3.Bxd8 Nd7 4.Ba5 Rf8 5.Rxd6 Nc5
  ±  (1.20)   Depth: 6/18   00:00:00  20kN
1.Qf3 Nd7
  +-  (1.58)   Depth: 6/18   00:00:00  28kN
1.Qf3 Nd7 2.Bc7 Qf6 3.Qe3
  +-  (1.60)   Depth: 6/18   00:00:00  30kN
1.Qf3 Nd7 2.Bc7 d5 3.exd5 exd5 4.Rxd5
  +-  (1.83)   Depth: 7/18   00:00:00  44kN
1.Qf3 Nd7
  +-  (1.56)   Depth: 8/18   00:00:00  84kN
1.Qf3 Nd7 2.Bc7 Qf6 3.Qxf6 Nxf6 4.Rxd6 Rc8 5.Bb6 Rc6 6.Rxc6 bxc6
  +-  (1.54)   Depth: 8/18   00:00:00  100kN
1.Qh4 Qxh4 2.gxh4 d5 3.exd5 exd5 4.Rxd5 Nc6 5.Rd7 Rb8
  +-  (1.81)   Depth: 8/23   00:00:00  134kN
1.Qh4 Qxh4 2.gxh4 d5 3.exd5 exd5 4.Rxd5 Nc6 5.Rd7 Rb8 6.h5
  +-  (1.81)   Depth: 9/24   00:00:01  217kN
1.Qh4 Qxh4 2.gxh4 d5 3.exd5 exd5 4.Rxd5 Nc6 5.Rd7 Rb8 6.f3 g6
  +-  (1.84)   Depth: 10/27   00:00:02  508kN
1.Qh4 Qxh4 2.gxh4 d5 3.exd5 exd5 4.Rxd5 Nc6 5.Rd7 Rb8 6.f3 g6 7.c4
  +-  (1.79)   Depth: 11/28   00:00:04  1062kN
1.Qf3 Nc6 2.Qd3 d5 3.exd5 exd5 4.Qxd5 e4 5.Bc5 Qe5 6.Bd6 Qxd5
  +-  (1.88)   Depth: 11/28   00:00:08  1920kN
1.Qf3 Nd7 2.Bc7 Qf6 3.Qxf6 Nxf6 4.Rxd6 Rc8 5.Bb6 Nxe4 6.Rd7 Rb8 7.Bc7 Nf6 8.Rxg7
Kxg7 9.Bxb8
  +-  (2.06)   Depth: 12/33   00:00:32  6577kN
1.Qf3 Nc6 2.Qd3 d5 3.exd5 exd5 4.Qxd5 Re8 5.Qd7 e4 6.Qxe7 Rxe7 7.c4 Ne5 8.Rd8+
Kh7
  +-  (1.93)   Depth: 13/37   00:01:57  22980kN



Analysis by Chess Tiger 14.0:

Depth 16

1. +- (1.62): 1.Qh4 Qd7 2.Qd8+ Qxd8 3.Bxd8 Nd7 4.Ba5 Rf8 5.Rxd6 Nc5 6.f4 exf4
7.Bb4 Na4 8.Rxe6 Rf6 9.Rxf6 gxf6
2. +- (1.58): 1.Qf3 Nc6 2.Qd3 Qf7 3.Qxd6 Qh5 4.Re1 Qf7 5.Re3 Rf8 6.Rd3 g6 7.Qd7
Kg7 8.Rd6 Qxd7 9.Rxd7+ Rf7









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