Author: Lawrence S. Tamarkin
Date: 11:13:20 11/06/98
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Hi: The Fritz5 Power Book has the move 8...d6 in it, and gives these moves as the main line follow-up, 8...d6 9.f4 Bb6 10.Qd3 Nxd4 11.Bxd4 d5 12.exd5 Bf5 13.Qe2 Rfd8 14.Re1 Bxd4 15.cxd4 Bxb1 16.Raxb1 Nf5 17.Qe5 Nxd4 18.Qxf6 gxf6 19.Re7, and finally this large tree comes to an end. Does anyone know the source of these moves? After about 23 seconds (on my 200 MzH PC, 32 meg of Edo ram), set for a 10 minute game, so the method of analysis might not be the most scientific!?, Junior5 plays 10...Bh3 and continues the game this way, 11.gxh3 Qg6+ 12.Kh1 Bxe3!? 13.fxe3 Qe4+ 14.Kg1 Qxc4 15.Nxa8 Nxe3 16.Qe2 Qg6+ 17.Kh1 Nxf1 18.Nc7 Rc8 19.Nb5 Nd5 20.Ncb5 (if, 20.Qxf1 Ne3 21.Qf3 Nc2, Black is back)...Nf1e3, and Black continues to be doing well. I'll try it on some of my other programs when I get some time. It certainly is an interesting Opening, and position! mrslug - the inkompetent chess software addict! On November 06, 1998 at 00:45:49, odell hall wrote: >Hi CCC > > I would like to share this exciting game with the group. In my view It is the >most astonishing chess game between two computers I have ever seen!!. Rebel 6.0 >although it is a now old program shows it still has sting. At move 8.. >chessmaster goes out of book with d6 which I believe is a theoretical novelty. >It then follows this idea up with the astonishing 10..Bh3!!! the most incredible >move I have ever witness from a computer!. Also I discovered this position is a >very good illustration of Rebel10 Anti Grandmaster Feature, Rebel9 does not find >this move after ten minutes, yet rebel 10 on my cyrix233 finds the move in >30sec! I think that the position itself would be a classical example of an anti >grandmaster move!! because the complications are so incredible, I doubt many >humans could correctly navigate. > > >[Event "?"] >[Site "?"] >[Date "??.??.????"] >[Round "?"] >[White "Rebel6 P200pro G/30"] >[Black "CM5555 P166mmx"] >[Result "*"] >[WhiteElo "?"] >[BlackElo "?"] >[ECO "C45"] > >1. e4 e5 2. Nf3 Nc6 3. d4 exd4 4. Nxd4 Bc5 5. Be3 Qf6 6. c3 Nge7 7. Bc4 >O-O 8. O-O d6 9. Nb5 Ne5 10. Nxc7 Bh3 11. gxh3 Qg6+ 12. Kh1 Qxe4+ 13. f3 >Qxe3 14. Nxa8 Nxc4 15. Re1 Qg5 16. Qe2 d5 17. b3 Rxa8 18. bxc4 Rd8 19. >Nd2 Ng6 20. Rad1 Nf4 21. Qf1 Bf8 22. cxd5 Rxd5 23. Ne4 Qf5 24. Rxd5 Qxd5 >25. Rd1 Qc6 26. Rd8 f5 27. Ng3 Qxc3 28. Nxf5 Qc2 29. Ne7+ Kf7 30. Nc8 Qxa2 >31. Rd7+ Kf6 32. Rxb7 Bc5 33. Rc7 Qd5 34. Nxa7 Ne6 35. Rxc5 Qxc5 *
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