Computer Chess Club Archives


Search

Terms

Messages

Subject: Re: DB vs Kasparov Game 2 35. axb5

Author: Robert Hyatt

Date: 16:12:59 11/21/98

Go up one level in this thread


On November 21, 1998 at 15:55:11, blass uri wrote:

>
>On November 21, 1998 at 13:36:46, Bruce Moreland wrote:
>
>>
>>On November 21, 1998 at 13:03:07, Robert Hyatt wrote:
>>
>>>I think their search is difficult to understand.  IE I'll point back to the
>>>position I posted last year on r.g.c.c about the c5 move in a game against
>>>Cray Blitz, in Orlando at the 88 or 89 ACM event.  They played c5 after
>>>failing high to +2.x, the game went *10* full moves further before *we*
>>>failed low to -2.x...  I was looking right at their output and they had
>>>this incredibly long PV showing that the bishop was going to be lost.  They
>>>saw it 20 full plies before we did.  Lots of micros tried this position last
>>>year, and almost all would play c5 (as we expected that reply ourselves in
>>>the real game).  But *none* had any clue that it was winning material.. even
>>>when they went far into the variation...
>>
>>[Event "ACM 1991"]
>>[Site ""]
>>[Date ""]
>>[Round ""]
>>[White "Cray Blitz"]
>>[WhiteElo ""]
>>[Black "Deep Thought II"]
>>[BlackElo ""]
>>[Result "0-1"]
>>
>>1. e4 c5 2. Nf3 d6 3. d4 cxd4 4. Nxd4 Nf6 5. Nc3 Nc6 6. f4 e5
>>7. Nxc6 bxc6 8. fxe5 Ng4 9. Be2 Nxe5 10. Be3 Be7 11. O-O Be6
>>12. Qd4 O-O 13. Rad1 f6 14. b3 Qe8 15. Na4 Qg6 16. Bf4 Rf7 17. Qe3
>>Raf8 18. Qxa7 Qxe4 19. Bd3 Qb4 20. Qe3 Ra8 21. c3 Qb7 22. Rf2
>>Qa7 23. Qxa7 Rxa7 24. Be3 Ra5 25. Bb6 Ra8 26. Bc2 Bf8 27. Re1
>>c5 28. Be4 Ra6 29. Rb1 f5 30. Bc2 Rb7 31. Bd8 g6 32. Re1 c4
>>33. Rb1 Bd7 34. Nb2 Ra8 35. Bg5 Rxa2 36. b4 Bb5 37. Re2 Bg7
>>38. Nd1 Ra6 39. Bd2 Nd3 40. Ne3 Ra2 41. Bxd3 cxd3 42. Rf2 Rxd2
>>43. Rxd2 Bxc3 44. Nf1 Bxd2 45. Nxd2 Re7 46. Nf3 h6 47. Rb2 Re4
>>48. Kf2 g5 49. g3 f4 50. gxf4 Rxf4 51. Kg3 h5 52. Nd2 h4+ 53. Kg2
>>Bc6+ 54. Kg1 Rg4+ 55. Kf2 Rg2+ 56. Ke3 Bb5 57. Ra2 Rxh2 58. Ra5
>>Re2+ 59. Kd4 h3 60. Rxb5 Rg2 61. Rb8+ Kg7 62. Rb7+ Kg6 63. Rd7 0-1
>>
>>r4bk1/5rpp/1Bppbp2/4n3/N7/1PP5/P1B2RPP/4R1K1 b - - 7 27
>>
>>The goal is to search this position and achieve a score of approximately +2.  It
>>is possible to find the move for other reasons, perhaps a sniff of danger, but
>>Bob says that Deep Thought saw to the end of this.
>
>I do not see something singular in this position
>white can play many moves without being -2.xx and even without being-1.xx


better look again.  First, there is *definitely* something singular if black
plays c5.  White has to move the bishop.  (remember it is black to move in
the above game and has to find the move c5 with a score of +2.x for black).
If you don't do something right *now* after c5, the bishop is trapped.  But
it is in fact *very* deep.  Deep enough that CB didn't find it...


>
>If there are singular extensions then there must be many extensions that begin
>far from the root.


as I said, perhaps you haven't read Hsu's paper on singular extensions and
understand what this algorithm is.  But from the initial position, if black
plays c5, then white has to walk a tightrope to avoid immediately losing the
bishop, and at the end it falls anyway...




>
>If I were white then I would play 28.b4(Junior5 changes its mind from Be4 to b4
>and now to Rd2 without a losing evaluation for white)
>
>I want to see a tree that prove Junior5 or Fritz5 that the evaluation of the
>position is less than -1 (I mean the evaluation at the leaves after search  at
>tournament time control is less than -1,   and the evaluation after every move
>of white that go out of the tree is less than -1)
>
>Uri


I'm not sure what you mean "I want to see a tree ..."...  I *saw* the output,
I was on the *wrong* end of all this...  I saw their score, I watched our score,
thinking their score was the result of a bug.  It wasn't...



This page took 0.02 seconds to execute

Last modified: Thu, 15 Apr 21 08:11:13 -0700

Current Computer Chess Club Forums at Talkchess. This site by Sean Mintz.