Author: Peter Berger
Date: 05:36:12 02/01/05
Go up one level in this thread
On January 31, 2005 at 18:00:14, Gian-Carlo Pascutto wrote:
>On January 31, 2005 at 17:43:29, Peter Berger wrote:
>
>>Junior 9.0.0.3 - Yace 0.99.87, Blitz:60'+10"
>>[D]1n3nk1/2r2pp1/1p2p2p/rq1pP2P/p1pP4/R1P1BN2/1P1Q1PP1/5RK1 w - - 0 1
>>
>>Here Junior 9 played 24.Bxh6! and went on to win in *the* typical way humans
>>used to do the computers in the past. Please note Junior's eval here : 0.27! -
>>and how nicely and easily it continues.
>>
>>I wonder if there are other engines who can play this attack, first the sac,
>>then the slow and overwhelming build-up - it's possible, I haven't checked many
>>others yet. The move is even kind of forced because statically black is doing
>>extremely well here, even if it wouldn't work out.
>
>"Puh". Anyone can play Bxh6. It's the move all patzers would play.
>
>Real men (in other words, Deep Sjeng) attack with g4!! and g5! next move.
>
>--
>GCP
This plan looks too slow to me and much inferior to the one chosen in the game.
I thought I'd let the real man show me, and gave Deep Sjeng the white pieces to
battle it out against Yace (time control reflects the clock situation in the
actual Junior-Yace game). Unfortunately old man Yace was too tough to overcome
for the real man and he even lost:
[Event "Computer chess game"]
[Site "P432"]
[Date "2005.02.01"]
[Round "-"]
[White "Deep Sjeng 1.6"]
[Black "Yace 0.99.87"]
[Result "0-1"]
[TimeControl "1800+10"]
[FEN "1n3nk1/2r2pp1/1p2p2p/rq1pP2P/p1pP4/R1P1BN2/1P1Q1PP1/5RK1 w - - 0 1"]
[SetUp "1"]
{--------------
. n . . . n k .
. . r . . p p .
. p . . p . . p
r q . p P . . P
p . p P . . . .
R . P . B N . .
. P . Q . P P .
. . . . . R K .
white to play
--------------}
1. g4 Nbd7 2. g5 hxg5 3. Bxg5 f6 4. Bh4 fxe5 5. h6 Ng6 6. Bd8 Rb7 7. hxg7
Ra8 8. Qg5 Kxg7 9. Rb1 e4 10. Nh4 Nf8 11. Kh1 Qe8 12. Bf6+ Kg8 13. Rg1 Rh7
14. Rg4 Kf7 15. Kg1 Nxh4 16. Rxh4 Qd7 17. Rxh7+ Nxh7 18. Qg7+ Ke8 19. Qh8+
Nf8 20. Bg7 Kf7 21. Qh6 b5 22. Ra1 Qe7 23. f3 Nh7 24. Qxh7 Rg8 25. Kf2 Rxg7
26. Qh5+ Kf8 27. Qh2 exf3 28. Qb8+ Kf7 29. Qf4+ Ke8 30. Qb8+ Kf7 31. Qf4+
Kg8 32. Rh1 Qg5 33. Qxg5 Rxg5 34. Kxf3 Kg7 35. Rh2 Rg1 36. Ke3 Ra1 37. Rg2+
Kf7 38. Rf2+ Ke7 39. Rc2 Kd6 40. Ke2 Ra2 41. Ke3 a3 42. Rc1 axb2 43. Rb1 b4
44. cxb4 Ra3+ 45. Kd2 c3+ 46. Kc2 Ra1 47. Kxc3 Rxb1 48. b5 Rd1 49. Kxb2 Kc7
50. Kb3 Kb6 51. Kc3 Kxb5 52. Kc2 Rxd4 53. Kc3 e5 54. Kb2 Rc4 55. Kb3 d4 56.
Kb2 Kb4 57. Ka1 Rc2 58. Kb1 Kb3 59. Ka1 Rc1#
{Black mates} 0-1
Peter
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