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Subject: Re: A Certain Schizophreny

Author: Andreas Guettinger

Date: 05:15:32 06/26/05

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I think a men vs. machine match constellation is rarely good for the human.
Adams plays his best attacking style but is outplayed by the computer. Great
performance by Hydra, and maybe a bit of bad luck for Adams.
But let's imagine an other scenario. What if Adams had played well prepared
anti-computer strategy, won one game (and the match) on time at move 257 and
drew all the other games? After the match some happy anti-computer specialists
would cry yes!, he did it. But the major part of the (non-computer) chess fans
would not be satified with the match (maybe even disgusted). Maybe also Adams
would not be proud of his performance. There would be always the question what
would have been if he played a more attacking (and more interesting) chess
match?

I think that's why Adams choose to go down proudly playing his (maybe not) best
attacking style. If he wins, he is the hero. If he wins with sneaky play, the he
is the guy who won the boring match. Ergo there is more to win with attractive
play. And most GMs want to play attractive (or what they consider attractive,
even if it's the Berlin defense). And they want to win.

regards
Andy



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