Author: blass uri
Date: 15:22:11 03/03/99
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On March 03, 1999 at 17:28:37, blass uri wrote: > >On March 03, 1999 at 16:36:27, Robert Hyatt wrote: > >>On March 03, 1999 at 14:51:25, blass uri wrote: >> >>> >>>On March 03, 1999 at 12:22:42, Michael Ginat wrote: >>> >>> >>>>It's a pity someone like Karpov didn't get a chance to play Deeper Blue - I >>>>can't imagine him resigning a drawn position, and he would be able to steer the >>>>games along positional paths without playing nonsense openings. >>> >>>I do not think that karpov is good against computers >>>he played a game against Deep thought with white in 1990 and won a drawn rook >>>endgame only because of a mistake of deep thought. >>> >>>This is the position when Deep thought did the mistake: >>>8/5k2/R5pp/3pP3/p2r1PK1/8/7P/8 b - - 0 1 >>> >>>Deep thought played Rc4 when g5 was the right move. >>> >>>Commercial programs avoid the mistake of Deep thought. >>> >>>For example Fritz5(16 bit) has no problem to play g5. >>> >>>Uri >> >>I have played some games against Karpov. And believe me, he is the strongest >>GM I have ever had the chance to play. the move g5 is trivial to find, and >>why DT didn't find it is anyone's guess. That is the only move crafty ever >>considers, from .01 seconds to 1 hour, so no idea what DT did wrong... But >>just because Karpov was lucky to draw doesn't mean he can't play chess, let >>me guarantee you. > >I did not say that karpov was lucky to draw but that karpov was lucky to win. > >Karpov won the game after 47...Rc4 48.h4 Rd4 I think that Rd4 was the losing mistake and 48...d4 could still draw The book say nothing about this move. Uri
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