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Subject: Re: A fine line between Brilliance & Blunder

Author: chandler yergin

Date: 16:46:28 11/27/05

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On November 27, 2005 at 16:48:13, Vincent Lejeune wrote:

>On November 27, 2005 at 16:01:34, chandler yergin wrote:
>
>>On November 27, 2005 at 10:39:04, Vincent Lejeune wrote:
>>
>>>
>>>For me, the game who illustrate the most this fine line is this one, it shows
>>>one move forgotten, in thousand possible move in the tree after 19. Nxf7 ?! :
>>>
>>>from http://www.chesscenter.com/twic/event/brainb02/game6.html :
>>>At the time of playing 19.Nxf7, Kramnik had intended 27.Qe6+ here, but then saw
>>>27...Nf6 28. Qh3+ Kg6! 29. f4 Bh6 30.f5+ Kf7 and dismissed it for the text move
>>>(he was under time pressure). It turns out that the more complicated 27.Qe6+
>>>would have resulted in better winning chances for White. Following is the actual
>>>analysis done by the commentary team, Deep Fritz, and Kramnik himself, enjoy: [
>>>27.Qe6+ Nf6 28.Qh3+  ( 28.f4 Bh4!! The Move that prevented this game from being
>>>the brilliant jewel in Kramnik's crown. The bishop is sacrificed in order to
>>>clear open the file leading to White's king. This is also why White avoided
>>>Qe6+.) 28...Kg6! Kramnik showed that this move gives back the piece but wins for
>>>Black- see very bottom of this analysis.
>>>
>>>
>>>[Event "Brains in Bahrain Man-Machine Match"]
>>>[Site "Manama, Bahrain"]
>>>[Date "2002.10.15"]
>>>[Round "6"]
>>>[White "Kramnik, Vladimir"]
>>>[Black "Deep Fritz"]
>>>[Result "0-1"]
>>>[ECO "E15"]
>>>[WhiteElo "2807"]
>>>[PlyCount "68"]
>>>[EventDate "2002.??.??"]
>>>[SourceDate "2002.10.04"]
>>>
>>>1. d4 Nf6 2. c4 e6 3. Nf3 b6 4. g3 Ba6 5. b3 Bb4+ 6. Bd2 Be7 7. Bg2 c6 8. Bc3
>>>d5 9. Ne5 Nfd7 10. Nxd7 Nxd7 11. Nd2 O-O 12. O-O Rc8 13. a4 Bf6 14. e4 c5 15.
>>>exd5 cxd4 16. Bb4 Re8 17. Ne4 exd5 18. Nd6 dxc4 19. Nxf7 Kxf7 20. Bd5+ Kg6 21.
>>>Qg4+ Bg5 22. Be4+ Rxe4 23. Qxe4+ Kh6 24. h4 Bf6 25. Bd2+ g5 26. hxg5+ Bxg5 27.
>>>Qh4+ Kg6 28. Qe4+ Kg7 29. Bxg5 Qxg5 30. Rfe1 cxb3 31. Qxd4+ Nf6 32. a5 Qd5 33.
>>>Qxd5 Nxd5 34. axb6 axb6 0-1
>>
>>Thanks! Do you know where I can download all the games in .pgn?
>>I don't know how I missed getting them into my Database.. but I did
>>;(
>>Chan
>
>
>sure ... they are all here :
>
>http://www.chessgames.com/perl/chess.pl?pid=50406&pid2=12295
http://www.chessgames.com/perl/pgndownload_inactive
Thanks  I'll try TWIC



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